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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting stripping certain characters in at the middle of a string Post 302194417 by mcoblefias on Monday 12th of May 2008 10:44:55 PM
Old 05-12-2008
stripping certain characters in at the middle of a string

Sorry for that. Let me clarify.
First, i want to get the word "hear" from this string: see@hear|touch
I tried stripping first the left part ("see@") then the right part ("|touch") leaving me with only what i wanted... "hear" but, it took me a couple of lines of codes to do this. Now are there any ways to do it in only a single line of code?

Second, I want to separate each word in the string and put them into separate variables.

from
see@hear|touch|smell

to
string1=see
string2=hear
string3=touch
string4=smell

*removed separators @ and |. btw, i have to use | as a separator as it was the one instructed for me to use.

...can you suggest anything on how to do this with minimal lines of code?

Hope i made it clear enough.Smilie
 

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TR(1)							      General Commands Manual							     TR(1)

NAME
tr - translate characters SYNOPSIS
tr [ -cds ] [ string1 [ string2 ] ] DESCRIPTION
Tr copies the standard input to the standard output with substitution or deletion of selected characters. Input characters found in string1 are mapped into the corresponding characters of string2. When string2 is short it is padded to the length of string1 by duplicat- ing its last character. Any combination of the options -cds may be used: -c complements the set of characters in string1 with respect to the universe of characters whose ASCII codes are 01 through 0377 octal; -d deletes all input characters in string1; -s squeezes all strings of repeated output characters that are in string2 to single characters. In either string the notation a-b means a range of characters from a to b in increasing ASCII order. The character `' followed by 1, 2 or 3 octal digits stands for the character whose ASCII code is given by those digits. A `' followed by any other character stands for that character. The following example creates a list of all the words in `file1' one per line in `file2', where a word is taken to be a maximal string of alphabetics. The second string is quoted to protect `' from the Shell. 012 is the ASCII code for newline. tr -cs A-Za-z '12' <file1 >file2 SEE ALSO
ed(1), ascii(7) BUGS
Won't handle ASCII NUL in string1 or string2; always deletes NUL from input. TR(1)
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