1.6 KiB
The Missing Semester of your CS education
1. The shell
Create new file:
touch hello.txt
Write to new file / delete everything and write new:
echo 'my_string' > hello.txt
Append to file
echo 'my_string' >> hello.txt
To write two commands at the same time, use |. Also so that the output of the first command is the input to the second.
Write multiline string:
echo -e "Hello \nWorld \n" >> greetings.txt
Given a file with content:
#!/bin/sh
curl --head --silent https://missing.csail.mit.edu
Make it executable and execute it
chmod +x my_file
./my_file
Generally, using ./filename.sh specifies a file in the current directory and using filename.sh specifies a file in the current directory or any directory of PATH. The first usage removes any uncertainty as to which file is accessed. In this case, you are attempting to execute the script with bash or another interpreter (by virtue of assumed #!/bin/bash as first line in your script) just by entering the filename. This usage requires the directory is specified. Alternatively, you can try bash filename.sh which seems to work with unspecified directory.
To find in file:
grep my_string file.txt
Run script, find string in string and output to file
./semester | grep 'my_string' > last-modified.txt
Use grep -o to display only matched pattern, grep -P for regex. See stackoverflow