bash : how can I used regex into xargs command [duplicate]
Let's say, you have a Bash alias
like:
alias rxvt='urxvt'
which works fine.
However:
alias rxvt='urxvt -fg '#111111' -bg '#111111''
won't work, and neither will:
alias rxvt='urxvt -fg \'#111111\' -bg \'#111111\''
So how do you end up matching up opening and closing quotes inside a string once you have escaped quotes?
alias rxvt='urxvt -fg'\''#111111'\'' -bg '\''#111111'\''
seems ungainly although it would represent the same string if you're allowed to concatenate them like that.
Solution 1:
If you really want to use single quotes in the outermost layer, remember that you can glue both kinds of quotation. Example:
alias rxvt='urxvt -fg '"'"'#111111'"'"' -bg '"'"'#111111'"'"
# ^^^^^ ^^^^^ ^^^^^ ^^^^
# 12345 12345 12345 1234
Explanation of how '"'"'
is interpreted as just '
:
-
'
End first quotation which uses single quotes. -
"
Start second quotation, using double-quotes. -
'
Quoted character. -
"
End second quotation, using double-quotes. -
'
Start third quotation, using single quotes.
If you do not place any whitespaces between (1) and (2), or between (4) and (5), the shell will interpret that string as a one long word.
Solution 2:
I always just replace each embedded single quote with the sequence: '\''
(that is: quote backslash quote quote) which closes the string, appends an escaped single quote and reopens the string.
I often whip up a "quotify" function in my Perl scripts to do this for me. The steps would be:
s/'/'\\''/g # Handle each embedded quote
$_ = qq['$_']; # Surround result with single quotes.
This pretty much takes care of all cases.
Life gets more fun when you introduce eval
into your shell-scripts. You essentially have to re-quotify everything again!
For example, create a Perl script called quotify containing the above statements:
#!/usr/bin/perl -pl
s/'/'\\''/g;
$_ = qq['$_'];
then use it to generate a correctly-quoted string:
$ quotify
urxvt -fg '#111111' -bg '#111111'
result:
'urxvt -fg '\''#111111'\'' -bg '\''#111111'\'''
which can then be copy/pasted into the alias command:
alias rxvt='urxvt -fg '\''#111111'\'' -bg '\''#111111'\'''
(If you need to insert the command into an eval, run the quotify again:
$ quotify
alias rxvt='urxvt -fg '\''#111111'\'' -bg '\''#111111'\'''
result:
'alias rxvt='\''urxvt -fg '\''\'\'''\''#111111'\''\'\'''\'' -bg '\''\'\'''\''#111111'\''\'\'''\'''\'''
which can be copy/pasted into an eval:
eval 'alias rxvt='\''urxvt -fg '\''\'\'''\''#111111'\''\'\'''\'' -bg '\''\'\'''\''#111111'\''\'\'''\'''\'''
Solution 3:
Since Bash 2.04 syntax $'string'
allows a limit set of escapes.
Since Bash 4.4, $'string'
also allows the full set of C-style escapes, making the behavior differ slightly in $'string'
in previous versions. (Previously the $('string')
form could be used.)
Simple example in Bash 2.04 and newer:
$> echo $'aa\'bb'
aa'bb
$> alias myvar=$'aa\'bb'
$> alias myvar
alias myvar='aa'\''bb'
In your case:
$> alias rxvt=$'urxvt -fg \'#111111\' -bg \'#111111\''
$> alias rxvt
alias rxvt='urxvt -fg '\''#111111'\'' -bg '\''#111111'\'''
Common escaping sequences works as expected:
\' single quote
\" double quote
\\ backslash
\n new line
\t horizontal tab
\r carriage return
Below is copy+pasted related documentation from man bash
(version 4.4):
Words of the form $'string' are treated specially. The word expands to string, with backslash-escaped characters replaced as specified by the ANSI C standard. Backslash escape sequences, if present, are decoded as follows:
\a alert (bell)
\b backspace
\e
\E an escape character
\f form feed
\n new line
\r carriage return
\t horizontal tab
\v vertical tab
\\ backslash
\' single quote
\" double quote
\? question mark
\nnn the eight-bit character whose value is the octal
value nnn (one to three digits)
\xHH the eight-bit character whose value is the hexadecimal
value HH (one or two hex digits)
\uHHHH the Unicode (ISO/IEC 10646) character whose value is
the hexadecimal value HHHH (one to four hex digits)
\UHHHHHHHH the Unicode (ISO/IEC 10646) character whose value
is the hexadecimal value HHHHHHHH (one to eight
hex digits)
\cx a control-x character
The expanded result is single-quoted, as if the dollar sign had not been present.
See Quotes and escaping: ANSI C like strings on bash-hackers.org wiki for more details. Also note that "Bash Changes" file (overview here) mentions a lot for changes and bug fixes related to the $'string'
quoting mechanism.
According to unix.stackexchange.com How to use a special character as a normal one? it should work (with some variations) in bash, zsh, mksh, ksh93 and FreeBSD and busybox sh.
Solution 4:
I don't see the entry on his blog (link pls?) but according to the gnu reference manual:
Enclosing characters in single quotes (‘'’) preserves the literal value of each character within the quotes. A single quote may not occur between single quotes, even when preceded by a backslash.
so bash won't understand:
alias x='y \'z '
however, you can do this if you surround with double quotes:
alias x="echo \'y "
> x
> 'y