# string.bash --- bash emulation of string(3) library routines # Author: Noah Friedman # Created: 1992-07-01 # Last modified: 1993-09-29 # Public domain # Conversion to bash v2 syntax done by Chet Ramey # Commentary: # Code: #:docstring strcat: # Usage: strcat s1 s2 # # Strcat appends the value of variable s2 to variable s1. # # Example: # a="foo" # b="bar" # strcat a b # echo $a # => foobar # #:end docstring: ###;;;autoload function strcat () { local s1_val s2_val s1_val=${!1} # indirect variable expansion s2_val=${!2} eval "$1"=\'"${s1_val}${s2_val}"\' } #:docstring strncat: # Usage: strncat s1 s2 $n # # Line strcat, but strncat appends a maximum of n characters from the value # of variable s2. It copies fewer if the value of variabl s2 is shorter # than n characters. Echoes result on stdout. # # Example: # a=foo # b=barbaz # strncat a b 3 # echo $a # => foobar # #:end docstring: ###;;;autoload function strncat () { local s1="$1" local s2="$2" local -i n="$3" local s1_val s2_val s1_val=${!s1} # indirect variable expansion s2_val=${!s2} if [ ${#s2_val} -gt ${n} ]; then s2_val=${s2_val:0:$n} # substring extraction fi eval "$s1"=\'"${s1_val}${s2_val}"\' } #:docstring strcmp: # Usage: strcmp $s1 $s2 # # Strcmp compares its arguments and returns an integer less than, equal to, # or greater than zero, depending on whether string s1 is lexicographically # less than, equal to, or greater than string s2. #:end docstring: ###;;;autoload function strcmp () { [ "$1" = "$2" ] && return 0 [ "${1}" '<' "${2}" ] > /dev/null && return -1 return 1 } #:docstring strncmp: # Usage: strncmp $s1 $s2 $n # # Like strcmp, but makes the comparison by examining a maximum of n # characters (n less than or equal to zero yields equality). #:end docstring: ###;;;autoload function strncmp () { if [ -z "${3}" ] || [ "${3}" -le "0" ]; then return 0 fi if [ ${3} -ge ${#1} ] && [ ${3} -ge ${#2} ]; then strcmp "$1" "$2" return $? else s1=${1:0:$3} s2=${2:0:$3} strcmp $s1 $s2 return $? fi } #:docstring strlen: # Usage: strlen s # # Strlen returns the number of characters in string literal s. #:end docstring: ###;;;autoload function strlen () { eval echo "\${#${1}}" } #:docstring strspn: # Usage: strspn $s1 $s2 # # Strspn returns the length of the maximum initial segment of string s1, # which consists entirely of characters from string s2. #:end docstring: ###;;;autoload function strspn () { # Unsetting IFS allows whitespace to be handled as normal chars. local IFS= local result="${1%%[!${2}]*}" echo ${#result} } #:docstring strcspn: # Usage: strcspn $s1 $s2 # # Strcspn returns the length of the maximum initial segment of string s1, # which consists entirely of characters not from string s2. #:end docstring: ###;;;autoload function strcspn () { # Unsetting IFS allows whitspace to be handled as normal chars. local IFS= local result="${1%%[${2}]*}" echo ${#result} } #:docstring strstr: # Usage: strstr s1 s2 # # Strstr echoes a substring starting at the first occurrence of string s2 in # string s1, or nothing if s2 does not occur in the string. If s2 points to # a string of zero length, strstr echoes s1. #:end docstring: ###;;;autoload function strstr () { # if s2 points to a string of zero length, strstr echoes s1 [ ${#2} -eq 0 ] && { echo "$1" ; return 0; } # strstr echoes nothing if s2 does not occur in s1 case "$1" in *$2*) ;; *) return 1;; esac # use the pattern matching code to strip off the match and everything # following it first=${1/$2*/} # then strip off the first unmatched portion of the string echo "${1##$first}" } #:docstring strtok: # Usage: strtok s1 s2 # # Strtok considers the string s1 to consist of a sequence of zero or more # text tokens separated by spans of one or more characters from the # separator string s2. The first call (with a non-empty string s1 # specified) echoes a string consisting of the first token on stdout. The # function keeps track of its position in the string s1 between separate # calls, so that subsequent calls made with the first argument an empty # string will work through the string immediately following that token. In # this way subsequent calls will work through the string s1 until no tokens # remain. The separator string s2 may be different from call to call. # When no token remains in s1, an empty value is echoed on stdout. #:end docstring: ###;;;autoload function strtok () { : } #:docstring strtrunc: # Usage: strtrunc $n $s1 {$s2} {$...} # # Used by many functions like strncmp to truncate arguments for comparison. # Echoes the first n characters of each string s1 s2 ... on stdout. #:end docstring: ###;;;autoload function strtrunc () { n=$1 ; shift for z; do echo "${z:0:$n}" done } provide string # string.bash ends here