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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Files test How to recover a specific variable Post 302981918 by rovf on Wednesday 21st of September 2016 08:27:17 AM
Old 09-21-2016
Quote:
Originally Posted by Arnaudh78
Thank for your reply, I use #!/bin/bash, So I work in Bash ? I'm beginner, I'm open at all.what do you recommend?
This depends on how you invoke your script.

If the script as executable rights, and you invoke it by typing the script name, the #! line defines, which language processor will be used to run your script. In your case, it is the bash executable stored in the /bin directory.

Alternatively, you can invoke the language processor to be used explicitly from the command line. For instance, if I write bash myfile, the file myfile should better be a bash script (and not zsh or ksh or awk....), as it will be executed under bash. The same applies to other languages - zsh, perl, ruby, ....

Now as for the recommendation. It is difficult to give a recommendation without starting a language war, because most programmers seem to be very picky when it comes to choosing one language over another, and everyone has his favorite pet, so note that I give here only my personal opinion, and others might advice you differently.

As for shell programming, after having had long experience with bash and a little bit experience with ksh, csh and tcsh, I turned to zsh, because I found that quite a few things are simpler to do in zsh than in the other languages. I yet have to see something which is easier to do in bash than in zsh (there must be something). The main drawback of zsh is that fewer people use it, so if you get stuck, you might have to search longer for someone to help. However, I got every zsh question answered by someone so far.

As second language, I tend to use Ruby (after having collected experience with awk, Perl, Python and Tcl), because I found it more expressive than the others and much easier to learn.

Of course one thing to consider it, where your script will run, and how much control you have on the software at the target machine. If I know that there is no zsh installed on the target machine, and I don't even have an account there, it would not be wise to deliver a zsh script. Having said this, even when using bash, you should make sure that you either develop your scripts with the same bash version than the one available on the target host, or write your scripts in a way that they will likely run under each version. This might turn out to be difficult, in particular for someone who doesn't have much experience yet.

If you run your programs only on your own machine, it is up to you what tools you choose.
 

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NPX(1)                                                             User Commands                                                            NPX(1)

NAME
npx - execute npm package binaries SYNOPSIS
npx [options] <command>[@version] [command-arg]... npx [options] [-p|--package <pkg>]... <command> [command-arg]... npx [options] -c '<command-string>' npx --shell-auto-fallback [shell] INSTALL
npm install -g npx DESCRIPTION
Executes <command> either from a local node_modules/.bin, or from a central cache, installing any packages needed in order for <command> to run. By default, npx will check whether <command> exists in $PATH, or in the local project binaries, and execute that. If <command> is not found, it will be installed prior to execution. Unless a --package option is specified, npx will try to guess the name of the binary to invoke depending on the specifier provided. All package specifiers understood by npm may be used with npx, including git specifiers, remote tarballs, local directories, or scoped pack- ages. If a full specifier is included, or if --package is used, npx will always use a freshly-installed, temporary version of the package. This can also be forced with the --ignore-existing flag. o -p, --package <package> - define the package to be installed. This defaults to the value of <command>. This is only needed for packages with multiple binaries if you want to call one of the other executables, or where the binary name does not match the package name. If this option is provided <command> will be executed as-is, without interpreting @version if it's there. Multiple --package options may be provided, and all the packages specified will be installed. o --no-install - If passed to npx, it will only try to run <command> if it already exists in the current path or in $prefix/node_mod- ules/.bin. It won't try to install missing commands. o --cache <path> - set the location of the npm cache. Defaults to npm's own cache settings. o --userconfig <path> - path to the user configuration file to pass to npm. Defaults to whatever npm's current default is. o -c <string> - Execute <string> inside an npm run-script-like shell environment, with all the usual environment variables available. Only the first item in <string> will be automatically used as <command>. Any others must use -p. o --shell <string> - The shell to invoke the command with, if any. o --shell-auto-fallback [<shell>] - Generates shell code to override your shell's "command not found" handler with one that calls npx. Tries to figure out your shell, or you can pass its name (either bash, fish, or zsh) as an option. See below for how to install. o --ignore-existing - If this flag is set, npx will not look in $PATH, or in the current package's node_modules/.bin for an existing ver- sion before deciding whether to install. Binaries in those paths will still be available for execution, but will be shadowed by any pack- ages requested by this install. o -q, --quiet - Suppressed any output from npx itself (progress bars, error messages, install reports). Subcommand output itself will not be silenced. o -n, --node-arg - Extra node argument to supply to node when binary is a node script. You can supply this option multiple times to add more arguments. o -v, --version - Show the current npx version. EXAMPLES
Running a project-local bin $ npm i -D webpack $ npx webpack ... One-off invocation without local installation $ npm rm webpack $ npx webpack -- ... $ cat package.json ...webpack not in "devDependencies"... Invoking a command from a github repository $ npx github:piuccio/cowsay ...or... $ npx git+ssh://my.hosted.git:cowsay.git#semver:^1 ...etc... Execute a full shell command using one npx call w/ multiple packages $ npx -p lolcatjs -p cowsay -c 'echo "$npm_package_name@$npm_package_version" | cowsay | lolcatjs' ... _____ < your-cool-package@1.2.3 > ----- ^__^ (oo)\_______ (__) )/ ||----w | || || Run node binary with --inspect $ npx --node-arg=--inspect cowsay Debugger listening on ws://127.0.0.1:9229/.... Specify a node version to run npm scripts (or anything else!) npx -p node@8 npm run build SHELL AUTO FALLBACK
You can configure npx to run as your default fallback command when you type something in the command line with an @ but the command is not found. This includes installing packages that were not found in the local prefix either. For example: $ npm@4 --version (stderr) npm@4 not found. Trying with npx... 4.6.1 $ asdfasdfasf zsh: command not found: asfdasdfasdf Currently, zsh, bash (>= 4), and fish are supported. You can access these completion scripts using npx --shell-auto-fallback <shell>. To install permanently, add the relevant line below to your ~/.bashrc, ~/.zshrc, ~/.config/fish/config.fish, or as needed. To install just for the shell session, simply run the line. You can optionally pass through --no-install when generating the fallback to prevent it from installing packages if the command is missing. For bash@>=4: $ source <(npx --shell-auto-fallback bash) For zsh: $ source <(npx --shell-auto-fallback zsh) For fish: $ source (npx --shell-auto-fallback fish | psub) ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Huge thanks to Kwyn Meagher https://blog.kwyn.io for generously donating the package name in the main npm registry. Previously npx was used for a Tessel board Neopixels library, which can now be found under npx-tessel https://npm.im/npx-tessel. AUTHOR
Written by Kat Marchan https://github.com/zkat. REPORTING BUGS
Please file any relevant issues on Github. https://github.com/zkat/npx LICENSE
This work is released by its authors into the public domain under CC0-1.0. See LICENSE.md for details. SEE ALSO
o npm(1) o npm-run-script(1) o npm-config(7) npx@10.1.1 April 2018 NPX(1)
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