It’s that time of year again! When stores start putting up colourful sparkly lit-up plastic bits, we all begin to feel a little festive, and by festive I mean let’s go shopping. Specifically, holiday gift shopping! (Gifts for yourself are still gifts, technically.)
Just so this doesn’t all go completely madcap, you ought to make some gift lists. Bash can help.
Brace expansion
These are not braces: ()
Neither are these: []
These are braces: {}
Braces tell Bash to do something with the arbitrary string or strings it finds between them. Multiple strings are comma-separated: {a,b,c}
. You can also add an optional preamble and postscript to be attached to each expanded result. Mostly, this can save some typing, such as with common file paths and extensions.
Let’s make some lists for each person we want to give stuff to. The following commands are equivalent:
touch /home/me/gift-lists/Amy.txt /home/me/gift-lists/Bryan.txt /home/me/gift-lists/Charlie.txt
touch /home/me/gift-lists/{Amy,Bryan,Charlie}.txt
tree gift-lists
/home/me/gift-lists
├── Amy.txt
├── Bryan.txt
└── Charlie.txt
Oh darn, “Bryan” spells his name with an “i.” I can fix that.
mv /home/me/gift-lists/{Bryan,Brian}.txt
renamed '/home/me/gift-lists/Bryan.txt' -> '/home/me/gift-lists/Brian.txt'
Shell parameter expansions
Shell parameter expansion allows us to make all sorts of changes to parameters enclosed in braces, like manipulate and substitute text.
There are a few stocking stuffers that all our giftees deserve. Let’s make that a variable:
STUFF=$'socks\nlump of coal\nwhite chocolate'
echo "$STUFF"
socks
lump of coal
white chocolate
Now to add these items to each of our lists with some help from the tee
command to get echo
and expansions to play nice.
echo "$STUFF" | tee {Amy,Brian,Charlie}.txt
cat {Amy,Brian,Charlie}.txt
socks
lump of coal
white chocolate
socks
lump of coal
white chocolate
socks
lump of coal
white chocolate
Pattern match substitution
On second thought, maybe the lump of coal isn’t such a nice gift. You can replace it with something better using a pattern match substitution in the form of ${parameter/pattern/string}
:
echo "${STUFF/lump of coal/candy cane}" | tee {Amy,Brian,Charlie}.txt
cat {Amy,Brian,Charlie}.txt
socks
candy cane
white chocolate
socks
candy cane
white chocolate
socks
candy cane
white chocolate
This replaces the first instance of “lump of coal” with “candy cane.” To replace all instances (if there were multiple), use ${parameter//pattern/string}
. This doesn’t change our $STUFF
variable, so we can still reuse the original list for someone naughty later.
Substrings
While we’re improving things, our giftees may not all like white chocolate. We’d better add some regular chocolate to our lists just in case. Since I’m super lazy, I’m just going to hit the up arrow and modify a previous Bash command. Luckily, the last word in the $STUFF
variable is “chocolate,” which is nine characters long, so I’ll tell Bash to keep just that part using ${parameter:offset}
. I’ll use tee
’s -a
flag to a
ppend to my existing lists:
echo "${STUFF: -9}" | tee -a {Amy,Brian,Charlie}.txt
cat {Amy,Brian,Charlie}.txt
socks
candy cane
white chocolate
chocolate
socks
candy cane
white chocolate
chocolate
socks
candy cane
white chocolate
chocolate
You can also:
Do this | With this |
---|---|
Get substring from n characters onwards | ${parameter:n} |
Get substring for x characters starting at n | ${parameter:n:x} |
There! Now our base lists are finished. Let’s have some eggnog.
Testing variables
You know, it may be the eggnog, but I think I started a list for Amy yesterday and stored it in a variable that I might have called amy
. Let’s see if I did. I’ll use the ${parameter:?word}
expansion. It’ll write word
to standard error and exit if there’s no amy
parameter.
echo "${amy:?no such}"
bash: amy: no such
I guess not. Maybe it was Brian instead?
echo "${brian:?no such}"
Lederhosen
You can also:
Do this | With this |
---|---|
Substitute word if parameter is unset or null |
${parameter:-word} |
Substitute word if parameter is not unset or null |
${parameter:+word} |
Assign word to parameter if parameter is unset or null |
${parameter:=word} |
Changing case
That’s right! Brian said he wanted some lederhosen and so I made myself a note. This is pretty important, so I’ll add it to Brian’s list in capital letters with the ${parameter^^pattern}
expansion. The pattern
part is optional. We’re only writing to Brian’s list, so I’ll just use >>
instead of tee -a
.
echo "${brian^^}" >> Brian.txt
cat Brian.txt
socks
candy cane
white chocolate
chocolate
LEDERHOSEN
You can also:
Do this | With this |
---|---|
Capitalize the first letter | ${parameter^pattern} |
Lowercase the first letter | ${parameter,pattern} |
Lowercase all letters | ${parameter,,pattern} |
Expanding arrays
You know what, all this gift-listing business is a lot of work. I’m just going to make an array of things I saw at the store:
gifts=(sweater gameboy wagon pillows chestnuts hairbrush)
I can use substring expansion in the form of ${parameter:offset:length}
to make this simple. I’ll add the first two to Amy’s list, the middle two to Brian’s, and the last two to Charlie’s. I’ll use printf
to help with newlines.
printf '%s\n' "${gifts[@]:0:2}" >> Amy.txt
printf '%s\n' "${gifts[@]:2:2}" >> Brian.txt
printf '%s\n' "${gifts[@]: -2}" >> Charlie.txt
cat Amy.txt
socks
candy cane
white chocolate
chocolate
sweater
gameboy
cat Brian.txt
socks
candy cane
white chocolate
chocolate
LEDERHOSEN
wagon
pillows
cat Charlie.txt
socks
candy cane
white chocolate
chocolate
chestnuts
hairbrush
There! Now we’ve got a comprehensive set of super personalized gift lists. Thanks Bash! Too bad it can’t do the shopping for us, too.
Top comments (5)
This was a great article. Thanks!
wow
This is awesome! Well well done, very very good read!
Touché!
great article!