Bash
Contents
Attention Feminazis
If you are an overzealous feminist and seek documentation for the Bourne Again Shell, type
man bash
at the prompt. (rimshot)
Programming
See also the BASH Programming - Introduction HOWTO.
For
Bash for loops are a little tricky. The general form is
for i in *; do echo item: $i done
That's how to run a command for every (normal) file in the directory. (Note that for i in $( ls * ) doesn't work the same way, since the list would be the words in the output instead of the lines.) If you want to make an array yourself, instead of using the words output a program, that's
for i in {alpha,beta,gamma}; do echo item: $i done
Using sed
You can strip an extension off of a filename in a variable by doing
$( echo -n $FILENAME | sed "s/\\.png$//" )
Startup files
See shell startup scripts for what to put in these files.
You generally have a choice between .bashrc (see also rc file), .bash_profile, .profile, /etc/profile, et cetera. Here's the gist of what the man basher has to say:
As a login shell
Running as a login shell, bash will always source /etc/profile (if it exists). Then, it selects the first readable file in this order and sources it:
- ~/.bash_profile
- ~/.bash_login
- ~/.profile
Starting login bash with --noprofile
makes it skip both /etc/profile and the local profiles.
Incidentally, bash will source ~/.bash_logout upon your logout if it exists.
As a non-login shell
Running as a non-login shell, bash will run ~/.bashrc if it exists. --norc
will make it skip the rc file altogether; --rcfile filename
will make it source another file instead of ~/.bashrc.