Getting the window width
This shell code makes a global variable $TERM_SIZE
track the size of the terminal window:
set_term_size() {
TERM_SIZE="$(stty size 2>/dev/null)" && [ "$TERM_SIZE" ] ||
TERM_SIZE='25 80'
}
trap set_term_size WINCH
set_term_size
It tries stty size
before falling back to assuming that the terminal is 25 lines high and 80 characters wide. POSIX does not mandate the size
operand for stty
`, so the fallback is needed.
You can then access the columsn argument by using the shell's limited string substitution capabilities:
echo "${TERM_SIZE% *}" # Prints the terminal's height.
echo "${TERM_SIZE#* }" # Prints the terminal's width.
Of course, the scripting language you use likely offers a library that takes care of that for you -- and you should use it.
Printing a line
Once you know the width of the terminal, printing a horizontal line is easy, for example, by abusing printf
's string padding:
printf '%*s\n' "${TERM_SIZE#* }" '' |
tr ' ' -
The first line tells printf
to print as many spaces as there are columns (by abusing string paddin) to a pipe. Note, POSIX does not mention the *
syntax, so this may not be as portable as the code above.
The second line tells tr
to read from that pipe and replace every space with a hypen.