On 23/02/14 07:39, berenger.mo...@neutralite.org wrote:
> 
> 
> Le 20.02.2014 02:15, Scott Ferguson a écrit :
>> On 19/02/14 23:32, berenger.mo...@neutralite.org wrote:
>>> 
>>> 
>>> Le 19.02.2014 10:53, Scott Ferguson a écrit :
>>>> Just read your last post before sending this, so this may no
>>>> longer be relevant... I don't know that you need to quote the
>>>> variables. I use coloured bash
>> 
>> coloured *editor* i.e. nano, vi/emac, dex[*1] or Kwrite is what I
>> meant to write. If anyone knows of a way to colourise the syntax in
>> xterm (especially 'fc' temp) I'd be *very* interested.
> 
> I think I did not read correctly when I replied to you.

No. The mistake was mine (I didn't write "editor" originally).

> I also use syntactic coloration in my editors, I'm a programmer after
> all. And vim manages it correctly enough... Still, it did not helped
> me with *that* pebcak. The only things colored in my shell is not
> bash, btw, only the prompt... indeed, a colored shell would be very,
> very powerful.


Darac (Paul?) made a suggestion about that - there is also fish.

<snipped>

> 
>> 
>>> but for a reason I can not understand, echo did not displayed
>>> them.

I'm not sure if you mean echo as in your example:-
for i in *.zip;
do
    artiste=`echo $i|cut -f1 -d-|sed -e 's/^ *//g' -e 's/ *$//g'`
    album=`echo $i|cut -f2 -d-|sed -e 's/^ *//g' -e 's/ *$//g'`
    mkdir "$artiste/$album" -p
    7z x \"$i\" -o\"$artiste/$album\" || rmdir "$artiste/$album" -p
    echo 7z x \"$i\" -o\"$artiste/$album\"
done


If so, perhaps it's the way you were using echo? It displays the string
- including the spaces, but when you use the string with 7z it's working
with only working with the first word/character before the space -
because you're escaping the last " in each string.

So if artiste is "Frank Zappa" and album is "Weasels Rip My Flesh" then
those variables will display fine with echo, but because you were
escaping the parenthesis  7z is trying to work with Frank, not "Frank
Zappa". And if the artiste or album contains a minus character.... If
you'd done the same thing with rmdir the mistake would have been
obvious. (I altered that section too - just in case you have more than
one album by an artist.)

Note also - if you want to echo escape characters you need to use the -e
switch, or just avoid them altogether - I'd, cautiously (I haven't
tested it, and I'd prefer more error checking) suggest this variation:-


for i in *.zip;
do
    artiste=`echo $i|cut -f1 -d-|sed -e 's/^ *//g' -e 's/ *$//g'`
    album=`echo $i|cut -f2 -d-|sed -e 's/^ *//g' -e 's/ *$//g'`
    mkdir -p "$artiste/$album"
    7z x "$i" -o "$artiste/$album" || rmdir "$artiste/$album"
    echo "7z x $i -o $artiste/$album"
done


<snipped>

Kind regards


-- 
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org 
with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org
Archive: http://lists.debian.org/530955d1....@gmail.com

Reply via email to