How to remove all non-numeric characters from a string in Bash?
Example:
file="123 hello"
How can I edit the string file
such that it only contains the numbers and the text part is removed?
So,
echo $file
should print 123
only.
Solution 1:
This is one way with sed
:
$ echo $file | sed 's/[^0-9]*//g'
123
$ echo "123 he23llo" | sed 's/[^0-9]*//g'
12323
Or with pure bash
:
$ echo "${file//[!0-9]/}"
123
$ file="123 hello 12345 aaa"
$ echo "${file//[!0-9]/}"
12312345
To save the result into the variable itself, do
$ file=$(echo $file | sed 's/[^0-9]*//g')
$ echo $file
123
$ file=${file//[!0-9]/}
$ echo $file
123
Solution 2:
You can say:
echo ${file%%[^0-9]*}
However, this runs into problems in certain cases:
$ file="123 file 456"
$ echo ${file%%[^0-9]*}
123
Using tr
:
$ file="123 hello 456"
$ new=$(tr -dc '0-9' <<< $file)
$ echo $new
123456