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There are a few ways to do this: | There are a few ways to do this. Some involve special tricks that only work with whitespace. Others are more general, and can be used to strip leading zeroes, etc. |
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Here's one that only works for whitespace. It relies on the fact that `read` strips all leading and trailing whitespace when `IFS` isn't set: | |
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#POSIX, but fails if the variable contains newlines | # POSIX, but fails if the variable contains newlines |
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$var EOF |
$var EOF |
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One can also achieve in bash using a herestring | Bash can do something similar with a "here string": |
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# Bash still fails if the variable contains a newline. read -r x <<< "$x" |
# Bash read -rd '' x <<< "$x" |
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Using an empty string as a delimiter means the read consumes the whole string, as NUL is used. (Remember: BASH only does C-string variables.) This is entirely safe for any text, including newlines. | |
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(note: using IFS=$' \t' read -d "" -r x partially fix the "problem" of the newlines but adds a trailing \n) There's also a solution using [[glob|extglob]]: |
Here's a solution using [[glob|extglob]] together with [[BashFAQ/073|parameter expansion]]: |
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This solution isn't restricted to whitespace like the first few were. You can remove leading zeroes as well: {{{ # Bash shopt -s extglob x=${x##+(0)} }}} |
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There are many, many other ways to do this, using sed for instance: | If you need to remove leading zeroes in a POSIX shell, you can use a loop: |
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# POSIX, suppress the trailing and leading whitespace on every lines | # POSIX while true; do case "$var" in 0*) var=${var#0};; *) break;; esac done }}} There are many, many other ways to do this, using sed for instance: {{{ # POSIX, suppress the trailing and leading whitespace on every line |
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These are not necessarily the best, but they're known to work. |
Solutions based on external programs like sed are well suited to trimming large files, rather than shell variables. |
How can I trim leading/trailing white space from one of my variables?
There are a few ways to do this. Some involve special tricks that only work with whitespace. Others are more general, and can be used to strip leading zeroes, etc.
Here's one that only works for whitespace. It relies on the fact that read strips all leading and trailing whitespace when IFS isn't set:
# POSIX, but fails if the variable contains newlines read -r var << EOF $var EOF
Bash can do something similar with a "here string":
# Bash read -rd '' x <<< "$x"
Using an empty string as a delimiter means the read consumes the whole string, as NUL is used. (Remember: BASH only does C-string variables.) This is entirely safe for any text, including newlines.
Here's a solution using extglob together with parameter expansion:
# Bash shopt -s extglob x=${x##+([[:space:]])} x=${x%%+([[:space:]])} shopt -u extglob
This solution isn't restricted to whitespace like the first few were. You can remove leading zeroes as well:
# Bash shopt -s extglob x=${x##+(0)}
This also works in KornShell, without needing the explicit extglob setting:
# ksh x=${x##+([[:space:]])} x=${x%%+([[:space:]])}
If you need to remove leading zeroes in a POSIX shell, you can use a loop:
# POSIX while true; do case "$var" in 0*) var=${var#0};; *) break;; esac done
There are many, many other ways to do this, using sed for instance:
# POSIX, suppress the trailing and leading whitespace on every line x=$(echo "$x" | sed -e 's/^[[:space:]]*//' -e 's/[[:space:]]*$//')
Solutions based on external programs like sed are well suited to trimming large files, rather than shell variables.