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I have a string as

pid ="2006"

I want to replace the pid to [2]006. Currently I am tried using following

1.9.3p448 :001 > pid = "12345"
 => "12345" 
1.9.3p448 :002 >  pid[0]="[#{pid[0]}]"
 => "[1]" 
1.9.3p448 :003 > pid
 => "[1]2345" 

I replace the first_character with [first_character].So that is my question how to do it using gsub.

And I have to use that pid for checking that the process is running or not so for this I am using following command.

ps aux | grep -e #{pid}

here -e is for regular repression so that my actual command looks like
ps aux | grep -e [2]006

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  • 1
    Try to make the question clearer: what do you want to replace, what is the desired outcome?
    – Ju Liu
    Jan 14, 2014 at 10:17
  • 1
    If it is unclear.. we can close it.. without down-voting.. a lots.. Jan 14, 2014 at 10:20

2 Answers 2

1

You could use gsub, but there is a better alternative: sub. sub replaces only the first occurrence in the string.

pid = "12345"
pid.sub(/\d/) { |m| "[#{m}]" }
# => "[1]2345" 
1
  • Yes, you are right why should I use gsb, if I want to just replace first occurrence.
    – r15
    Jan 14, 2014 at 12:34
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Why you bother changing small part of the string? You can just re-assign it:

pid = '2006'
# some code later
pid = '[1]006'# '2006' will be replaced by the new value, '[1]006' 

gsub or other method operating on the string takes some time, sometimes it's easier/faster to just re-assign value instead of messing with it.

If you still insist on changing first digit in your pid you can use regexp:

pid = '2006'
pid.gsub /\A\d/, '*' 
# => "*006"

\A -> Matches beginning of string.
\d -> digit(0-9)

Substitute '*' with the new value of the part of your pid that has changed.

If you want replace more than one digit use {} or other operators(here is list of repetition operators:

pid.gsub /\A\d{3}/, '*'
#=> "*6"

In the above example, 2006 was replaced with *.

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  • I tried with pid.gsub /\A\d/, '[#{pid[0]}]' but not working am I doing wrong?
    – r15
    Jan 14, 2014 at 11:16
  • @r15 You must use "" instead of '', like this: pid.gsub /\A\d/, "[#{pid[0]}]". String in '' is not interpolated = it won't change #{42} will produce #{42} not 42. Jan 14, 2014 at 11:17

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