I'm trying to write a shell script "echo.by" that echoes its arguments as many times as the user chooses. For example, if the user enters the command line
echo.by 5 Play it again, Sam. <return>
The script should print
Play it again, Sam.
Play it again, Sam.
Play it again, Sam.
Play it again, Sam.
Play it again, Sam.
However, I do not know how to print only Play it again, Sam and exclude the first argument. The $*
command prints everything, so I end up with
5 Play it again, Sam.
5 Play it again, Sam.
5 Play it again, Sam.
5 Play it again, Sam.
5 Play it again, Sam.
My script needs to be able to accommodate any script after the first number, so I can't just tell the shell to echo $2 $3 $4 $5
.
Here is my script:
count = 0
while test $count -lt $1
do
echo $*
count = `expr $count + 1`
done
count = 0
is running the programcount
with arguments=
and0
. If you want to do an assignment, you need to leave out the space:count=0
. Also,((count++))
is much easier to write thancount=$(( count + 1 ))
(again, no spaces allowed around the=
).echo "$*"
, notecho $*
. If someone passed a quoted '*' in your arguments, you wouldn't want it to be replaced with a list of files in the current directory, would you? Guess what happens if you don't quote your arguments...