Differences between revisions 5 and 10 (spanning 5 versions)
Revision 5 as of 2008-07-04 08:55:23
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Editor: pgas
Comment: remove the loop add a solution with read and here strings
Revision 10 as of 2008-07-17 15:56:25
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Editor: wsip-68-15-32-50
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There are a few ways to do this -- none of them elegant.

First, the most portable way would be to use `sed`:
There are a few ways to do this:
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   # POSIX
   x=$(echo "$x" | sed -e 's/^[[:space:]]*//' -e 's/[[:space:]]*$//')
   #POSIX, but fails if the variable contains newlines
   read -r var << EOF
   $var
   EOF
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One can also achieve the same goal using Bash builtins: One can also achieve in bash using a herestring
{{{
   # Bash still fails if the variable contains a newline.
   read -r x <<< "$x"
}}}
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{{{
   # Bash
   # Remove leading whitespace:
   read -r x <<< "$x"
}}}
(note: using IFS=$' \t' read -d "" -r x partially fix the "problem" of the newlines but adds a trailing \n)
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There are many, many other ways to do this. These are not necessarily the best, but they're known to work. There are many, many other ways to do this, using sed for instance:
{{{
   # POSIX, suppress the trailing and leading whitespace on every lines
   x=$(echo "$x" | sed -e 's/^[[:space:]]*//' -e 's/[[:space:]]*$//')
}}}

These are not necessarily the best, but they're known to work.

Anchor(faq67)

How can I trim leading/trailing white space from one of my variables?

There are a few ways to do this:

   #POSIX, but fails if the variable contains newlines
   read -r var << EOF
   $var 
   EOF 

One can also achieve in bash using a herestring

   # Bash still fails if the variable contains a newline.
   read  -r x <<< "$x"

(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]:

   # Bash
   shopt -s extglob
   x=${x##+([[:space:]])} x=${x%%+([[:space:]])}
   shopt -u extglob

This also works in KornShell, without needing the explicit extglob setting:

   # ksh
   x=${x##+([[:space:]])} x=${x%%+([[:space:]])}

There are many, many other ways to do this, using sed for instance:

   # POSIX, suppress the trailing and leading whitespace on every lines
   x=$(echo "$x" | sed -e 's/^[[:space:]]*//' -e 's/[[:space:]]*$//')

These are not necessarily the best, but they're known to work.

BashFAQ/067 (last edited 2018-11-29 15:32:42 by GreyCat)