I need to replace a space (
) with a dot (.
) in a string in bash.
I think this would be pretty simple, but I'm new so I can't figure out how to modify a similar example for this use.
Use inline shell string replacement. Example:
foo=" "
# replace first blank only
bar=${foo/ /.}
# replace all blanks
bar=${foo// /.}
See http://tldp.org/LDP/abs/html/string-manipulation.html for more details.
tr
for long strings. On my system tr
outperforms bash starting at strings with more than 1000
characters. It seems like bash's time complexity is worse than linear. A small test: x="$(tr -dc 'a-z \n' </dev/urandom | head -c1M)"; time y="$(tr ' ' \\- <<< "$x")"; time z="${x// /-}"
. With a string length of 1M (=2^20) tr
took 0.04s
and bash 5.0.11 took 17s
. With 2M tr
took 0.07s
(expected) but bash took 69s
(4 times as long for twice the string length).
tr
!... Depending on available memory and hw resources... But you're right!: Depending on kind of job to do, dedicated tools stay more efficient!
Dec 21, 2019 at 12:20
$'\n'
Jan 17, 2020 at 2:18
You could use tr
, like this:
tr " " .
Example:
# echo "hello world" | tr " " .
hello.world
From man tr
:
DESCRIPTION
Translate, squeeze, and/or delete characters from standard input, writ‐ ing to standard output.
In bash, you can do pattern replacement in a string with the ${VARIABLE//PATTERN/REPLACEMENT}
construct. Use just /
and not //
to replace only the first occurrence. The pattern is a wildcard pattern, like file globs.
string='foo bar qux'
one="${string/ /.}" # sets one to 'foo.bar qux'
all="${string// /.}" # sets all to 'foo.bar.qux'
Try this for paths:
echo \"hello world\"|sed 's/ /+/g'|sed 's/+/\/g'|sed 's/\"//g'
It replaces the space inside the double-quoted string with a +
sing, then replaces the +
sign with a backslash, then removes/replaces the double-quotes.
I had to use this to replace the spaces in one of my paths in Cygwin.
echo \"$(cygpath -u $JAVA_HOME)\"|sed 's/ /+/g'|sed 's/+/\\/g'|sed 's/\"//g'
sed
. The quotes are irrelevant.
The recommended solution by shellcheck would be the following:
string="Hello World" ; echo "${string// /.}"
output: Hello.World