On 02/02/2022 08:54 PM, H wrote:
On 01/31/2022 09:59 PM, H wrote:
On 01/30/2022 11:00 PM, Orion Poplawski wrote:
On 1/30/22 18:12, H wrote:
I am writing a long bash script under CentOS 7 where perl is used for manipulating some external files. So far I am using perl one-liners to do so but ran into a problem when I need to append text to an external file.
Here is a simplified example in the bash script where txt is a bash variable which I built containing a longish text with multiple newlines:
txt="a b$'\n'cd ef$'\n'g h$'\n'ij kl"
A simplified perl one-liner to append the text in the variable above to some file in the bash script would be:
perl -pe 'eof && do{print $_'"${txt}"'; exit}' someexternalfile.txt
This works when fine when $txt does /not/ contain any spaces but falls apart when it does.
I would like to keep the above structure, ie using bash variables to build text strings and one-liners to do the text manipulation. Hopefully there is a "simple" solution to do this, I have tried many variations and failed miserably... Note that I also want to use a similar pattern to do substitutions in external files, I would thus like to use the same code pattern.
I don't understand why:
echo -e $txt >> someexternalfile.txt
doesn't do what you want, or if perl is absolutely what you need:
perl -e "print "${txt}";" >> someexternalfile.txt
I have no idea if you are trying to output literal $'s or 's or not.
Thank you, it works! I had forgotten to escape the quotes around my bash variable...
I am still having a problem. The following (where $txt is an arbitrary string) works:
perl -e 'print '""${txt}""';'
The following does not work (I want to append the content of the $txt to the end of an existing file in-place):
perl -i -pe 'eof && do{print $_''"aaa"''; exit}' somefile.txt
but this does:
perl -i -pe "eof && do{print $_"""${txt}""'; exit}' somefile.txt
as does:
perl -i -pe "eof && do{print $_"""${txt}"""; exit}" somefile.txt
The difference is that the last two perl command strings use " rather than '.
My questions are:
Why would not using single-quotes for parts of the perl command string work?
Is there any reason I should fight this or should I just go with double-quotes for all parts of the perl command string? Any downside? Remember, these are all in bash scripts and I am looking for a "pattern" to use for other, more complicated text substitutions, hence the use of perl.
Thank you!
I see I made a mistake, the line:
perl -i -pe 'eof && do{print $_''"aaa"''; exit}' somefile.txt
should be:
perl -i -pe 'eof && do{print $_''"${txt}"''; exit}' somefile.txt
Related question, if the $txt string contains eg $ or another special character, what would be the best way of escaping it so it is not substituted by perl?
Thank you.