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136 lines
4.1 KiB
Markdown
136 lines
4.1 KiB
Markdown
# Print a horizontal line
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---- dataentry snipplet ---- snipplet_tags: terminal, line
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LastUpdate_dt: 2010-07-31 Contributors: Jan Schampera, prince_jammys,
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ccsalvesen, others type: snipplet
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
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The purpose of this small code collection is to show some code that
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draws a horizontal line using as less external tools as possible (it's
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not a big deal to do it with AWK or Perl, but with pure or nearly-pure
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Bash it gets more interesting).
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In general, you should be able to use this code to repeat any character
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or character sequence.
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## The simple way: Just print it
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Not a miracle, just to be complete here.
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``` bash
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printf '%s\n' --------------------
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```
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## The iterative way
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This one simply loops 20 times, always draws a dash, finally a newline
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``` bash
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for ((x = 0; x < 20; x++)); do
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printf %s -
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done
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echo
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```
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## The simple printf way
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This one uses the `printf` command to print an **empty** field with a
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**minimum field width** of 20 characters. The text is padded with
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spaces, since there is no text, you get 20 spaces. The spaces are then
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converted to `-` by the `tr` command.
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``` bash
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printf '%20s\n' | tr ' ' -
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```
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whitout an external command, using the (non-POSIX) substitution
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expansion and `-v` option:
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``` bash
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printf -v res %20s
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printf '%s\n' "${res// /-}"
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```
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## A line across the entire width of the terminal
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This is a variant of the above that uses `tput cols` to find the width
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of the terminal and set that number as the minimum field witdh.
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``` bash
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printf '%*s\n' "${COLUMNS:-$(tput cols)}" '' | tr ' ' -
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```
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## The more advanced printf way
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This one is a bit tricky. The format for the `printf` command is `%.0s`,
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which specified a field with the **maximum** length of **zero**. After
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this field, `printf` is told to print a dash. You might remember that
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it's the nature of `printf` to repeat, if the number of conversion
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specifications is less than the number of given arguments. With brace
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expansion `{1..20}`, 20 arguments are given (you could easily write
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`1 2 3 4 ... 20`, of course!). Following happens: The **zero-length
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field** plus the dash is repeated 20 times. A zero length field is,
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naturally, invisible. What you see is the dash, repeated 20 times.
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``` bash
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# Note: you might see that as ''%.s'', which is a (less documented) shorthand for ''%.0s''
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printf '%.0s-' {1..20}; echo
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```
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If the 20 is variable, you can use [eval](../commands/builtin/eval.md) to
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insert the expansion (take care that using `eval` is potentially
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dangerous if you evaluate external data):
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``` bash
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eval printf %.0s- '{1..'"${COLUMNS:-$(tput cols)}"\}; echo
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```
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Or restrict the length to 1 and prefix the arguments with the desired
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character.
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``` bash
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eval printf %.1s '-{1..'"${COLUMNS:-$(tput cols)}"\}; echo
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```
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You can also do it the crazy ormaaj way™ following basically the same
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principle as this [string reverse
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example](../commands/builtin/eval.md#expansion_side-effects). It completely
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depends on Bash due to its brace expansion evaluation order and array
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parameter parsing details. As above, the eval only inserts the COLUMNS
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expansion into the expression and isn't involved in the rest, other
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than to put the `_` value into the environment of the `_[0]` expansion.
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This works well since we\'re not creating one set of arguments and then
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editing or deleting them to create another as in the previous examples.
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``` bash
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_=- command eval printf %s '"${_[0]"{0..'"${COLUMNS:-$(tput cols)}"'}"}"'; echo
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```
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## The parameter expansion way
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Preparing enough dashes in advance, we can then use a non-POSIX
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subscript expansion:
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``` bash
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hr=---------------------------------------------------------------\
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----------------------------------------------------------------
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printf '%s\n' "${hr:0:${COLUMNS:-$(tput cols)}}"
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```
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A more flexible approach, and also using modal terminal line-drawing
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characters instead of hyphens:
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``` bash
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hr() {
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local start=$'\e(0' end=$'\e(B' line='qqqqqqqqqqqqqqqq'
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local cols=${COLUMNS:-$(tput cols)}
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while ((${#line} < cols)); do line+="$line"; done
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printf '%s%s%s\n' "$start" "${line:0:cols}" "$end"
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}
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```
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## Related articles
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- [printf](../commands/builtin/printf.md)
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