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using 'echo' & 'printf' in bash function calls
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I have a simple shell function call and I'm using echo and printf commands to print the parameter I'm passing. I have noticed the following:
echois printing the output
printfis not printing the output
Am I missing something here?
check_host(){
# prints output
echo $1
# does not print the output
printf $1
}
check_host $(hostname)
bash shell-script
New contributor
sqlcheckpoint is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
add a comment |
I have a simple shell function call and I'm using echo and printf commands to print the parameter I'm passing. I have noticed the following:
echois printing the output
printfis not printing the output
Am I missing something here?
check_host(){
# prints output
echo $1
# does not print the output
printf $1
}
check_host $(hostname)
bash shell-script
New contributor
sqlcheckpoint is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
that works :) any explanation on this ?
– sqlcheckpoint
3 hours ago
See also unix.stackexchange.com/questions/131766/…
– Jeff Schaller
3 hours ago
add a comment |
I have a simple shell function call and I'm using echo and printf commands to print the parameter I'm passing. I have noticed the following:
echois printing the output
printfis not printing the output
Am I missing something here?
check_host(){
# prints output
echo $1
# does not print the output
printf $1
}
check_host $(hostname)
bash shell-script
New contributor
sqlcheckpoint is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
I have a simple shell function call and I'm using echo and printf commands to print the parameter I'm passing. I have noticed the following:
echois printing the output
printfis not printing the output
Am I missing something here?
check_host(){
# prints output
echo $1
# does not print the output
printf $1
}
check_host $(hostname)
bash shell-script
bash shell-script
New contributor
sqlcheckpoint is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
New contributor
sqlcheckpoint is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
edited 2 hours ago
terdon♦
131k32258436
131k32258436
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asked 3 hours ago
sqlcheckpointsqlcheckpoint
1134
1134
New contributor
sqlcheckpoint is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
New contributor
sqlcheckpoint is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
sqlcheckpoint is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
that works :) any explanation on this ?
– sqlcheckpoint
3 hours ago
See also unix.stackexchange.com/questions/131766/…
– Jeff Schaller
3 hours ago
add a comment |
that works :) any explanation on this ?
– sqlcheckpoint
3 hours ago
See also unix.stackexchange.com/questions/131766/…
– Jeff Schaller
3 hours ago
that works :) any explanation on this ?
– sqlcheckpoint
3 hours ago
that works :) any explanation on this ?
– sqlcheckpoint
3 hours ago
See also unix.stackexchange.com/questions/131766/…
– Jeff Schaller
3 hours ago
See also unix.stackexchange.com/questions/131766/…
– Jeff Schaller
3 hours ago
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
The function you show would print the first argument twice, once with a newline appended, and with no newline at the end of the of second output.
E.g. in an interactive Bash shell, you'd get something like this
user@foo /tmp$ check_host foo
foo
foouser@foo /tmp$
The output from printf is there, just not on a line of its own.
The difference between echo and printf is that echo prints a newline at the end even if you don't ask for it (you can prevent that in Bash by using echo -n), and printf works more like the printf() function in C, in that it only prints what you ask. You'll have to explicitly use n in the printf format string to get the newline.
Note that in general, you'd want to quote those variables and the command substitution to prevent issues with word splitting. This probably isn't a problem with the hostname, but if you have values with whitespace, you'll need it.
So:
check_host() {
echo "$1"
printf "%sn" "$1"
}
check_host "$(hostname)"
Printing arbitrary data with printf should also be done through the %s format specifier as above. Otherwise any % signs in the data would be interpreted by printf.
Also see: Why is printf better than echo?
add a comment |
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1 Answer
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active
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votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
The function you show would print the first argument twice, once with a newline appended, and with no newline at the end of the of second output.
E.g. in an interactive Bash shell, you'd get something like this
user@foo /tmp$ check_host foo
foo
foouser@foo /tmp$
The output from printf is there, just not on a line of its own.
The difference between echo and printf is that echo prints a newline at the end even if you don't ask for it (you can prevent that in Bash by using echo -n), and printf works more like the printf() function in C, in that it only prints what you ask. You'll have to explicitly use n in the printf format string to get the newline.
Note that in general, you'd want to quote those variables and the command substitution to prevent issues with word splitting. This probably isn't a problem with the hostname, but if you have values with whitespace, you'll need it.
So:
check_host() {
echo "$1"
printf "%sn" "$1"
}
check_host "$(hostname)"
Printing arbitrary data with printf should also be done through the %s format specifier as above. Otherwise any % signs in the data would be interpreted by printf.
Also see: Why is printf better than echo?
add a comment |
The function you show would print the first argument twice, once with a newline appended, and with no newline at the end of the of second output.
E.g. in an interactive Bash shell, you'd get something like this
user@foo /tmp$ check_host foo
foo
foouser@foo /tmp$
The output from printf is there, just not on a line of its own.
The difference between echo and printf is that echo prints a newline at the end even if you don't ask for it (you can prevent that in Bash by using echo -n), and printf works more like the printf() function in C, in that it only prints what you ask. You'll have to explicitly use n in the printf format string to get the newline.
Note that in general, you'd want to quote those variables and the command substitution to prevent issues with word splitting. This probably isn't a problem with the hostname, but if you have values with whitespace, you'll need it.
So:
check_host() {
echo "$1"
printf "%sn" "$1"
}
check_host "$(hostname)"
Printing arbitrary data with printf should also be done through the %s format specifier as above. Otherwise any % signs in the data would be interpreted by printf.
Also see: Why is printf better than echo?
add a comment |
The function you show would print the first argument twice, once with a newline appended, and with no newline at the end of the of second output.
E.g. in an interactive Bash shell, you'd get something like this
user@foo /tmp$ check_host foo
foo
foouser@foo /tmp$
The output from printf is there, just not on a line of its own.
The difference between echo and printf is that echo prints a newline at the end even if you don't ask for it (you can prevent that in Bash by using echo -n), and printf works more like the printf() function in C, in that it only prints what you ask. You'll have to explicitly use n in the printf format string to get the newline.
Note that in general, you'd want to quote those variables and the command substitution to prevent issues with word splitting. This probably isn't a problem with the hostname, but if you have values with whitespace, you'll need it.
So:
check_host() {
echo "$1"
printf "%sn" "$1"
}
check_host "$(hostname)"
Printing arbitrary data with printf should also be done through the %s format specifier as above. Otherwise any % signs in the data would be interpreted by printf.
Also see: Why is printf better than echo?
The function you show would print the first argument twice, once with a newline appended, and with no newline at the end of the of second output.
E.g. in an interactive Bash shell, you'd get something like this
user@foo /tmp$ check_host foo
foo
foouser@foo /tmp$
The output from printf is there, just not on a line of its own.
The difference between echo and printf is that echo prints a newline at the end even if you don't ask for it (you can prevent that in Bash by using echo -n), and printf works more like the printf() function in C, in that it only prints what you ask. You'll have to explicitly use n in the printf format string to get the newline.
Note that in general, you'd want to quote those variables and the command substitution to prevent issues with word splitting. This probably isn't a problem with the hostname, but if you have values with whitespace, you'll need it.
So:
check_host() {
echo "$1"
printf "%sn" "$1"
}
check_host "$(hostname)"
Printing arbitrary data with printf should also be done through the %s format specifier as above. Otherwise any % signs in the data would be interpreted by printf.
Also see: Why is printf better than echo?
answered 3 hours ago
ilkkachuilkkachu
60.1k997169
60.1k997169
add a comment |
add a comment |
sqlcheckpoint is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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that works :) any explanation on this ?
– sqlcheckpoint
3 hours ago
See also unix.stackexchange.com/questions/131766/…
– Jeff Schaller
3 hours ago