Differences between revisions 18 and 26 (spanning 8 versions)
Revision 18 as of 2014-07-25 13:51:36
Size: 2830
Editor: geirha
Comment: junk may contain glob chars
Revision 26 as of 2016-06-16 06:08:13
Size: 3133
Editor:
Comment:
Deletions are marked like this. Additions are marked like this.
Line 6: Line 6:
Line 8: Line 9:
   junk="${var##*[! ]}" # match prefixed spaces
   var="${var%"$junk"}" # trim the match
   junk="${var%%[! ]*}" # match affixed spaces
   var="${var#"$junk"}" # trim the match
   junk=${var##*[! ]} # match prefixed spaces
   var=${var%"$junk"} # trim the match
   junk=${var%%[! ]*} # match affixed spaces
   var=${var#"$junk"} # trim the match
Line 13: Line 14:
Bash can do the same thing, but without the need for a throw-away variable, by using [[glob|extglob]]'s more advanced pattern matching:
Line 14: Line 16:
Bash can do the same thing, but without the need for a throw-away variable, by using [[glob|extglob]]'s more advanced pattern matching:
Line 18: Line 19:
   var="${var##*( )}" # trim the left
   var="${var%%*( )}" # trim the right
   var=${var##*( )} # trim the left
   var=${var%%*( )} # trim the right
Line 21: Line 22:
Here's one that only works for whitespace. It relies on the fact that `read` strips all leading and trailing whitespace (tab or space character) when `IFS` isn't set:
Line 22: Line 24:
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:
Line 29: Line 30:
Bash can do something similar with a "here string":
Line 30: Line 32:
Bash can do something similar with a "here string":
Line 35: Line 36:
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. 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 (which will also be stripped from the beginning and end of the variable with the default value of IFS).
Line 38: Line 39:
Line 43: Line 45:
(where `[[:space:]]` includes space, tab and all other horizontal and vertical spacing characters, the list of which varies with the current [[locale]]).
Line 45: Line 48:
Line 49: Line 53:
This solution isn't restricted to whitespace like the first few were. You can remove leading zeroes as well:
Line 50: Line 55:
This solution isn't restricted to whitespace like the first few were. You can remove leading zeroes as well:
Line 56: Line 60:
Another way to remove leading zeroes from a number in bash is to treat it as a decimal integer, in a [[ArithmeticExpression|math context]]:
Line 57: Line 62:
Another way to remove leading zeroes from a number in bash is to treat it as an integer, in a [[ArithmeticExpression|math context]]:
Line 61: Line 65:
   # However, this fails if x contains anything other than digits.    # However, this fails if x contains anything other than decimal digits.
Line 63: Line 67:
If you need to remove leading zeroes in a POSIX shell, you can use a loop:
Line 64: Line 69:
If you need to remove leading zeroes in a POSIX shell, you can use a loop:
Line 74: Line 78:
Or this trick (covered in more detail in [[BashFAQ/100|FAQ #100]]):
Line 75: Line 80:
Or this trick (covered in more detail in [[BashFAQ/100|FAQ #100]]):
Line 79: Line 83:
   var=${var#$zeroes}    var=${var#"$zeroes"}
Line 81: Line 85:
There are many, many other ways to do this, using sed for instance:
Line 82: Line 87:
There are many, many other ways to do this, using sed for instance:
Line 85: Line 89:
   x=$(echo "$x" | sed -e 's/^[[:space:]]*//' -e 's/[[:space:]]*$//')    x=$(printf '%s\n' "$x" | sed -e 's/^[[:space:]]*//' -e 's/[[:space:]]*$//')

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.

For simple variables, you can trim whitespace (or other characters) using this trick:

   # POSIX
   junk=${var##*[! ]}   # match prefixed spaces
   var=${var%"$junk"}    # trim the match
   junk=${var%%[! ]*}   # match affixed spaces
   var=${var#"$junk"}    # trim the match

Bash can do the same thing, but without the need for a throw-away variable, by using extglob's more advanced pattern matching:

   # Bash
   shopt -s extglob
   var=${var##*( )}   # trim the left
   var=${var%%*( )}   # trim the right

Here's one that only works for whitespace. It relies on the fact that read strips all leading and trailing whitespace (tab or space character) 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 (which will also be stripped from the beginning and end of the variable with the default value of IFS).

Here's a solution using extglob together with parameter expansion:

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

(where [[:space:]] includes space, tab and all other horizontal and vertical spacing characters, the list of which varies with the current locale).

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

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

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)}

Another way to remove leading zeroes from a number in bash is to treat it as a decimal integer, in a math context:

   # Bash
   x=$((10#$x))
   # However, this fails if x contains anything other than decimal digits.

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

Or this trick (covered in more detail in FAQ #100):

   # POSIX
   zeroes=${var%%[!0]*}
   var=${var#"$zeroes"}

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

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

Solutions based on external programs like sed are better suited to trimming large files, rather than shell variables.

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