By default, the internal field separator IFS is set to space, linefeed, and tab. By changing that in your script, you can maintain the spaces. Try this
I'm sure there are better ways to reset IFS but I've been doing it this way for so long...I have forgotten why.
Please Help!!
Here is a very simplistic example of what I am trying to accomplish.
I need what I have inbetween the quotes to be read into the shell variable.
x="This is fun"
echo $x
The results of x from the above expression is:
This is fun
Notice the unix takes out the... (1 Reply)
Hi All,
I have a script that reads a file and echo it back to std out.
Test.txt
1aaaaaaaaaaa .
The script is ReadLine.sh
#!/bin/ksh
cat $1 | while read file
do
echo $file
done
I invoke the script as ReadLine.sh Test.txt
The output that I get is (1 Reply)
Hi
I am trouble parsing through a file with spaces in the filename. I need to grab "supportIDPS/SCM/windows_install/file groups/dds.fgl" and then do a md5sum on it. I am using sh.
Any help is appreciated.
Here is an example of the input file:
7eedbc9f7902bf4c1878d9e571addf9a ... (4 Replies)
I want to be able to read in input which contain spaces and put that into an array. Each field should be delimeted by a space and should be a different array element. However I cant get it to work. any tips?
read input
//type field1 field2 field3
echo "$input"
array="$input"
Thanks in... (11 Replies)
Hi,
I am reading data from a variable which has spaces in it. I want to get the data after first space, i.e. if my data line is "My Name is Ashish...", I want the data returned as "Name is Ashish". I am using #!/bin/sh shell. Please help me with the code to read the complete data after first... (8 Replies)
Hi,
I have a test.txt and would like to put in a different file but while putting in the other file, blank spaces are missing.
$ indicates blank spaces
filename: test.txt:
USA$$$840$$$$
Desired output
USA$$$840$$$$
Current output as per the following code.
while read j;
do... (3 Replies)
consider the small piece of code
while read line
do
echo $line
done < example
content of example file
sadasdasdasdsa erwerewrwr ergdgdfgf rgerg erwererwr
the output is like
sadasdasdasdsa erwerewrwr ergdgdfgf rgerg erwererwr
the... (4 Replies)
I have a csv file called template.csv which has the following data
Name, Age, Height
Jessica Jesse, 18, 150
Now what I want to do is use a shell script to read the name age and height which looks like this:
#!bin/sh
INPUT='template.csv
while read Name Age Height
do
echo... (2 Replies)
Hello
I've got a certain no. of files in a directory whose names I'm reading and redirecting into a temporary text file using the command below:
ls -l | grep ^- | awk '{print $9}'However, whenever the file names contain spaces the above command considers only the part of the file name up to... (5 Replies)
Hi I want to know how to handle the spaces in the below scenario.
I have a file (CON_zip_path_1.txt) which has some directory paths with spaces in directory names . My requirement is to unzip these zip files to
another path. Please see the code below and the error.
CON_zip_path_1.txt... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: paul1234
4 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
plan9-read
CAT(1) General Commands Manual CAT(1)NAME
cat, read, nobs - catenate files
SYNOPSIS
cat [ file ... ]
read [ -m ] [ -n nline ] [ file ... ]
nobs [ file ... ]
DESCRIPTION
Cat reads each file in sequence and writes it on the standard output. Thus
cat file
prints a file and
cat file1 file2 >file3
concatenates the first two files and places the result on the third.
If no file is given, cat reads from the standard input. Output is buffered in blocks matching the input.
Read copies to standard output exactly one line from the named file, default standard input. It is useful in interactive rc(1) scripts.
The -m flag causes it to continue reading and writing multiple lines until end of file; -n causes it to read no more than nline lines.
Read always executes a single write for each line of input, which can be helpful when preparing input to programs that expect line-at-a-
time data. It never reads any more data from the input than it prints to the output.
Nobs copies the named files to standard output except that it removes all backspace characters and the characters that precede them. It is
useful to use as $PAGER with the Unix version of man(1) when run inside a win (see acme(1)) window.
SOURCE
/src/cmd/cat.c
/src/cmd/read.c
/bin/nobs
SEE ALSO cp(1)DIAGNOSTICS
Read exits with status eof on end of file or, in the -n case, if it doesn't read nlines lines.
BUGS
Beware of and which destroy input files before reading them.
CAT(1)