14

i wish to write a fish shell script to automatically initialize JAVA_HOME to current configured java-alternative.

In bash it would look like this (sorry for the ugly double dirname)

j=`update-alternatives --query javac | grep Value:`
JAVA_HOME=`dirname ${j#Value:}`
JAVA_HOME=`dirname $JAVA_HOME`
export JAVA_HOME

what about fish?

set j (update-alternatives --query javac | grep Value:)
set JAVA_HOME (dirname ${j#Value:}) <-- this won't work!!
set JAVA_HOME (dirname $JAVA_HOME)
set --export JAVA_HOME
1
  • I resigned string manipulation in favor of set --export JAVA_HOME (update-alternatives --query javac | grep Value: | sed -e "s/Value: //" | sed 's,/*[^/]\+/*$,,' | sed 's,/*[^/]\+/*$,,')
    – lrkwz
    Jan 29, 2011 at 19:37

4 Answers 4

26

The fish shell now has a string builtin command for string manipulation. This was added in version 2.3.0 (May 2016).

E.g. in this case, we could use string replace to remove the Value: substring:

set j (update-alternatives --query javac | grep Value: | string replace 'Value: ' '')
set --export JAVA_HOME (dirname (dirname $j))

There's lots more that string can do. From the string command documentation:

Synopsis

string length [(-q | --quiet)] [STRING...]
string sub [(-s | --start) START] [(-l | --length) LENGTH] [(-q | --quiet)]
           [STRING...]
string split [(-m | --max) MAX] [(-r | --right)] [(-q | --quiet)] SEP
             [STRING...]
string join [(-q | --quiet)] SEP [STRING...]
string trim [(-l | --left)] [(-r | --right)] [(-c | --chars CHARS)]
            [(-q | --quiet)] [STRING...]
string escape [(-n | --no-quoted)] [STRING...]
string match [(-a | --all)] [(-i | --ignore-case)] [(-r | --regex)]
             [(-n | --index)] [(-q | --quiet)] [(-v | --invert)] PATTERN [STRING...]
string replace [(-a | --all)] [(-i | --ignore-case)] [(-r | --regex)]
               [(-q | --quiet)] PATTERN REPLACEMENT [STRING...]
4
  • Wow, great! If I want to use the results of something like string split " " "This is my teststring" in a list variable, how would I do that?
    – rassoh
    Dec 21, 2016 at 12:43
  • 1
    @rassoh - By way of example: set mylist (string split " " "This is my teststring")
    – mattbh
    Dec 24, 2016 at 6:36
  • thanks, works great! Of course, to make it a list i had to do set -l mylist (...)
    – rassoh
    Dec 24, 2016 at 12:38
  • @rassoh - The -l flag changes the scope of the variable rather than its type. See the set command.
    – mattbh
    Dec 30, 2016 at 1:18
4

Bash:

j=$(update-alternatives --query javac | sed -n '/Value: /s///p')
export JAVA_HOME=${j%/*/*}

Fish:

set j (update-alternatives --query javac | sed -n '/Value: /s///p')
set --export JAVA_HOME (dirname (dirname $j))

or

set --export JAVA_HOME (dirname (dirname (update-alternatives --query javac | sed -n '/Value: /s///p')))
2

Instead of sed, u could make use of expr with a regexp, for example:

$ set a /path/to/some/folder/file.extension

the command:

$ expr "//$a" : '.*/\([^.]*\)\..*$'
file

extract the file basename without extension.

See man expr

0

Fish shell:

~> set JAVA_HOME (readlink -f /usr/bin/javac | sed "s:/bin/javac::")
~> echo $JAVA_HOME

Output (example):

/usr/lib/jvm/java-8-openjdk-amd64

Also u can add to ~/.config/fish/config.fish this line:

set JAVA_HOME (readlink -f /usr/bin/javac | sed "s:/bin/javac::")

WBR

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