Bash Input/Output: Difference between revisions
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=Echo Multiple Lines into a File= | ==Echo Multiple Lines into a File== | ||
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Revision as of 01:22, 13 February 2018
Internal
Here-Docs
Echo Multiple Lines to stdout
cat <<EOF blah ${some_var} $(some-command) blah EOF
- It will perform variable substitution. If you don't want that, escape \${some_var}.
- `...` sequences should be escaped as shown here: \`...\` otherwise they will executed before the output is sent to stdout.
- \ will join lines. If you want "\" in the output, then you should escape it:
... blah blah \\ ...
Echo Multiple Lines into a File
(cat << EOF blah EOF ) > /tmp/test.txt
Iterating over Lines from a File in the Same bash Process
With for
Note that the following approach works better for small files. If the file is large, the content will be first cached in memory, and it may look like the command is irresponsive:
With sed
This approach has the advantage that lines are read one by one and not buffered:
filename=... line_count=$(wc -l ${filename}) || exit 1 line_count=${line_count% *} line_count=$(echo ${line_count} | sed -e 's/ *//') line_number=1 while [ ${line_number} -le ${line_count} ]; do local line line=$(sed -n ${line_number}p ${filename}) # process line ... ((line_number++)) done
Extracting a Line Specified by Its Number from a File
With head and tail
Extract line 15 (line numbers are 1-based):
cat ./test.txt | head -15 | tail -1
With sed
echo Formatting
Bold:
echo -e "\033[1msomething bold \033[0m"
Red:
echo -e "\033[31msomething red\033[0m"