11

Is it possible to define a macro-function in bash so when I write:

F(sth);

bash runs this:

echo "sth" > a.txt;

4 Answers 4

17

Arbitrary syntax can't be made to do anything. Parentheses are metacharacters which have special meaning to the parser, so there's no way you can use them as valid names. The best way to extend the shell is to define functions.

This would be a basic echo wrapper that always writes to the same file:

f() {
    echo "$@"
} >a.txt

This does about the same but additionally handles stdin - sacrificing echo's -e and -n options:

f() {
    [[ ${1+_} || ! -t 0 ]] && printf '%s\n' "${*-$(</dev/fd/0)}"
} >a.txt

Which can be called as

f arg1 arg2...

or

f <file

Functions are passed arguments in the same way as any other commands.

The second echo-like wrapper first tests for either a set first argument, or stdin coming from a non-tty, and conditionally calls printf using either the positional parameters if set, or stdin. The test expression avoids the case of both zero arguments and no redirection from a file, in which case Bash would try expanding the output of the terminal, hanging the shell.

5
  • +1, nice answer. would you mind to explain more detailed why you use that more complex (but better) construct to output the argument(s)?
    – Kaii
    Apr 17, 2012 at 7:31
  • It just allows input from either stdin or arguments. The test expression prevents a situation where there are both zero args and stdin is coming from a terminal, in which case the shell would have to be killed since the processes own tty is getting read and blocking. If that passes then either the positional parameters will be expanded if set, or the expansion will be read from the function's input. A slightly more portable but slower solution is possible with cat - this requires a system with real /dev/fd/*. I just posted this trick since my previous answer was the same as the others. :)
    – ormaaj
    Apr 17, 2012 at 8:07
  • also, it does allow multiple arguments just like echo does. Your function works with f one two three while the others only work with f "one two three". Given input without the qotes, the other solutions would only take the first word (here: "one") into account.
    – Kaii
    Apr 17, 2012 at 8:11
  • would be great if you could include those explanations in your answer, so others can learn from that.
    – Kaii
    Apr 17, 2012 at 8:11
  • Added a bit of an explanation. It could get even more complex to handle the same features as echo but that seemed a bit outside the scope of this question and would require some option parsing
    – ormaaj
    Apr 17, 2012 at 10:08
8
F () {
  echo "$1" > a.txt
}

You don't use parentheses when you call it. This is how you call it:

F "text to save"
0
3

Yes, only you should call it with F sth:

F()
{
  echo "$1" > a.txt
}

Read more here.

3

This was answered long ago, but to provide an answer that satisfies the original request (even though that is likely not what is actually desired): This is based on Magic Aliases: A Layering Loophole in the Bourne Shell by Simon Tatham.

F() { str="$(history 1)"; str=${str# *F(}; echo "${str%)*}"; } >a.txt
alias F='\F #'

$ F(sth)
$ cat a.txt
sth

See also ormaaj's better magic alias.

0

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