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I'd like to create a bash prompt that includes a shortened path to the current working directory, so

~/folder/directory/foo

would become

~/f/d/foo

I got this idea from a custom bash prompt described here (http://engineerwithoutacause.com/show-current-virtualenv-on-bash-prompt.html) which includes code that's supposed to do exactly that (according to the comment) but doesn't. I don't know anything about bash scripting, but I bet this would be an easy one to answer.

What line or lines of code in a bash script will let me generate that shortened version of the working directory?

3 Answers 3

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You can put your $PWD variable (a string with your current directory) to being changed by a sed command, as in:

echo $PWD | sed 's:/\(.\)[^/]*/:/\1/:g'

Basically, this sed is finding everything (g) that is between two / (and that's why I'm using : as a delimiter), and replacing it to just the first char (the . enclosed by \( and \), referenced as \1 later), surrounded by /s again.

If you set this to your PS1 variable, you can change your bash prompt as request.

Hope that helps.

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  • This gets me part way but isn't quite working. If my $PWD is /home/joe/Dropbox/foo/bar/folder, I would expect /h/j/D/f/b/folder, but instead I'm getting just /h/folder.
    – workerjoe
    Sep 22, 2014 at 19:49
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    OK, figured it out. This works for the sed command: sed "s:\(.\)[^/]*/:\1/:g". Your code used a greedy regex that took the whole path as "something between two /". Mine now matches any set of characters that aren't slashes, plus a single slash, so it won't grab the whole path.
    – workerjoe
    Sep 22, 2014 at 20:17
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Using sed is easiest because of regex backreference support, but for fun and profit a pure bash solution:

path="$(while read -rd/; do echo -n ${REPLY::1}/; done <<< "$PWD"; echo "${PWD##*/}")"

The value of $PWD is fed into the while loop via the herestring syntax <<<, then split on slashes by read -rd/. Conveniently, the last component is ignored because it doesn't end in a slash, so read exits with a nonzero status and terminates the loop.

Inside the loop, ${REPLY::1} takes only the first character of the path component, and echo -n prints it without a newline.

Finally, we print the last pathname component in full using ${PWD##*/}, which strips the longest prefix that matches */.

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  • This does the trick. However, how do I take the above, and feed it into a variable? As in the link I referenced, I want to create a variable called path to hold this output, then insert into my bash prompt with other stuff.
    – workerjoe
    Sep 22, 2014 at 19:52
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Combining the information at the link I referenced in the question, with Fernando's answer and some research of my own into regex, This is the code that provides the path I want:

pwd | sed -e "s:$HOME:~:" -e "s:\(.\)[^/]*/:\1/:g"

The first sed pattern replaces my home directory /home/joe with a ~ and the second one replaces every multi-character directory name with its first character.

If anyone's interested, the complete code for my bashprompt is here: https://gist.github.com/joeclark-phd/d6be2dca717788e6a872. The part you helped me with is in line 39.

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