5509
Comment:
|
307
|
Deletions are marked like this. | Additions are marked like this. |
Line 2: | Line 2: |
== How can i perform a substitution with arbitrary values ("s/$foo/$bar/") safely, without treating either value as a regular expression or worrying about other special characters? == Sed is not the right tool for this. Nor is ed. At best, attempting either will result in an escaping nightmare, and will be extremely prone to bugs. |
== Can I use something like templates with bash? == Bash does not have any native way to use templates. However, depending on your actual goals, just evaluating the file with a new bash or shell instance could do the trick. |
Line 5: | Line 5: |
First, what are we performing the substitution on? If it's a string, it can be done very simply with a parameter expansion. {{{ var='some string' search=some rep=another printf '%s\n' "${var//"$search"/$rep}" }}} This is discussed in more detail in [[BashFAQ/100|Faq #100]]. If it's a file or stream, things get a bit trickier. One way to accomplish this would be to combine the previous method with [[BashFAQ/001|Faq #1]]. {{{ search=foo rep=bar # file while IFS= read -r line; do printf '%s\n' "${line//"$search"/$rep}" done < "$file" # command output while IFS= read -r line; do printf '%s\n' "${line//"$search"/$rep}" done < <(my_command) my_command | while IFS= read -r line; do printf '%s\n' "${line//"$search"/$rep}" done }}} Note that the last example creates a subshell. See [[BashFAQ/024|Faq #24]] for more information on that. Both of the above examples print to stdout; neither actually edits the file in place. Of course this could be resolved with something like: {{{ # create a temp file, die on failure tmp=$(mktemp) || exit while IFS= read -r line; do printf '%s\n' "${line//"$search"/$rep}" done < "$file" > "$tmp" && mv "$tmp" "$file" }}} On large data sets, you'll notice that this is quite slow. The following functions use awk, and are quite a bit faster: The first two here are similar to sed 's/STR/REP/', they only replaces the first instance on each line. The first function operates on stdin and writes to stdout, the second overwrites FILE. {{{ # usage: sub_literal STR REP sub_literal() { # string manip needed to escape '\'s, so awk doesn't expand '\n' and such awk -v str="${1//\\/\\\\}" -v rep="${2//\\/\\\\}" ' # get the length of the search string BEGIN { len = length(str); } # if the search string is in the line (i = index($0, str)) { # replace the first occurance with rep $0 = substr($0, 1, i-1) rep substr($0, i + len); } # print each line 1 ' } # usage: sub_literal_f STR REP FILE sub_literal_f() { local tmp if ! [[ -f $3 && -r $3 && -w $3 ]]; then printf '%s does not exist or is not readable or writable\n' "$3" >&2 return 1 fi trap 'rm -rf "$tmp"' RETURN tmp=$(mktemp) && cp "$3" "$tmp" || return # string manip needed to escape '\'s, so awk doesn't expand '\n' and such awk -v str="${1//\\/\\\\}" -v rep="${2//\\/\\\\}" ' # get the length of the search string BEGIN { len = length(str); } # if the search string is in the line (i = index($0, str)) { # replace the first occurance with rep $0 = substr($0, 1, i-1) rep substr($0, i + len); } # print each line 1 ' "$tmp" > "$3" } }}} The next two functions are similar to 's/STR/REP/g', replacing every instance. Just like above, the first reads stdin and writes to stdout, the second actually edits FILE. {{{ # usage: gsub_literal STR REP gsub_literal() { # string manip needed to escape '\'s, so awk doesn't expand '\n' and such awk -v str="${1//\\/\\\\}" -v rep="${2//\\/\\\\}" ' # get the length of the search string BEGIN { len = length(str); } { # empty the output string out = ""; # continue looping while the search string is in the line while (i = index($0, str)) { # append everything up to the search string, and the replacement string out = out substr($0, 1, i-1) rep; # remove everything up to and including the first instance of the # search string from the line $0 = substr($0, i + len); } # append whatever is left out = out $0; print out; } ' } # usage: gsub_literal_f STR REP FILE gsub_literal_f() { local tmp if ! [[ -f $3 && -r $3 && -w $3 ]]; then printf '%s does not exist or is not readable or writable\n' "$3" >&2 return 1 fi trap 'rm -rf "$tmp"' RETURN tmp=$(mktemp) && cp "$3" "$tmp" || return # string manip needed to escape '\'s, so awk doesn't expand '\n' and such awk -v str="${1//\\/\\\\}" -v rep="${2//\\/\\\\}" ' # get the length of the search string BEGIN { len = length(str); } { # empty the output string out = ""; # continue looping while the search string is in the line while (i = index($0, str)) { # append everything up to the search string, and the replacement string out = out substr($0, 1, i-1) rep; # remove everything up to and including the first instance of the # search string from the line $0 = substr($0, i + len); } # append whatever is left out = out $0; print out; } ' "$tmp" > "$3" } }}} For more information on how these work, and awk in general, visit the #awk channel on freenode. The mktemp(1) command used in some of the examples above is not completely portable. While it will work on most systems, more information on safely creating temp files can be found in [[BashFAQ/062|Faq #62]]. |
This is further discussed on the [[TemplateFiles]] page |
Can I use something like templates with bash?
Bash does not have any native way to use templates. However, depending on your actual goals, just evaluating the file with a new bash or shell instance could do the trick.
This is further discussed on the TemplateFiles page