forked from andonome/lk
		
	edit bash_tricks
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		| @@ -12,6 +12,11 @@ See changes in a directory, as it changes: | ||||
|  | ||||
| `watch -d ls *directory*` | ||||
|  | ||||
| Or use the `-g` flag to exit once the output changes. | ||||
| This command will look at whether you're connected to the internet, and turn into a rainbow once the connection hits. | ||||
|  | ||||
| > watch -g ip address && clear && ip address | lolcat | ||||
|  | ||||
| ## Automatic Renaming | ||||
|  | ||||
| There are a bunch of files: | ||||
| @@ -34,17 +39,19 @@ done | ||||
|  | ||||
| IFS is the field separator.  This is required to denote the different files as marked by a new line, and not the spaces. | ||||
|  | ||||
| (Alternatively, just install `renameutils` and do `rename Column Alice *`) | ||||
|  | ||||
| ## Arguments and Input | ||||
|  | ||||
| The `rm' program takes arguments, but not `stdin' from a keyboard, and therefore programs cannot pipe results into rm. | ||||
|  | ||||
| That said, we can sometimes pipe into rm with `xargs rm' to turn the stdin into an argument.  For example, if we have a list of files called `list.txt' then we could use cat as so: | ||||
| To fix this, use `xargs` to turn the stdin into an argument. | ||||
| For example, if we have a list of files called `list.txt' then we could use cat as so: | ||||
|  | ||||
| ```bash | ||||
| cat list.txt | xargs rm | ||||
| ``` | ||||
|  | ||||
| ... *However*, this wouldn't work if spaces were included, as rm would take everything literally. | ||||
| Of course if spaces are included in the file, you would have to account for that. | ||||
|  | ||||
| ## Numbers | ||||
|  | ||||
| @@ -71,3 +78,22 @@ find . -type f -exec md5sum '{}' ';' | sort | uniq --all-repeated=separate -w 15 | ||||
| ```bash | ||||
| cat /dev/urandom | tr -cd [:alnum:] | dd bs=1 count=200 status=none && echo | ||||
| ``` | ||||
|  | ||||
| ## Temporary Working Directory | ||||
|  | ||||
| Try something out in a random directory in `/tmp` so the files will be deleted when you next shut down. | ||||
|  | ||||
| ```bash | ||||
| mktemp -d | ||||
| ``` | ||||
|  | ||||
| That gives you a random directory to mess about in. | ||||
|  | ||||
| ```bash | ||||
|    dir=$(mktemp -d) | ||||
|    for x in {A..Z}; do | ||||
|       fortune > "$dir"/chimpan-$x | ||||
|    done | ||||
|    cd $dir | ||||
| ``` | ||||
|  | ||||
|   | ||||
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