0

this is the situation into my file txt:

kevin \t password \t path \n

steve \t password \t path \n

etc...

how can I parse this kind of file to get names into an array, passwords into another array and idem for path? I thought to use IFS variable, but I've problems to identify what is id or psw or path.

I started from this code:

old_IFS=$IFS

IFS=$'\t\n'

lines=($(cat MYFILE)) 

IFS=$old_IFS

or is better to use awk?

someone has an idea?

3
  • I can tell you how to get those values into arrays, but I could probably tell you something more interesting if I knew what you wanted to do with the arrays once you had them.
    – kojiro
    Feb 13, 2013 at 19:25
  • for each user-psw-path I want to launch ftp command
    – rschirin
    Feb 14, 2013 at 15:28
  • So you don't need arrays at all: You can do the ftp command for each line.
    – kojiro
    Feb 14, 2013 at 16:24

2 Answers 2

1

Use a while read loop:

while IFS=$'\t' read user password path
do
    users+=( "$user" )
    passwords+=( "$password" )
    paths+=( "$path" )
    echo "$user's password is $password, and their path is $path"
done < yourtextfile
3
  • These aren't some arrays =) Feb 13, 2013 at 19:25
  • I tried this code under OS X 10.8 and SUSE Linux 11: the users variable is the whole line, whereas password and path are blank.
    – Hai Vu
    Feb 13, 2013 at 20:15
  • That's because your fields aren't tab separated, as per the question. Feb 13, 2013 at 21:09
0

Here's an inefficient approach that is nevertheless easy to read:

f() {
    local IFS=$'\n' # Don't wordsplit on just any whitespace. Newlines only
    names=( $(cut -d$'\t' -f1 < file) )
    passes=( $(cut -d$'\t' -f2 < file) )
    paths=( $(cut -d$'\t' -f3 < file) )
}
f
1
  • @thatotherguy true. Edited to wordsplit on newlines.
    – kojiro
    Feb 13, 2013 at 19:32

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