1

I can extract the contents of all the \include statements from a latex file (and append ".tex" to each one) with

grep -P "\\\\include{" Thesis_master.tex |sed -n -e"s/\\\\include{/$1/" -e" s/}.*$/.tex/p"

(I couldn't get lookbehinds working in grep, hence the pipe through sed. That gives me a list of filenames, one per line. I'd now like to pass those files to aspell. But aspell only accepts one filename as an argument, so I can't just tack |xargs aspell -c on the end.

I've read this related question but that reads from a file line by line through xargs. So how do I get it to read from the output of sed line by line?

7
  • If you show your input data then probably we can suggest lookbehind also
    – anubhava
    Mar 28, 2014 at 19:38
  • @anubhava, thank you: a sample line is \include{chap_theory/chap_theory}% I think the opening { was causing much of the trouble - should I or shouldn't I escape it and if so how? I tried quite a few things before just piping through sed - which I'd need to do to append the ".tex" I think
    – Chris H
    Mar 28, 2014 at 19:59
  • For lookbehind, use grep -P with perl regular expression. (assuming GNU grep) Mar 28, 2014 at 20:14
  • @glennjackman thank you, I think I did but now can't find those attempts in my command history to check - I was probably doing something else wrong.
    – Chris H
    Mar 28, 2014 at 20:47
  • So the lookbehind works now but of course grep (by default) prints the whole line.
    – Chris H
    Mar 28, 2014 at 20:50

2 Answers 2

1

I think xargs -L 1 should do what you need:

grep -P "\\\\include{" Thesis_master.tex | \
sed -n -e"s/\\\\include{/$1/" -e" s/}.*$/.tex/p" | \
xargs -L 1 aspell -c

(Backslash line continuation added for readability)

This will cause xargs to call aspell exactly once per line from the sed pipe.


Since your aspell commands appear to exit with a 255 code, this causes xargs to stop. You could trick xargs into not exiting by doing something like:

grep -P "\\\\include{" Thesis_master.tex | \
sed -n -e"s/\\\\include{/$1/" -e" s/}.*$/.tex/p" | \
xargs -L 1 -I % bash -c "aspell -c %; true"

This will run aspell in a subshell, followed by the true command which always return a 0 exit code to xargs.

8
  • I believe you're right - now trying to fix an issue with aspell closing with exit code 255 and no error message!
    – Chris H
    Mar 28, 2014 at 19:59
  • You can debug xargs commands by changing your command to something like xargs -L 1 echo aspell -c. That way, xargs will effectively simply echo every command instead of executing it. You can then run the echoed commands manually and figure out why they're failing. Mar 28, 2014 at 20:01
  • I was just trying that -- thanks -- I get aspell -c chap_Theory/chap_Theory.tex etc. Which works if I copy and paste or retype but not from xargs. Equally if I redirect the output of sed in my Q to a file tmp.txt, strip that to one line, and cat tmp.txt | xargs aspell -c it gives the same behaviour - I think I might have aspell related digging to do.
    – Chris H
    Mar 28, 2014 at 20:05
  • From the xargs manpage: "The xargs utility exits immediately (without processing any further input) if [...], or an invocation of utility exits with a value of 255." Mar 28, 2014 at 20:16
  • @ChrisH See my edit for a possible way to prevent xargs from quitting early Mar 28, 2014 at 20:24
1

The grep recipe is:

grep -oP '\\include{\K.+?(?=})' latex.file | xargs aspell ...
2
  • \K was new to me - it seems much easier than lookbehind where it does the job.
    – Chris H
    Mar 29, 2014 at 7:14
  • Especially when you need variable width lookbehind, which (?<= does not allow Mar 29, 2014 at 11:10

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