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    shell scripting topic

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Ideas and Development
    shellshell scriptprogramming
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    • meleuM
      meleu
      last edited by

      I would like to share a little trick I learned today and also ask for some help...

      First the short story

      I was needing to check if the current hour is after 18h, then I tried this:

      hour=$(date +%H)
      if [[ $hour -gt 18 ]]; then
          echo "do something..."
      fi
      

      And then I got this error (please, forgive the non-english):

      -bash: [[: 08: valor muito grande para esta base de numeração (token de erro é "08")
      

      As you can see, the problem is that date +%H returns 08, and when I try to compare it, bash doesn't see 08 as a decimal number.

      The solution is obviously getting rid of that leading zero. I decided that using sed would be overkill for such a simple task, then I've found a pure bash solution using a feature of $(( )).

      hour=$(date +%H)
      hour=$(( 10#$hour ))  # could also be an oneliner: $(( 10#$(date +%H) ))
      if [[ $hour -gt 18 ]]; then
          echo "do something..."
      fi
      

      And now my script is working perfectly!

      Now the help I mentioned earlier on the beginning of this post...

      On that stackoverflow answer I see this:

      The $(( )) sets up an arithmetic context and the 10# converts the number from base 10 to base 10 causing any leading zeros to be dropped.

      Alright, but I like to see stuff on the official documentation in a hope to learn more tricks. The $(( )) is a bash builtin feature, but in the official documentation there's no mention to the 10# operand.

      Any thoughts on where to get info about it?

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      • SanoS
        Sano @meleu
        last edited by

        @meleu That I can answer !
        Actually it's in the very doc you mention :
        https://www.gnu.org/software/bash/manual/bash.html#Shell-Arithmetic

        Constants with a leading 0 are interpreted as octal numbers. A leading ‘0x’ or ‘0X’ denotes hexadecimal. Otherwise, numbers take the form [base#]n, where the optional base is a decimal number between 2 and 64 representing the arithmetic base, and n is a number in that base. If base# is omitted, then base 10 is used. When specifying n, the digits greater than 9 are represented by the lowercase letters, the uppercase letters, ‘@’, and ‘_’, in that order. If base is less than or equal to 36, lowercase and uppercase letters may be used interchangeably to represent numbers between 10 and 35.

        meleuM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
        • meleuM
          meleu @Sano
          last edited by

          @sano whoops! Didn't catch those little words 😅

          Thanks Sano-san. And yeah, I learned more tricks!

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          • SanoS
            Sano @meleu
            last edited by

            @meleu Just FYI, you could just have used date +%-H ;)
            Glad to see you here again BTW !

            meleuM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
            • meleuM
              meleu @Sano
              last edited by

              @sano ouch! Looks like I need RTFM some more...

              From the date man page:

                     By default, date  pads  numeric  fields  with  zeroes.   The  following
                     optional flags may follow '%':
              
                     -      (hyphen) do not pad the field
              

              Thanks again, Sanso-sensei!

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              • SanoS
                Sano @meleu
                last edited by

                @meleu I really deserve no special credit for this, I just remembered something like this existed, probably had to use it in the past, too :)

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                • cyperghostC
                  cyperghost
                  last edited by cyperghost

                  A common mistake is often made by using grep.
                  It is often told that grep finds a total of all search strings within a text file due the -c switch. That is total nonsense .... -c just counts lines

                  So we miss

                  hello hello hello hello
                  hello
                  
                  grep -c hello
                  2
                  

                  We use a small hack ;)
                  Better is to use the -o option is will show occourences of search string listed in newline and now we pipe to wc -l ... and count lines again - now we catched them all ;)

                  hello hello hello hello
                  hello
                  
                  grep -o hello | wc -l
                  5
                  
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                  • cyperghostC
                    cyperghost
                    last edited by cyperghost

                    @meleu

                    EDIT BEGIN
                    I think I found a good solution with pure bash
                    But maybe some knows a better one ;)

                    val=${#Unix[@]}
                    for ((i=0; i<$val; i+=1)); do
                    

                    EDIT END


                    Is there something that can be made easier (more efficient) than this script?
                    I want to merge two arrys
                    A1=(1 2 3)
                    A2=(one two there)
                    the result should be A3
                    A3=(1 one 2 two 3 three)

                    It works with this script.
                    But first... I want to avoid any counters (if possible)
                    Do you know a nice trick to count up values {0..6} works only with fixed characters not as variable. So {0..6} is fine {0..$arraysize} not

                    #!/bin/bash
                    # A small script to show how to merge two arrays
                    # with alternating values (exp. for creating arrays for dialogs)
                    
                    # Example Array
                    Unix=("Debian" "Red hat" "Ubuntu" "Suse" "Fedora" "UTS" "OpenLinux")
                    Shell=("bash" "csh" "jsh" "rsh" "ksh" "rc" "tcsh")
                    
                    # Check if both arrays got some size
                    [[ ${#Unix[@]} -eq ${#Shell[@]} ]] || exit 1
                    echo "Both arrays got same size -- Proceed"
                    
                    val=$((${#Unix[@]}-1))
                    echo $val
                    for i in $(seq 0 $val); do
                        echo "Merging ${Unix[$i]} and ${Shell[$i]}"
                        UnixShell+=("${Unix[$i]}" "${Shell[$i]}")
                    done
                    
                    echo "${UnixShell[@]}"
                    
                    meleuM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • meleuM
                      meleu @cyperghost
                      last edited by

                      @cyperghost both methods are perfectly valid (using a for to iterate through all items).

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                      • cyperghostC
                        cyperghost @meleu
                        last edited by

                        @meleu thanks for the feedback -- I appreciate it ;)
                        Come on ... take a look in the MAME RoW now - if you have time ;)

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                        • hiulitH
                          hiulit
                          last edited by

                          FYI, I'll release a new version of RetroPie Shell Script Boilerplate soon-ish.

                          This is a template for building shell scripts for RetroPie, with some helper functions, dialogs, etc.

                          My little contributions to the RetroPie project:

                          • Shell-Script-Boilerplate
                          • Fun-Facts-Splashscreens
                          • Limit-Last-Played-Games
                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
                          • hiulitH
                            hiulit
                            last edited by

                            Well, here it is! A new version of RetroPie Shell Script Boilerplate.

                            This is a template for building shell scripts for RetroPie.

                            I've added examples of the following dialog boxes:

                            • --infobox
                            • --yesno
                            • --msgbox
                            • --menu

                            All the dialogs can be found at utils/dialogs.sh

                            I've also moved some functions to utils/base.sh.

                            My little contributions to the RetroPie project:

                            • Shell-Script-Boilerplate
                            • Fun-Facts-Splashscreens
                            • Limit-Last-Played-Games
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