diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'bash.html.markdown')
-rw-r--r-- | bash.html.markdown | 48 |
1 files changed, 47 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/bash.html.markdown b/bash.html.markdown index 0c097c27..8c40931e 100644 --- a/bash.html.markdown +++ b/bash.html.markdown @@ -16,6 +16,7 @@ contributors: - ["Betsy Lorton", "https://github.com/schbetsy"] - ["John Detter", "https://github.com/jdetter"] - ["Harry Mumford-Turner", "https://github.com/harrymt"] + - ["Martin Nicholson", "https://github.com/mn113"] filename: LearnBash.sh --- @@ -25,7 +26,7 @@ Nearly all examples below can be a part of a shell script or executed directly i [Read more here.](http://www.gnu.org/software/bash/manual/bashref.html) ```bash -#!/bin/bash +#!/usr/bin/env bash # First line of the script is shebang which tells the system how to execute # the script: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shebang_(Unix) # As you already figured, comments start with #. Shebang is also a comment. @@ -76,6 +77,11 @@ echo ${Variable/Some/A} # => A string Length=7 echo ${Variable:0:Length} # => Some st # This will return only the first 7 characters of the value +echo ${Variable: -5} # => tring +# This will return the last 5 characters (note the space before -5) + +# String length +echo ${#Variable} # => 11 # Default value for variable echo ${Foo:-"DefaultValueIfFooIsMissingOrEmpty"} @@ -83,6 +89,25 @@ echo ${Foo:-"DefaultValueIfFooIsMissingOrEmpty"} # This works for null (Foo=) and empty string (Foo=""); zero (Foo=0) returns 0. # Note that it only returns default value and doesn't change variable value. +# Declare an array with 6 elements +array0=(one two three four five six) +# Print first element +echo $array0 # => "one" +# Print first element +echo ${array0[0]} # => "one" +# Print all elements +echo ${array0[@]} # => "one two three four five six" +# Print number of elements +echo ${#array0[@]} # => "6" +# Print number of characters in third element +echo ${#array0[2]} # => "5" +# Print 2 elements starting from forth +echo ${array0[@]:3:2} # => "four five" +# Print all elements. Each of them on new line. +for i in "${array0[@]}"; do + echo "$i" +done + # Brace Expansion { } # Used to generate arbitrary strings echo {1..10} # => 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 @@ -155,6 +180,23 @@ then echo "This will run if $Name is Daniya OR Zach." fi +# There is also the =~ operator, which tests a string against a Regex pattern: +Email=me@example.com +if [[ "$Email" =~ [a-z]+@[a-z]{2,}\.(com|net|org) ]] +then + echo "Valid email!" +fi +# Note that =~ only works within double [[ ]] square brackets, +# which are subtly different from single [ ]. +# See http://www.gnu.org/software/bash/manual/bashref.html#Conditional-Constructs for more on this. + +# Redefine command 'ping' as alias to send only 5 packets +alias ping='ping -c 5' +# Escape alias and use command with this name instead +\ping 192.168.1.1 +# Print all aliases +alias -p + # Expressions are denoted with the following format: echo $(( 10 + 5 )) # => 15 @@ -202,10 +244,13 @@ mv s0urc3.txt dst.txt # sorry, l33t hackers... # Since bash works in the context of a current directory, you might want to # run your command in some other directory. We have cd for changing location: cd ~ # change to home directory +cd # also goes to home directory cd .. # go up one directory # (^^say, from /home/username/Downloads to /home/username) cd /home/username/Documents # change to specified directory cd ~/Documents/.. # still in home directory..isn't it?? +cd - # change to last directory +# => /home/username/Documents # Use subshells to work across directories (echo "First, I'm here: $PWD") && (cd someDir; echo "Then, I'm here: $PWD") @@ -230,6 +275,7 @@ print("#stderr", file=sys.stderr) for line in sys.stdin: print(line, file=sys.stdout) EOF +# Variables will be expanded if the first "EOF" is not quoted # Run the hello.py Python script with various stdin, stdout, and # stderr redirections: |