Difference between revisions of "Echo Command"
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− | To display the value of a variable either use echo or printf command as follows: | + | To display the value of a variable, either use echo or printf command as follows: |
<source lang="bash">echo $varName</source> | <source lang="bash">echo $varName</source> | ||
OR | OR | ||
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==Generating Output With echo command== | ==Generating Output With echo command== | ||
− | Use echo command to display a line of text or variable value. It | + | Use echo command to display a line of text or a variable value. It offers no formatting option. It is good a command to display a simple output. |
===echo Command Examples=== | ===echo Command Examples=== | ||
<source lang="bash">#!/bin/bash | <source lang="bash">#!/bin/bash |
Revision as of 02:11, 8 October 2009
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To display the value of a variable, either use echo or printf command as follows:
echo $varName
OR
printf "%s\n" $varName
Generating Output With echo command
Use echo command to display a line of text or a variable value. It offers no formatting option. It is good a command to display a simple output.
echo Command Examples
#!/bin/bash
# Display welcome message, computer name and date
echo "*** Backup Shell Script ***"
echo
echo "*** Run time: $(date) @ $(hostname)"
echo
# Define variables
BACKUP="/nas05"
NOW=$(date +"%d-%m-%Y")
# Let us start backup
echo "*** Dumping MySQL Database to $BACKUP/$NOW..."
# Just sleep for 3 secs
sleep 3
# And we are done...
echo
echo "*** Backup wrote to $BACKUP/$NOW/latest.tar.gz"
Printing file names with echo
You can also print the file names using wildcards and echo command:
cd /etc
echo *.conf
Sample outputs:
aatv.conf adduser.conf apg.conf argus.conf atool.conf brltty.conf ca-certificates.conf chkrootkit.conf cowpoke.conf cvs-cron.conf cvs-pserver.conf dconf.conf dconf-custom.conf debconf.conf deluser.conf .... ... .. wodim.conf wpa_supplicant.conf wvdial.conf xorg.conf
Generating Output With printf command
printf command format and display data on screen. However, printf does not provide a new line. You need to provide format string using % directives and escapes to format numeric and string arguments in a way that is mostly similar to the C printf() function. Use printf to generate formatted output.
printf Format Directives
From the printf man page:
FORMAT controls the output as in C printf. Interpreted sequences are: \" double quote \NNN character with octal value NNN (1 to 3 digits) \\ backslash \a alert (BEL) \b backspace \c produce no further output \f form feed \n new line \r carriage return \t horizontal tab \v vertical tab \xHH byte with hexadecimal value HH (1 to 2 digits) \uHHHH Unicode (ISO/IEC 10646) character with hex value HHHH (4 digits) \UHHHHHHHH Unicode character with hex value HHHHHHHH (8 digits) %% a single % %b ARGUMENT as a string with '\' escapes interpreted, except that octal escapes are of the form \0 or \0NNN and all C format specifications ending with one of diouxXfeEgGcs, with ARGUMENTs converted to proper type first. Variable widths are handled.
Format control string syntax is as follows:
printf "%w.pL\n" $varName
Where,
- w - Minimum field width.
- p - Display number of digits after the decimal point (precision).
- L - a conversion character. It can be:
- s - String
- d - Integer
- e - Exponential
- f - Floating point
printf Command Examples
Type the following at a shell prompt:
vech="Car"
printf "%s\n" $vech
printf "%1s\n" $vech
printf "%1.1s\n" $vech
printf "%1.2s\n" $vech
printf "%1.3s\n" $vech
printf "%10.3s\n" $vech
printf "%10.1s\n" $vech
no=10
printf "%d\n" $no
big=5355765613
printf "%e\n" $no
printf "%5.2e\n" $no