3

I have a string with a sentence within like a="hello my dear friend". I want to retrieve the first two words (here it should be "hello my"), knowing that the number of words can vary. I tried ${a%% *} but it only gives me the first one.

In the same kind, I need to extract the whole sentence without the two first words. How can I do that?

4 Answers 4

6

You can use BASH arrays for this:

# construct an array delimited by whitespace
a="hello my dear friend"
arr=($a)

# first two words
echo "${arr[@]:0:2}"
hello my

# anything after first 2 words
echo "${arr[@]:2}"
dear friend
3
  • A downside to this approach would be that you can't maintain whitespace in your string.
    – ghoti
    Jan 14, 2016 at 23:25
  • 1
    Yes but since OP says first 2 "words", words cannot have spaces
    – anubhava
    Jan 15, 2016 at 3:34
  • 1
    Yes, in my case this solution seems to be the better. But thanks for the tip with the whitespaces. Jan 15, 2016 at 18:22
2

You could read the string into an array and use a slice:

$ read -ra words <<<"$a" && echo "${words[@]:2}"
dear friend

At the cost of another process, you could also use cut:

$ cut -d' ' -f3- <<<"$a"
dear friend

The behaviour of this is slightly different, as it splits on single spaces, whereas the approach using read will consume any number of spaces between each word.

2

You can use a regular expression to capture the portion of the text you want:

$ a="hello my dear friend"
$ [[ $a =~ ^([^ ]+ [^ ]+)\ ?(.*) ]]
$ echo "${BASH_REMATCH[1]}"
hello my
$ echo "${BASH_REMATCH[2]}"
dear friend

Bash's extglob feature might also work, using a matched expression as an exclusion:

$ shopt -s extglob
$ a="hello my dear friend. would you like a beer?"
$ b="${a#+(!( )) +(!( )) }"
$ echo "$b"
dear friend. would you like a beer?
$ echo "${a%$b}"
hello my

Or from the other end of the string:

$ c="${a% +(!( )) +(!( ))}"
$ echo "$c"
hello my dear friend. would you like
$ echo "${a#$c}"
 a beer?
0

Shell functions work for this in any Bourne shell or later:

$ f2 () { echo "$1" "$2" }
$ frest () { shift; shift; echo "$*" }

$ a="hello my dear friend"

$ f2 $a
hello my

$ frest $a
dear friend
1
  • By dropping the quotes you are exposing yourself to all kinds of nasty surprises.
    – tripleee
    Oct 13, 2022 at 18:12

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