I would like to pipe a function with normal commands in Linux. Please note that all these commands are put into a .sh script (I use Bash shell). For example, I have with me a command as follows:
git diff --name-only HEAD~1..HEAD -z | xargs -0 dirname | catch_exceptions >> extracted_dir_names
I have written catch_exceptions
as a function above this command and it contains 2 sed delete statements. If i pipe the two sed commands in the function they work but if i put them one after the other they don't. Could someone explain why it is like this and how a work around can be done? Thanks in advance.
This works:
function catch_exceptions {
sed '/^\./d' | sed '\#this/path/alone#d'
}
pushd /path/to/direc
rm -f extracted_directories.txt
git diff --name-only HEAD~1..HEAD -z | xargs -0 dirname | remove_duplicates | catch_exceptions >> extracted_directories.txt
cat extracted_directories.txt
popd
}
But when i replace catch_exceptions with:
function catch_exceptions {
sed '/^\./d'
sed '\#this/path/alone#d'
}
it doesn't work.
|
. In other words, the second version fails because you're not piping the result of the first sed into the second sed. Note that you can still write it as two lines, the first line just needs to end with|