461

Given file names like these:

/the/path/foo.txt
bar.txt

I hope to get:

foo
bar

Why this doesn't work?

#!/bin/bash

fullfile=$1
fname=$(basename $fullfile)
fbname=${fname%.*}
echo $fbname

What's the right way to do it?

7
  • 1
    This code should work in most cases as long as the value of $1 is actually what you think it is. However, it is subject to word splitting and filename expansion due to improper quoting.
    – toxalot
    Mar 18, 2014 at 20:19
  • 1
    Closer @tripleee: this is not a duplicate of Extract filename and extension in Bash. The other more complex Q requires the extension and filename be separate. If anything, the other Q. is an elaboration of this more basic one.
    – agc
    Jan 10, 2020 at 6:38
  • @agc The answers seem very similar, but the older question has more of them. Can you explain why you think these should be kept separate?
    – tripleee
    Jan 10, 2020 at 7:55
  • 1
    @tripleee Users interested in the simpler problem might be needlessly confused by the added or differing code required to solve the more complex problem.
    – agc
    Jan 13, 2020 at 5:18
  • Did you read the answers to the other question? Out of the top five, four very distinctly demonstrate how to do exactly this, and explain the options, most of them quite succinctly. I'm happy to be convinced if you can point to actual differences, but I'm not seeing them. Perhaps raise this on Meta Stack Overflow for broader visibility.
    – tripleee
    Jan 13, 2020 at 6:25

9 Answers 9

829

You don't have to call the external basename command. Instead, you could use the following commands:

$ s=/the/path/foo.txt
$ echo "${s##*/}"
foo.txt
$ s=${s##*/}
$ echo "${s%.txt}"
foo
$ echo "${s%.*}"
foo

Note that this solution should work in all recent (post 2004) POSIX compliant shells, (e.g. bash, dash, ksh, etc.).

Source: Shell Command Language 2.6.2 Parameter Expansion

More on bash String Manipulations: http://tldp.org/LDP/LG/issue18/bash.html

20
  • 72
    fantastic answer... bash String Manipulations ( like ${s##*/} ) are explained here linuxgazette.net/18/bash.html
    – chim
    Dec 20, 2011 at 15:00
  • 7
    @chim have you found an updated reference to your link? It's dead.
    – yurisich
    Jul 9, 2014 at 19:59
  • 30
    @Droogans found it after some digging :) tldp.org/LDP/LG/issue18/bash.html didn't realise I had 27 upvotes on this comment :)
    – chim
    Jul 11, 2014 at 10:07
  • 40
    Is there a way to combine ##*/ at %.* (by nesting or piping or whatnot) arrive at foo directly?
    – bongbang
    Nov 26, 2014 at 22:09
  • 7
    Documentation is also available via man -P "less -p 'Parameter Expansion'" bash Feb 9, 2017 at 18:39
376

The basename command has two different invocations; in one, you specify just the path, in which case it gives you the last component, while in the other you also give a suffix that it will remove. So, you can simplify your example code by using the second invocation of basename. Also, be careful to correctly quote things:

fbname=$(basename "$1" .txt)
echo "$fbname"
7
  • 21
    Is there a way of making it remove any suffix? Nov 2, 2013 at 9:39
  • 4
    @handuel Unfortunately, basename does not support wildcards. Providing a second argument will only remove that exact literal string from the end.
    – toxalot
    Mar 18, 2014 at 17:52
  • 3
    On machines with basename 8.4, it works just as just as specified in this answer, but for me (with basename 8.22 from GNU coreutils) this worked as basename -s <extension> <filename>. Nov 24, 2015 at 23:00
  • 3
    @w4etwetewtwet - You can have basename remove any extension, see stackoverflow.com/a/36341390/2707864 Mar 31, 2016 at 18:55
  • if the name needs quoting, than it should be: fbname="$(basename "$1" .txt)" May 17, 2023 at 10:47
85

A combination of basename and cut works fine, even in case of double ending like .tar.gz:

fbname=$(basename "$fullfile" | cut -d. -f1)

Would be interesting if this solution needs less arithmetic power than Bash Parameter Expansion.

4
  • 4
    This is my preferred way - with the minor change of using $(..) - so this becomes: fbname=$(basename "$fullfile" | cut -d. -f1) Apr 22, 2015 at 13:06
  • This is a nice solution in that it will snip all (dot) extensions. Jun 1, 2015 at 13:41
  • 7
    If a file has dots elsewhere in the name, this would truncate it incorrectly. This may work better: fbname=$(basename "$fullfile" | sed -r 's|^(.*?)\.\w+$|\1|'). More choices: : 's|^(.*?)\..+$|\1|', 's|^(.*?)\.[^\.]+$|\1|'.
    – Pysis
    Nov 14, 2018 at 18:34
  • Real thanks for real useful answer!
    – AlexKh
    Nov 21, 2023 at 12:04
53

Here are oneliners:

  1. $(basename "${s%.*}")
  2. $(basename "${s}" ".${s##*.}")

I needed this, the same as asked by bongbang and w4etwetewtwet.

Example:

$ s=/the/path/foo.txt
$ echo "$(basename "${s%.*}")"
foo
$ echo "$(basename "${s}" ".${s##*.}")"
foo
0
27

Pure bash, no basename, no variable juggling. Set a string and echo:

p=/the/path/foo.txt
echo "${p//+(*\/|.*)}"

Output:

foo

Note: the bash extglob option must be "on", (Ubuntu sets extglob "on" by default), if it's not, do:

shopt -s extglob

Walking through the ${p//+(*\/|.*)}:

  1. ${p -- start with $p.
  2. // substitute every instance of the pattern that follows.
  3. +( match one or more of the pattern list in parenthesis, (i.e. until item #7 below).
  4. 1st pattern: *\/ matches anything before a literal "/" char.
  5. pattern separator | which in this instance acts like a logical OR.
  6. 2nd pattern: .* matches anything after a literal "." -- that is, in bash the "." is just a period char, and not a regex dot.
  7. ) end pattern list.
  8. } end parameter expansion. With a string substitution, there's usually another / there, followed by a replacement string. But since there's no / there, the matched patterns are substituted with nothing; this deletes the matches.

Relevant man bash background:

  1. pattern substitution:
  ${parameter/pattern/string}
          Pattern substitution.  The pattern is expanded to produce a pat
          tern just as in pathname expansion.  Parameter is  expanded  and
          the  longest match of pattern against its value is replaced with
          string.  If pattern begins with /, all matches  of  pattern  are
          replaced   with  string.   Normally  only  the  first  match  is
          replaced.  If pattern begins with #, it must match at the begin‐
          ning of the expanded value of parameter.  If pattern begins with
          %, it must match at the end of the expanded value of  parameter.
          If string is null, matches of pattern are deleted and the / fol
          lowing pattern may be omitted.  If parameter is @ or *, the sub
          stitution  operation  is applied to each positional parameter in
          turn, and the expansion is the resultant list.  If parameter  is
          an  array  variable  subscripted  with  @ or *, the substitution
          operation is applied to each member of the array  in  turn,  and
          the expansion is the resultant list.
  1. extended pattern matching:
  If the extglob shell option is enabled using the shopt builtin, several
   extended  pattern  matching operators are recognized.  In the following
   description, a pattern-list is a list of one or more patterns separated
   by a |.  Composite patterns may be formed using one or more of the fol
   lowing sub-patterns:

          ?(pattern-list)
                 Matches zero or one occurrence of the given patterns
          *(pattern-list)
                 Matches zero or more occurrences of the given patterns
          +(pattern-list)
                 Matches one or more occurrences of the given patterns
          @(pattern-list)
                 Matches one of the given patterns
          !(pattern-list)
                 Matches anything except one of the given patterns
0
13

Here is another (more complex) way of getting either the filename or extension, first use the rev command to invert the file path, cut from the first . and then invert the file path again, like this:

filename=`rev <<< "$1" | cut -d"." -f2- | rev`
fileext=`rev <<< "$1" | cut -d"." -f1 | rev`
2
  • 1
    I've never seen those triple angle bracket <<< doohickeys--what's that?
    – Alex Hall
    Sep 12, 2016 at 4:32
  • 3
    They are called "Here Strings" (more info here), basically it takes the input as a string and feed it to your program as it was reading through stdin.
    – higuaro
    Sep 12, 2016 at 5:00
2

If you want to play nice with Windows file paths (under Cygwin) you can also try this:

fname=${fullfile##*[/|\\]}

This will account for backslash separators when using BaSH on Windows.

1

Just an alternative that I came up with to extract an extension, using the posts in this thread with my own small knowledge base that was more familiar to me.

ext="$(rev <<< "$(cut -f "1" -d "." <<< "$(rev <<< "file.docx")")")"

Note: Please advise on my use of quotes; it worked for me but I might be missing something on their proper use (I probably use too many).

1
  • 1
    You do not need a single quote, you try to do the same as: rev <<< file.docx | cut -f1 -d. | rev just without the quotes and without the nested sub shells. Also I don't think the above can work at all. May 16, 2017 at 22:59
-16

Use the basename command. Its manpage is here: http://unixhelp.ed.ac.uk/CGI/man-cgi?basename

1
  • 11
    He is using basename, but that's not his problem.
    – chepner
    Jul 18, 2012 at 14:26

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