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| author | Nami-Doc <vendethiel@hotmail.fr> | 2013-12-27 08:33:17 -0800 | 
|---|---|---|
| committer | Nami-Doc <vendethiel@hotmail.fr> | 2013-12-27 08:33:17 -0800 | 
| commit | 79cc976ab48325ab4032377b10e7cc488a733640 (patch) | |
| tree | f87cd6d6d19227bca662dc9980c047a95b042f4d | |
| parent | 0aa7e32f059460a4b56f3674ab52eea20331787f (diff) | |
| parent | 5bd86ec047ba12decea1105d47b0496ab7e435cb (diff) | |
Merge pull request #466 from kyrami/master
[bash/en] spelling fixes
| -rw-r--r-- | bash.html.markdown | 20 | 
1 files changed, 10 insertions, 10 deletions
| diff --git a/bash.html.markdown b/bash.html.markdown index 815290dd..a6bd2b7c 100644 --- a/bash.html.markdown +++ b/bash.html.markdown @@ -21,7 +21,7 @@ Nearly all examples below can be a part of a shell script or executed directly i  # As you already figured, comments start with #. Shebang is also a comment.  # Simple hello world example: -echo Hello, world! +echo Hello world!  # Each command starts on a new line, or after semicolon:  echo 'This is the first line'; echo 'This is the second line' @@ -56,24 +56,24 @@ echo "Last program return value: $?"  echo "Script's PID: $$"  echo "Number of arguments: $#"  echo "Scripts arguments: $@" -echo "Scripts arguments separeted in different variables: $1 $2..." +echo "Scripts arguments seperated in different variables: $1 $2..."  # Reading a value from input:  echo "What's your name?" -read NAME # Note that we didn't need to declare new variable +read NAME # Note that we didn't need to declare a new variable  echo Hello, $NAME!  # We have the usual if structure:  # use 'man test' for more info about conditionals  if [ $NAME -ne $USER ]  then -    echo "Your name is you username" +    echo "Your name is your username"  else -    echo "Your name isn't you username" +    echo "Your name isn't your username"  fi  # There is also conditional execution -echo "Always executed" || echo "Only executed if first command fail" +echo "Always executed" || echo "Only executed if first command fails"  echo "Always executed" && echo "Only executed if first command does NOT fail"  # Expressions are denoted with the following format: @@ -81,7 +81,7 @@ echo $(( 10 + 5 ))  # Unlike other programming languages, bash is a shell — so it works in a context  # of current directory. You can list files and directories in the current -# directories with ls command: +# directory with the ls command:  ls  # These commands have options that control their execution: @@ -89,10 +89,10 @@ ls -l # Lists every file and directory on a separate line  # Results of the previous command can be passed to the next command as input.  # grep command filters the input with provided patterns. That's how we can list -# txt files in the current directory: +# .txt files in the current directory:  ls -l | grep "\.txt" -# You can also redirect a command output, input and error output. +# You can also redirect a command, input and error output.  python2 hello.py < "input.in"  python2 hello.py > "output.out"  python2 hello.py 2> "error.err" @@ -116,7 +116,7 @@ case "$VARIABLE" in      *) echo "It is not null.";;  esac -# For loops iterate for as many arguments given: +# for loops iterate for as many arguments given:  # The contents of var $VARIABLE is printed three times.  for VARIABLE in {1..3}  do | 
