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Mastering Linux Shell Scripting

You're reading from   Mastering Linux Shell Scripting A practical guide to Linux command-line, Bash scripting, and Shell programming

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Product type Paperback
Published in Apr 2018
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781788990554
Length 284 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
Tools
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Authors (2):
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Mokhtar Ebrahim Mokhtar Ebrahim
Author Profile Icon Mokhtar Ebrahim
Mokhtar Ebrahim
Andrew Mallett Andrew Mallett
Author Profile Icon Andrew Mallett
Andrew Mallett
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Toc

Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface 1. The What and Why of Scripting with Bash FREE CHAPTER 2. Creating Interactive Scripts 3. Conditions Attached 4. Creating Code Snippets 5. Alternative Syntax 6. Iterating with Loops 7. Creating Building Blocks with Functions 8. Introducing the Stream Editor 9. Automating Apache Virtual Hosts 10. AWK Fundamentals 11. Regular Expressions 12. Summarizing Logs with AWK 13. A Better lastlog with AWK 14. Using Python as a Bash Scripting Alternative 15. Assessments 16. Other Books You May Enjoy

The IFS

By default, the IFS variable has the value of one of (space, newline, or tab).

Suppose that you have a file like the following and you want to iterate over its lines:

Hello, this is a test 
This is the second line 
And this is the last line 

Let's write the for loop that will iterate over these lines:

#!/bin/bash 
file="file1.txt" 
for var in $(cat $file) 
do 
echo " $var" 
done 

If you check the result, it's something that we don't need:

Since the first separator the shell found is the space, the shell treats every word as a field, but we need every line to be printed as a field.

Here we need to change the IFS variable to be newline instead.

Let's modify our script to iterate over lines correctly:

#!/bin/bash 
file="file1.txt" 
IFS=$'\n'   #Here we change the default IFS to be a newline 
for var in $(cat $file...
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