CNIT 34010 final exam

Ace your homework & exams now with Quizwiz!

cat file | grep <search term>

"globally regular expression print" filters stuff by your input

get a variable

$var

get a value from an array

${array[n]}

preferred method of string processing

${}

defining a variable

- cannot start w a number can have numbers, alpha, underscores

paste -d"-" animals age

-d delimits, following char is how they are put together outputs dog-6 cat-4

success return code

0

$@

all of the arguments

-a -o

and, or

failed return code

anything not 0

$n

argument as a positive integer

$ (( 5 + 4 ))

arithmetic substitution/outputs 9 lol

!

bang, negates

case "$CMD" in sup*) ;; *) echo cya ;; esac

case statement

tr <input chars> <output chars> < file

changes input to the output

alpha, lower, upper, digit, alnum, cntrl, punct, blank, space

character sets (cntrl: ascii 0-37, del) (blank: tabs and spaces) (space: vertical and horizontal space)

`<command>` or ${<command>}

command substitution 2nd method is best practice

tr '[:lower:]' '[:upper:]' < file

converts to upper case, using character sets

sort file | uniq -c

counts unique words

:=

default value ASSIGNMENT if unset, it becomes this.

:-

default value substitution if unset, original value DOES NOT turn into this

tr -d (ex: tr -d " " < file)

delete characters(in this case: spaces)

-d filename

directory

if [[ <statements> ]]

double bracket test more versatile and familiar with syntax

-eq

equal

\

escape character

!

negate

what does -n do

no execute, reads lines and checks for syntax (debugging)

VAR=${#array[@]}

VAR = length of array

cut -c <chars> <file>

includes the output u tell it to based on the chars/length

[ -n STRING ]

length of string is nonzero

-lt

less than

-le

less than r equal to

sort file | uniq

lists only unique entries(ONLY CONSECUTIVE)

FILES=($(ls))

ls array

FILES=$(ls)

makes ls a string var

[char set]

matches the characters stated one time ex: [a-zA-z] ls Chapter[0-9].doc

expr index <string> <regex>

returns the position of the first matching char in the of the regex in the string

sort -r filename

reverse order

tail -n # filename

same as head but opposite

set +x

shell tracing

if [ <statement> ]

single bracket test not as good as [[ ]]

sort filename

sorts alphabetically

if then elif then else fi

standard if syntax

if then fi

standard if syntax

[ -z STRING ]

string is zero

[ STRING1 = STRING2]

strings are equal (note: dont use -eq or == )

:+

substitute when set ex: echo ${DEBUG:+"Program running in debug mode"}

$0

the name of the script being executed

" and '

they hold shit like spaces

tr

transliterate

A?B[0-9]*)

u can use wildcards/regexes in case statements

delete a variable

unset VAR cannot unset readonly variables

debugging: -v

verbose (prints lines)

*

wildcard (matches 0 or more times)

${string##regex}

LONGEST match to the regex, from the FRONT of the string

expr match <string> '<regex1>\(<regex2>\)<regex3>'

Returns from regex2 from string where: regex1 comes immediately before regex2 regex3 comes immediately after regex1 and/or regex3 can be omitted

debugging: set +n

TURNS DEBUGGING OFFF +n = OFF

debugging: set -n

TURNS DEBUGGING ON -n = ON

-e file

exists

$?

exit status of previous function(0, 1, 2..)

cut -f

field number as separated by the d character cut -c only works on fixed length fields

-f filename

file

[ file1 -nt file2 ]

file1 is newer than file2

[ file1 -ot file2 ]

file1 is older than file2

-s filename

filename exists and size is greater than 0

globbing

filename substitution(* ? [charset])

?

fills in the spot for one character

BASH_REMATCH[0]

first matched result in BASH_REMATCH array

${array[*]}

gets all elements, elements are separated by spaces

${array[@]}

gets all elements, includes elements with spaces

${#string}

gets length of string

who | cut -c1-6

gives you first 6 characters

-gt/-ge

greater than/greater than or equal to

${string/%regex1/regex2}

if regex1 matches BACK of string, replaces it with regex2

-ne

not equal

:?

null value thingy checker, if a value gets unset this msg prints to stderr ${name:?hi wtf}

$#

number of arguments

sort -n filename

numerical order

getopts

parses the command line to find options

String processing - expr and ${}

perform operations on string variables

our regexes are what type??

posix compliant

\$FRED

prints out literally "$FRED"

head -n # filename (ex: head -n 5 mydoc)

prints the first 5 lines of the file

paste file1 file2

puts 2 files together by line

make a variable read only

readonly VAR

[[ $string =~ $REGEX ]]

regex equality/comparison operator

scalar

regular var

sort -u filename

removes duplicates(non consecutive, all output)

shift

removes the next argument from $* and $@

${string/#regex1/regex2}

replaces first match(regex1) to the front of the string with regex2

tr -s (ex: tr -s a i < file)

replaces repeated characters (aa to a)

expr match <string> <regex>

returns LENGTH of matching regex at the beginning of <string>

${string%%regex}

returns LONGEST match from the BACK of the string

expr substr <string> <position> <length>

returns Length characters from string starting at Position

${string%regex}

returns SHORTEST match from the BACK of the string

${string/regex1/regex2}

returns String with the 1st match to regex, replaced by regex2.

${<string>:<position>}

returns remaining substring at position ("helloworld":5)->world

${string#regex}

returns shortest match to regex, starting from the FRONT of the string

${string/regex1//regex2}

returns string with ALL matches to regex1 replaced by regex2


Related study sets

PassPoint - Foundations of Pychiatric Nursing

View Set