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bash
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#!/bin/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. | |
# Simple hello world example: | |
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' | |
# Declaring a variable looks like this: | |
VARIABLE="Some string" | |
# But not like this: | |
VARIABLE = "Some string" | |
# Bash will decide that VARIABLE is a command it must execute and give an error | |
# because it couldn't be found. | |
# Using the variable: | |
echo $VARIABLE | |
echo "$VARIABLE" | |
echo '$VARIABLE' | |
# When you use the variable itself — assign it, export it, or else — you write | |
# its name without $. If you want to use variable's value, you should use $. | |
# Note that ' (single quote) won't expand the variables! | |
# String substitution in variables | |
echo ${VARIABLE/Some/A} | |
# This will substitute the first occurance of "Some" with "A" | |
# Substring from a variable | |
echo ${VARIABLE:0:7} | |
# This will return only the first 7 characters of the value | |
# Default value for variable | |
echo ${FOO:-"DefaultValueIfFOOIsMissingOrEmpty"} | |
# This works for null (FOO=), empty string (FOO=""), zero (FOO=0) returns 0 | |
# Builtin variables: | |
# There are some useful builtin variables, like | |
echo "Last program return value: $?" | |
echo "Script's PID: $$" | |
echo "Number of arguments: $#" | |
echo "Scripts arguments: $@" | |
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 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 your username" | |
else | |
echo "Your name isn't your username" | |
fi | |
# There is also conditional execution | |
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: | |
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 | |
# directory with the ls command: | |
ls | |
# These commands have options that control their execution: | |
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: | |
ls -l | grep "\.txt" | |
# 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" | |
# The output error will overwrite the file if it exists, if you want to | |
# concatenate them, use ">>" instead. | |
# Commands can be substituted within other commands using $( ): | |
# The following command displays the number of files and directories in the | |
# current directory. | |
echo "There are $(ls | wc -l) items here." | |
# The same can be done using backticks `` but they can't be nested - the preferred way | |
# is to use $( ). | |
echo "There are `ls | wc -l` items here." | |
# Bash uses a case statement that works similarly to switch in Java and C++: | |
case "$VARIABLE" in | |
#List patterns for the conditions you want to meet | |
0) echo "There is a zero.";; | |
1) echo "There is a one.";; | |
*) echo "It is not null.";; | |
esac | |
# for loops iterate for as many arguments given: | |
# The contents of var $VARIABLE is printed three times. | |
for VARIABLE in {1..3} | |
do | |
echo "$VARIABLE" | |
done | |
# while loop: | |
while [true] | |
do | |
echo "loop body here..." | |
break | |
done | |
# You can also define functions | |
# Definition: | |
function foo () | |
{ | |
echo "Arguments work just like script arguments: $@" | |
echo "And: $1 $2..." | |
echo "This is a function" | |
return 0 | |
} | |
# or simply | |
bar () | |
{ | |
echo "Another way to declare functions!" | |
return 0 | |
} | |
# Calling your function | |
foo "My name is" $NAME | |
# There are a lot of useful commands you should learn: | |
tail -n 10 file.txt | |
# prints last 10 lines of file.txt | |
head -n 10 file.txt | |
# prints first 10 lines of file.txt | |
sort file.txt | |
# sort file.txt's lines | |
uniq -d file.txt | |
# report or omit repeated lines, with -d it reports them | |
cut -d ',' -f 1 file.txt | |
# prints only the first column before the ',' character |
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