If we look at the excerpt for sed, since 2016, it says:
Use this tag only if your question relates to programming using sed or sed-based APIs. Questions relating to using or troubleshooting sed command-line options itself are off-topic.
awk has the same notice (with sed replaced by awk, of course), added by the same user.
This also reflects the information given in the help/on-topic page: a problem has to be unique to software development.
For awk and sed, that's a thin line. Many of these questions could be asked in the context of linux system administration, and thus aren't necessarily related to programming. That makes it possible to interpret them as off-topic.
You could make the argument that since these question are not necessarily programming related, they would fit better on SU. And SU does have a sed and an awk tag.
However, these text processors can take complex commands that filter and transform data, which might be analogous to an SQL statement (and asking questions about SQL statements certainly is on-topic here).
Also the tags on SU have less than 1000 questions per tag, while those on SO have around 20.000 questions per tag.
For me, I'd say plain general use questions (e.g. How do I open a file in awk) would be off-topic. Any questions regarding creating long commands to filter, output or transform text would be on-topic. In between, there's a grey area, but considering the much higher amount of questions on SO, we should not be overly critical to such questions.
sed
andawk
questions are fine on SO. They are both tools that require programs to be written — and the questions are usually about what's wrong with the program that the questioner has written. (Or there are the poorer standard questions where the OP wants the program written for them, etc; such questions are not so welcome, of course, but that's not because of the tag.) I also happen to have gold badges in both the awk and sed tags on SO.bash
quoting-a-single-quote question. And if we want that question to be about MacOSsed
's apparent bug with single quotes on its command line, we should edit the question to actually pass it some, instead of having a question where the normal fix leads to another problem on that platform. @Jww Downvoting the answers as well as the question is ridiculous, and improper, though, IMO.