Is there any easy way to "join" the arguments passed to a script? I'd like something similar to $@
, but that passes the arguments at once.
For example, consider the following script:
$/bin/bash
./my_program $@
When called as
./script arg1 arg2 arg3
my_program
will receive the arguments as 3 separated arguments. What I want, is to pass all the arguments a开发者_开发知识库s one argument, joining them — separated by spaces, something like calling:
./my_program arg1\ arg2\ arg3
Use this one:
./my_program "$*"
I've had a pretty similar problem today and came up with code like this (includes sanity checks):
#!/bin/sh
# sanity checks
if [ $# -lt 2 ]; then
echo "USAGE : $0 PATTERN1 [[PATTERN2] [...]]";
echo "EXAMPLE: $0 TODO FIXME";
exit 1;
fi
NEEDLE=$(echo $* | sed -s "s/ /\\\|/g")
grep $NEEDLE . -r --color=auto
This little script lets you search for various words recursively in all files below the current directory. You can use sed to replace your " " (space) delimiter with whatever you like. I replace a space with an escaped pipe: " " -> "\|" The resulting string can be parsed by grep.
Usage
Search for the terms "TODO" and "FIXME":
./script.sh TODO FIXME
You might wonder: Why not simply call grep directly?
grep "TODO\|FIXME" . -r
The answer is that I wanted to do some post-processing with the results in a more advanced script. Therefore I needed be able to compress all passed arguments (patterns) into a single string. And thats the key part here.
Konrad
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