Quick Background:
$ ls src
file1 file2 dir1 dir2 dir3
Script:
#!/bin/bash
for i in src/* ; do
if [ -d "$i" ]; then
echo "$i"
fi
done
Output:
src/dir1
src/dir2
src/dir3
However, I want it to read:
dir1
dir2
dir3
Now I realize I could sed/awk the output to remove "src/" however I am curious to know if there is a better way of going about this. Perhaps using a find + while开发者_如何转开发-loop instead.
Do this instead for the echo
line:
echo $(basename "$i")
No need for forking an external process:
echo "${i##*/}"
It uses the “remove the longest matching prefix” parameter expansion.
The */
is the pattern, so it will delete everything from the beginning of the string up to and including the last slash. If there is no slash in the value of $i
, then it is the same as "$i"
.
This particular parameter expansion is specified in POSIX and is part of the legacy of the original Bourne shell. It is supported in all Bourne-like shells (sh, ash, dash, ksh, bash, zsh, etc.). Many of the feature-rich shells (e.g. ksh, bash, and zsh) have other expansions that can handle even more without involving external processes.
If you do a cd
at the start of the script, it should be reverted when the script exits.
#!/bin/bash
cd src
for i in * ; do
if [ -d "$i" ]; then
echo "$i"
fi
done
Use basename
as:
if [ -d "$i" ]; then
basename "$i"
fi
精彩评论