I am wondering what does
%%bash
cat file.txt.*.decodes
do?
I got this line from here
Here is the original text
%%bash
DECODE_FILE=data/poetry/rumi_leads.txt
cat ${DECODE_FILE}.*.decodes
I am wondering what does
%%bash
cat file.txt.*.decodes
do?
I got this line from here
Here is the original text
%%bash
DECODE_FILE=data/poetry/rumi_leads.txt
cat ${DECODE_FILE}.*.decodes
The %%
starts a "cell magic", which applies to the cell (as opposed to the %
"line magic" that only affects one line). This particular one changes the language interpreter used for that cell from Python to BASH (the Bourne-Again SHell, used by Unix variants like MacOS and Linux).
You can see documentation for what a magic does by entering it into Jupyter (or IPython) followed by a question mark, like %%bash?
. Magic is an IPython thing that's not part of Python proper. You'll see it in notebooks, but not in pure Python modules.
The code
cat file.txt.*.decodes
Uses a glob (the *
) to get all file names in the current working directory that start with file.txt.
and end with .decodes
and uses the cat
command-line program to print their concatenated contents to stdout. This could certainly have been done in Python, but it would be a bit more verbose.
cat
is a unix-style command line utility to echo a file to standard out. The asterisk is a glob wild-card on the command line. So this cell calls the OS to echo some text from multiple files probably into the cell.