This is one of the weirdest things I've come across.
➜ ~ cat word.txt
mere doctrine
➜ ~ tr ' ' '\n' < ~/word.txt
mere
doctrine
➜ ~ echo $(tr ' ' '\n' < ~/word.txt)
mere doctrine
I don't understand what is the difference between executing inside $() environment and executing directly.
I am using zsh on manjaro linux.
When you write, for example, echo $(ls), word splitting occurs.
The best practice is to add double quotes to prevent word splitting:
➜ ~ echo "$(tr ' ' '\n' < word.txt)"
mere
doctrine
Related
I am looking to do some formatting of the output from my makefile using tput. An example: if you simply type
echo $(printf '%*s' "${COLUMNS:-$(tput cols)}" '' | tr ' ' –)
as a command in your shell it will output a nice line spanning the entire width of your terminal window.
I am wondering if there's any way to carry this over in a makefile? The following only produces a blank line:
lineTest:
#echo $$( printf '%*s' "${COLUMNS:-$(tput cols)}" '' | tr ' ' – )
Definitely a silly question, but please do chime in if you happen to know.
You have to escape ALL the $ you want to pass to make. You only escaped the first one. Also I don't know why you're invoking printf in a subshell then echoing the results...??
This works for me:
lineTest:
#printf '%*s\n' "$${COLUMNS:-$$(tput cols)}" '' | tr ' ' -
I should point out, this won't work reliably if you invoke make with parallel builds enabled, because in parallel mode not all of the jobs get access to the terminal.
read Name?" Enter Full name "
First= echo $Name | cut -d ' ' -f1
I am using this command to cut Full name, but it automatically print first name. which I don't want.
I want an output like
James, This is prime number.
In the shell I use (bash on MacOS), this following works.
read -p "Enter full name " first last
echo Hi $first, you are the man
Please specify what shell you are using.
Another thing to note, is that in order to assign to the variable 'First' in your question, in bash you need to do surround the command with backticks `` or the $() construction, as follows.
First=$(echo $Name | cut -d ' ' -f1)
I am writing a script which requires me to find the parent directory of the existing directory.
Suppose I have a directory called deep which is under /path/is/very/deep/. I need to find the "path" directory but not "/".
Tried couple of combination of code but seems I am stuck in a dead lock.
Appreciate any help.
here is my code which is not working.
if [ $dir_name != "/" || $path != "/" ]
then
path=`dirname $dir_name`
dir_name=`dirname $path`
echo $path
else
dir_name=$path
echo $dirname
fi
here is an alternative way to solve your problem:
Generally all you need to do is to remove all characters in the string after (and including) the second / character. Linux Terminals have the sed function that allows you to do it.
try out this line in your Terminal/code:
echo '/path/is/very/deep' | sed -r 's:^(/[^/]*).*$:\1:'
you can remove the echo command and assign it to any variable in your code as you wish.
Edit: In sed the backslash (/) is also used as a delimiter character, you have to escape it with a forward slash (\). Parentheses are also escaped for some reason.
path="$( echo "${dir_name}" | sed -e 's|/[^/]*/\{0,1\}$||;s|^$|/|' )"
(posix compliant) and work for /, /bla, /bla/, bla/bla, ...
I need to get the records from a text file in Unix. The delimiter is multiple blanks. For example:
2U2133 1239
1290fsdsf 3234
From this, I need to extract
1239
3234
The delimiter for all records will be always 3 blanks.
I need to do this in an unix script(.scr) and write the output to another file or use it as an input to a do-while loop. I tried the below:
while read readline
do
read_int=`echo "$readline"`
cnt_exc=`grep "$read_int" ${Directory path}/file1.txt| wc -l`
if [ $cnt_exc -gt 0 ]
then
int_1=0
else
int_2=0
fi
done < awk -F' ' '{ print $2 }' ${Directoty path}/test_file.txt
test_file.txt is the input file and file1.txt is a lookup file. But the above way is not working and giving me syntax errors near awk -F
I tried writing the output to a file. The following worked in command line:
more test_file.txt | awk -F' ' '{ print $2 }' > output.txt
This is working and writing the records to output.txt in command line. But the same command does not work in the unix script (It is a .scr file)
Please let me know where I am going wrong and how I can resolve this.
Thanks,
Visakh
The job of replacing multiple delimiters with just one is left to tr:
cat <file_name> | tr -s ' ' | cut -d ' ' -f 2
tr translates or deletes characters, and is perfectly suited to prepare your data for cut to work properly.
The manual states:
-s, --squeeze-repeats
replace each sequence of a repeated character that is
listed in the last specified SET, with a single occurrence
of that character
It depends on the version or implementation of cut on your machine. Some versions support an option, usually -i, that means 'ignore blank fields' or, equivalently, allow multiple separators between fields. If that's supported, use:
cut -i -d' ' -f 2 data.file
If not (and it is not universal — and maybe not even widespread, since neither GNU nor MacOS X have the option), then using awk is better and more portable.
You need to pipe the output of awk into your loop, though:
awk -F' ' '{print $2}' ${Directory_path}/test_file.txt |
while read readline
do
read_int=`echo "$readline"`
cnt_exc=`grep "$read_int" ${Directory_path}/file1.txt| wc -l`
if [ $cnt_exc -gt 0 ]
then int_1=0
else int_2=0
fi
done
The only residual issue is whether the while loop is in a sub-shell and and therefore not modifying your main shell scripts variables, just its own copy of those variables.
With bash, you can use process substitution:
while read readline
do
read_int=`echo "$readline"`
cnt_exc=`grep "$read_int" ${Directory_path}/file1.txt| wc -l`
if [ $cnt_exc -gt 0 ]
then int_1=0
else int_2=0
fi
done < <(awk -F' ' '{print $2}' ${Directory_path}/test_file.txt)
This leaves the while loop in the current shell, but arranges for the output of the command to appear as if from a file.
The blank in ${Directory path} is not normally legal — unless it is another Bash feature I've missed out on; you also had a typo (Directoty) in one place.
Other ways of doing the same thing aside, the error in your program is this: You cannot redirect from (<) the output of another program. Turn your script around and use a pipe like this:
awk -F' ' '{ print $2 }' ${Directory path}/test_file.txt | while read readline
etc.
Besides, the use of "readline" as a variable name may or may not get you into problems.
In this particular case, you can use the following line
sed 's/ /\t/g' <file_name> | cut -f 2
to get your second columns.
In bash you can start from something like this:
for n in `${Directoty path}/test_file.txt | cut -d " " -f 4`
{
grep -c $n ${Directory path}/file*.txt
}
This should have been a comment, but since I cannot comment yet, I am adding this here.
This is from an excellent answer here: https://stackoverflow.com/a/4483833/3138875
tr -s ' ' <text.txt | cut -d ' ' -f4
tr -s '<character>' squeezes multiple repeated instances of <character> into one.
It's not working in the script because of the typo in "Directo*t*y path" (last line of your script).
Cut isn't flexible enough. I usually use Perl for that:
cat file.txt | perl -F' ' -e 'print $F[1]."\n"'
Instead of a triple space after -F you can put any Perl regular expression. You access fields as $F[n], where n is the field number (counting starts at zero). This way there is no need to sed or tr.
For grep there's a fixed string option, -F (fgrep) to turn off regex interpretation of the search string.
Is there a similar facility for sed? I couldn't find anything in the man. A recommendation of another gnu/linux tool would also be fine.
I'm using sed for the find and replace functionality: sed -i "s/abc/def/g"
Do you have to use sed? If you're writing a bash script, you can do
#!/bin/bash
pattern='abc'
replace='def'
file=/path/to/file
tmpfile="${TMPDIR:-/tmp}/$( basename "$file" ).$$"
while read -r line
do
echo "${line//$pattern/$replace}"
done < "$file" > "$tmpfile" && mv "$tmpfile" "$file"
With an older Bourne shell (such as ksh88 or POSIX sh), you may not have that cool ${var/pattern/replace} structure, but you do have ${var#pattern} and ${var%pattern}, which can be used to split the string up and then reassemble it. If you need to do that, you're in for a lot more code - but it's really not too bad.
If you're not in a shell script already, you could pretty easily make the pattern, replace, and filename parameters and just call this. :)
PS: The ${TMPDIR:-/tmp} structure uses $TMPDIR if that's set in your environment, or uses /tmp if the variable isn't set. I like to stick the PID of the current process on the end of the filename in the hopes that it'll be slightly more unique. You should probably use mktemp or similar in the "real world", but this is ok for a quick example, and the mktemp binary isn't always available.
Option 1) Escape regexp characters. E.g. sed 's/\$0\.0/0/g' will replace all occurrences of $0.0 with 0.
Option 2) Use perl -p -e in conjunction with quotemeta. E.g. perl -p -e 's/\\./,/gi' will replace all occurrences of . with ,.
You can use option 2 in scripts like this:
SEARCH="C++"
REPLACE="C#"
cat $FILELIST | perl -p -e "s/\\Q$SEARCH\\E/$REPLACE/g" > $NEWLIST
If you're not opposed to Ruby or long lines, you could use this:
alias replace='ruby -e "File.write(ARGV[0], File.read(ARGV[0]).gsub(ARGV[1]) { ARGV[2] })"'
replace test3.txt abc def
This loads the whole file into memory, performs the replacements and saves it back to disk. Should probably not be used for massive files.
If you don't want to escape your string, you can reach your goal in 2 steps:
fgrep the line (getting the line number) you want to replace, and
afterwards use sed for replacing this line.
E.g.
#/bin/sh
PATTERN='foo*[)*abc' # we need it literal
LINENUMBER="$( fgrep -n "$PATTERN" "$FILE" | cut -d':' -f1 )"
NEWSTRING='my new string'
sed -i "${LINENUMBER}s/.*/$NEWSTRING/" "$FILE"
You can do this in two lines of bash code if you're OK with reading the whole file into memory. This is quite flexible -- the pattern and replacement can contain newlines to match across lines if needed. It also preserves any trailing newline or lack thereof, which a simple loop with read does not.
mapfile -d '' < file
printf '%s' "${MAPFILE//"$pat"/"$rep"}" > file
For completeness, if the file can contain null bytes (\0), we need to extend the above, and it becomes
mapfile -d '' < <(cat file; printf '\0')
last=${MAPFILE[-1]}; unset "MAPFILE[-1]"
printf '%s\0' "${MAPFILE[#]//"$pat"/"$rep"}" > file
printf '%s' "${last//"$pat"/"$rep"}" >> file
perl -i.orig -pse 'while (($i = index($_,$s)) >= 0) { substr($_,$i,length($s), $r)}'--\
-s='$_REQUEST['\'old\'']' -r='$_REQUEST['\'new\'']' sample.txt
-i.orig in-place modification with backup.
-p print lines from the input file by default
-s enable rudimentary parsing of command line arguments
-e run this script
index($_,$s) search for the $s string
substr($_,$i,length($s), $r) replace the string
while (($i = index($_,$s)) >= 0) repeat until
-- end of perl parameters
-s='$_REQUEST['\'old\'']', -r='$_REQUEST['\'new\'']' - set $s,$r
You still need to "escape" ' chars but the rest should be straight forward.
Note: this started as an answer to How to pass special character string to sed hence the $_REQUEST['old'] strings, however this question is a bit more appropriately formulated.
You should be using replace instead of sed.
From the man page:
The replace utility program changes strings in place in files or on the
standard input.
Invoke replace in one of the following ways:
shell> replace from to [from to] ... -- file_name [file_name] ...
shell> replace from to [from to] ... < file_name
from represents a string to look for and to represents its replacement.
There can be one or more pairs of strings.