Seriously. There doesn’t seem to be a way to do this. Every thing I ever try I just get bad substitution errors. The internet is full of people posting code that’s supposed to compare file extensions but none of it works. I’ve spent all morning trying everything I could find. I already gave up and I’m making this progeam in python instead but now I’m curious. How tf do you actually compare file extensions? If I have a folder fill of files and I want to run a command only on the png files, there seems to be no way to actually do this.
If someone posts “[[ $file == *.txt ]]” I’m going to fucking scream because THAT DOES NOT WORK. IT’S NOT VAILD BASH CODE.
File extensions are just a text based convention. Renaming a file to end in .PDF does not make the file a valid PDF.
You’re really saying there’s no way for a posix shell to take the text to the right of the last “.” character and then do simple string comparison on the result?
Also why can’t you just use normal globbing to feed arguments to your command? Why do you need to involve flow control?
That works in bash 3.2 for me. So does this:
[[ $file = *.txt ]]
Maybe, the error is somewhere else in your code.
I loved this comment:
What is the extension of the file xyzzy.tar.gz? Or plugh.cfg.saved? In other words, are you treating extension as a simple technical issue or a semantic one?
For an OS that does not have file “extensions”, it’s entirely up to the user to define whatever it is that they are trying to accomplish.
for i in ``ls *.png``; do something $i; done;
(not formatting correctly)
Is this sort of what you mean? You can tune the loop, but essentially you build a list of the files you want to do something against, then loop through it.
What’s the benefit of spawning a subshell and executing “ls” here instead of just passing a glob to your loop?
$ for lol in /usr/share/*.lm;do printf "I found a file named '%s'\n" "$lol";done I found a file named '/usr/share/out-go.lm' I found a file named '/usr/share/ragel.lm' I found a file named '/usr/share/ril.lm' I found a file named '/usr/share/rlhc-c.lm' I found a file named '/usr/share/rlhc-crack.lm' I found a file named '/usr/share/rlhc-csharp.lm' I found a file named '/usr/share/rlhc-d.lm' I found a file named '/usr/share/rlhc-go.lm' I found a file named '/usr/share/rlhc-java.lm' I found a file named '/usr/share/rlhc-js.lm' I found a file named '/usr/share/rlhc-julia.lm' I found a file named '/usr/share/rlhc-main.lm' I found a file named '/usr/share/rlhc-ocaml.lm' I found a file named '/usr/share/rlhc-ruby.lm' I found a file named '/usr/share/rlhc-rust.lm'
The benefit is I get taught something new!
Are you actually using Bash? You might be in a different shell. You can check with
echo $SHELL
Maybe a little more context of what you want to run would help here. Find would work.
find . -name “*.png” -exec whateveryouwanttodohere {} \;
Or you could find, and then pass the arguments to xargs:
find . -name “*.png” -print | xargs whateveryouwanttodohere
ls | grep txt$
will return only files ending “txt”What’s the purpose of a pipe and an execution of “grep” here?
ls
returns a list of files, the pipe passes that list to grep. The grep only returns results that match the string. The
symbol represents an end of line.
That’s my bad, I asked an incomplete question.
What does the approach of spawning a grep process and having ls send ALL of it’s output to grep have over just passing a glob to ls?
Like:
$ ls /usr/share/*.lm /usr/share/out-go.lm /usr/share/ril.lm /usr/share/rlhc-crack.lm /usr/share/rlhc-d.lm /usr/share/rlhc-java.lm /usr/share/rlhc-julia.lm /usr/share/rlhc-ocaml.lm /usr/share/rlhc-rust.lm /usr/share/ragel.lm /usr/share/rlhc-c.lm /usr/share/rlhc-csharp.lm /usr/share/rlhc-go.lm /usr/share/rlhc-js.lm /usr/share/rlhc-main.lm /usr/share/rlhc-ruby.lm
Tbh, I didn’t even realise you could do that. I’m just used to using grep and worked backwards. Thanks for pointing it out.
It would also return non-file objects, like directories
Let’s not forget that Linux filenames are case sensitive, so “.txt” ≠ “.TXT” ≠ “.Txt”
How about instead of starting with a list of all files in the directory, you use
find
to filter just the ones ending in .txt (or .TXT, it’s case insensitive)find $dir -maxdepth 1 -type f -iname "*.txt"
If someone posts “[[ $file == *.txt ]]” I’m going to fucking scream because THAT DOES NOT WORK. IT’S NOT VAILD BASH CODE.
This is valid bash code.
Do you understand how string substitution works? In this example, “file” is the name of a variable, and $file substitutes its value. If you have not set the value of
file
, then it won’t work.Edit: you should, as a rule of thumb, quote your variables. So
"$file"
instead of just$file
. Quoting prevents some weird behavior with whitespace and special characters in the value. But either way, this is valid code and will work in the general case.