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Full Discussion: Command option substitution?
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Command option substitution? Post 303009130 by Scrutinizer on Saturday 9th of December 2017 05:35:15 AM
Old 12-09-2017
Here documents require that EOF is at the start of the on a separate line and that is the only text on the line, so using you code as an example, you would need something like this
Code:
    cat <<EOF
echo some stupid text 
EOF

Alternatively you could use a here-string

Passing a function is possible with bash through an export of the function, but can this easily become a security risk, so imho is best avoided.

For passing text to a sub process you can use a named pipe if you just want it to display the message,
or use bash 4's coproc functionality for a two-way pipe.

Last edited by Scrutinizer; 12-09-2017 at 07:09 AM..
 

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VIEWPERL(1)							   User Commands						       VIEWPERL(1)

NAME
viewperl - quickly view syntax highlighted Perl code SYNOPSIS
viewperl [OPTION]... FILE... DESCRIPTION
View a Perl source code file, syntax highlighted. -c, --code=CODE view CODE, syntax highlighted -l, --lines display line numbers -L, --no-lines supress display of line numbers (default) -m, --module=FILE consider FILE the name of a module, not a file name -n, --name display the name of each file (default) -N, --no-name supress display of file names (implied by --no-reset) -p, --pod display inline POD documentation (default) -P, --no-pod hide POD documentation (line numbers still increment) -r, --reset reset formatting and line numbers each file (default) -R, --no-reset supress resetting of formatting and line numbers -s, --shift=WIDTH set tab width (default is 4) -t, --tabs translate tabs into spaces (default) -T, --no-tabs supress translating of tabs into spaces --help display this help and exit Note that module names should be given as they would appear after a Perl `use' or `require' statement. `Getopt::Long', for example. Each string given using -c is considered a different file, so line number and formatting resets will apply. View a Perl source code file, syntax highlighted. -c, --code=CODE view CODE, syntax highlighted -l, --lines display line numbers -L, --no-lines supress display of line numbers (default) -m, --module=FILE consider FILE the name of a module, not a file name -n, --name display the name of each file (default) -N, --no-name supress display of file names (implied by --no-reset) -p, --pod display inline POD documentation (default) -P, --no-pod hide POD documentation (line numbers still increment) -r, --reset reset formatting and line numbers each file (default) -R, --no-reset supress resetting of formatting and line numbers -s, --shift=WIDTH set tab width (default is 4) -t, --tabs translate tabs into spaces (default) -T, --no-tabs supress translating of tabs into spaces --help display this help and exit Note that module names should be given as they would appear after a Perl `use' or `require' statement. `Getopt::Long', for example. Each string given using -c is considered a different file, so line number and formatting resets will apply. viewperl August 2007 VIEWPERL(1)
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