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More on brace expansion.
Updates #116. Thanks also to the suggestion in #1.
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@ -115,9 +115,8 @@ Notes:
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- In Bash, note there are lots of kinds of variable expansion. Checking a variable exists: `${name:?error message}`. For example, if a Bash script requires a single argument, just write `input_file=${1:?usage: $0 input_file}`. Arithmetic expansion: `i=$(( (i + 1) % 5 ))`. Sequences: `{1..10}`. Trimming of strings: `${var%suffix}` and `${var#prefix}`. For example if `var=foo.pdf`, then `echo ${var%.pdf}.txt` prints `foo.txt`.
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- Shell brace expansion can help reduce having to re-type similar text. The command `echo foo{,bar,baz}` will expand to
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`echo foo foobar foobaz`. This is helpful when copying/renaming files such as `cp somefile{,.bak}` which expands to
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`cp somefile somefile.bak` or `mv some_{,absurdly_long_}filename` which expands to `mv some_filename some_absurdly_long_filename`
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- Brace expansion using `{`...`}` can reduce having to re-type similar text and automate combinations of items. This is helpful in examples like `mv foo.{txt,pdf} some-dir` (which moves both files), `cp somefile{,.bak}` (which expands to
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`cp somefile somefile.bak`) or `mkdir -p test-{a,b,c}/subtest-{1,2,3}` (which expands all possible combinations and creates a directory tree).
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- The output of a command can be treated like a file via `<(some command)`. For example, compare local `/etc/hosts` with a remote one:
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```sh
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