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Pure Bash Bible
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Pure Bash Bible

A collection of pure bash alternatives to external processes.
The goal of this book is to document commonly-known and lesser-known methods of doing various tasks using only built-in bash features. Using the snippets from this bible can help remove unneeded dependencies from scripts and in most cases make them faster. I came across these tips and discovered a few while developing neofetch, pxltrm and other smaller projects.
The snippets below are linted using shellcheck and tests have been written where applicable. Want to contribute? Read the CONTRIBUTING.md. It outlines how the unit tests work and what is required when adding snippets to the bible.
See something incorrectly described, buggy or outright wrong? Open an issue or send a pull request. If the bible is missing something, open an issue and a solution will be found.
This book is also available to purchase on leanpub. https://leanpub.com/bash
Or you can buy me a coffee: PayPal, Patreon, Liberapay.

FOREWORD

A collection of pure bash alternatives to external processes and programs. The bash scripting language is more powerful than people realise and most tasks can be accomplished without depending on external programs.
Calling an external process in bash is expensive and excessive use will cause a noticeable slowdown. Scripts and programs written using built-in methods (where applicable) will be faster, require fewer dependencies and afford a better understanding of the language itself.
The contents of this book provide a reference for solving problems encountered when writing programs and scripts in bash. Examples are in function formats showcasing how to incorporate these solutions into code.

STRINGS

Trim leading and trailing white-space from string

This is an alternative to sed, awk, perl and other tools. The function below works by finding all leading and trailing white-space and removing it from the start and end of the string. The : built-in is used in place of a temporary variable.
Example Function:
trim_string() {
 # Usage: trim_string " example string "
 : "${1#"${1%%[![:space:]]*}"}"
 : "${_%"${_##*[![:space:]]}"}"
 printf '%s\n' "$_"
}
Example Usage:
$ trim_string " Hello, World "
Hello, World

$ name=" John Black "
$ trim_string "$name"
John Black

Trim all white-space from string and truncate spaces

This is an alternative to sed, awk, perl and other tools. The function below works by abusing word splitting to create a new string without leading/trailing white-space and with truncated spaces.
Example Function:
# shellcheck disable=SC2086,SC2048
trim_all() {
 # Usage: trim_all " example string "
 set -f
 set -- $*
 printf '%s\n' "$*"
 set +f
}
Example Usage:
$ trim_all " Hello, World "
Hello, World

$ name=" John Black is my name. "
$ trim_all "$name"
John Black is my name.

Use regex on a string

The result of bash’s regex matching can be used to replace sed for a large number of use-cases.
CAVEAT: This is one of the few platform dependent bash features. bash will use whatever regex engine is installed on the user’s system. Stick to POSIX regex features if aiming for compatibility.
CAVEAT: This example only prints the first matching group. When using multiple capture groups some modification is needed.
Example Function:
regex() {
 # Usage: regex "string" "regex"
 [[ $1 =~ $2 ]] && printf '%s\n' "${BASH_REMATCH[1]}"
}
Example Usage:
$ # Trim leading white-space.
$ regex ' hello' '^\s*(.*)'
hello

$ # Validate a hex color.
$ regex "#FFFFFF" '^(#?([a-fA-F0-9]{6}|[a-fA-F0-9]{3}))$'
#FFFFFF

$ # Validate a hex color (invalid).
$ regex "red" '^(#?([a-fA-F0-9]{6}|[a-fA-F0-9]{3}))$'
# no output (invalid)
Example Usage in script:
is_hex_color() {
 if [[ $1 =~ ^(#?([a-fA-F0-9]{6}|[a-fA-F0-9]{3}))$ ]]; then
 printf '%s\n' "${BASH_REMATCH[1]}"
 else
 printf '%s\n' "error: $1 is an invalid color."
 return 1
 fi
}

read -r color
is_hex_color "$color" || color="#FFFFFF"

# Do stuff.

Split a string on a delimiter

CAVEAT: Requires bash 4+
This is an alternative to cut, awk and other tools.
Example Function:
split() {
 # Usage: split "string" "delimiter"
 IFS=$'\n' read -d "" -ra arr <<< "${1//$2/$'\n'}"
 printf '%s\n' "${arr[@]}"
}
Example Usage:
$ split "apples,oranges,pears,grapes" ","
apples
oranges
pears
grapes

$ split "1, 2, 3, 4, 5" ", "
1
2
3
4
5

# Multi char delimiters work too!
$ split "hello---world---my---name---is---john" "---"
hello
world
my
name
is
john

Change a string to lowercase

CAVEAT: Requires bash 4+
Example Function:
lower() {
 # Usage: lower "string"
 printf '%s\n' "${1,,}"
}
Example Usage:
$ lower "HELLO"
hello

$ lower "HeLlO"
hello

$ lower "hello"
hello

Change a string to uppercase

CAVEAT: Requires bash 4+
Example Function:
upper() {
 # Usage: upper "string"
 printf '%s\n' "${1^^}"
}
Example Usage:
$ upper "hello"
HELLO

$ upper "HeLlO"
HELLO

$ upper "HELLO"
HELLO

Reverse a string case

CAVEAT: Requires bash 4+
Example Function:
reverse_case() {
 # Usage: reverse_case "string"
 printf '%s\n' "${1~~}"
}
Example Usage:
$ reverse_case "hello"
HELLO

$ reverse_case "HeLlO"
hElLo

$ reverse_case "HELLO"
hello

Trim quotes from a string

Example Function:
trim_quotes() {
 # Usage: trim_quotes "string"
 : "${1//\'}"
 printf '%s\n' "${_//\"}"
}
Example Usage:
$ var="'Hello', \"World\""
$ trim_quotes "$var"
Hello, World

Strip all instances of pattern from string

Example Function:
strip_all() {
 # Usage: strip_all "string" "pattern"
 printf '%s\n' "${1//$2}"
}
Example Usage:
$ strip_all "The Quick Brown Fox" "[aeiou]"
Th Qck Brwn Fx

$ strip_all "The Quick Brown Fox" "[[:space:]]"
TheQuickBrownFox

$ strip_all "The Quick Brown Fox" "Quick "
The Brown Fox

Strip first occurrence of pattern from string

Example Function:
strip() {
 # Usage: strip "string" "pattern"
 printf '%s\n' "${1/$2}"
}
Example Usage:
$ strip "The Quick Brown Fox" "[aeiou]"
Th Quick Brown Fox

$ strip "The Quick Brown Fox" "[[:space:]]"
TheQuick Brown Fox

Strip pattern from start of string

Example Function:
lstrip() {
 # Usage: lstrip "string" "pattern"
 printf '%s\n' "${1##$2}"
}
Example Usage:
$ lstrip "The Quick Brown Fox" "The "
Quick Brown Fox

Strip pattern from end of string

Example Function:
rstrip() {
 # Usage: rstrip "string" "pattern"
 printf '%s\n' "${1%%$2}"
}
Example Usage:
$ rstrip "The Quick Brown Fox" " Fox"
The Quick Brown

Percent-encode a string

Example Function:
urlencode() {
 # Usage: urlencode "string"
 local LC_ALL=C
 for (( i = 0; i < ${#1}; i++ )); do
 : "${1:i:1}"
 case "$_" in
 [a-zA-Z0-9.~_-])
 printf '%s' "$_"
 ;;

 *)
 printf '%%%02X' "'$_"
 ;;
 esac
 done
 printf '\n'
}
Example Usage:
$ urlencode "https://github.com/dylanaraps/pure-bash-bible"
https%3A%2F%2Fgithub.com%2Fdylanaraps%2Fpure-bash-bible

Decode a percent-encoded string

Example Function:
urldecode() {
 # Usage: urldecode "string"
 : "${1//+/ }"
 printf '%b\n' "${_//%/\\x}"
}
Example Usage:
$ urldecode "https%3A%2F%2Fgithub.com%2Fdylanaraps%2Fpure-bash-bible"
https://github.com/dylanaraps/pure-bash-bible

Check if string contains a sub-string

Using a test:
if [[ $var == *sub_string* ]]; then
 printf '%s\n' "sub_string is in var."
fi

# Inverse (substring not in string).
if [[ $var != *sub_string* ]]; then
 printf '%s\n' "sub_string is not in var."
fi

# This works for arrays too!
if [[ ${arr[*]} == *sub_string* ]]; then
 printf '%s\n' "sub_string is in array."
fi
Using a case statement:
case "$var" in
 *sub_string*)
 # Do stuff
 ;;

 *sub_string2*)
 # Do more stuff
 ;;

 *)
 # Else
 ;;
esac

Check if string starts with sub-string

if [[ $var == sub_string* ]]; then
 printf '%s\n' "var starts with sub_string."
fi

# Inverse (var does not start with sub_string).
if [[ $var != sub_string* ]]; then
 printf '%s\n' "var does not start with sub_string."
fi

Check if string ends with sub-string

if [[ $var == *sub_string ]]; then
 printf '%s\n' "var ends with sub_string."
fi

# Inverse (var does not end with sub_string).
if [[ $var != *sub_string ]]; then
 printf '%s\n' "var does not end with sub_string."
fi

ARRAYS

Reverse an array

Enabling extdebug allows access to the BASH_ARGV array which stores the current function’s arguments in reverse.
Example Function:
reverse_array() {
 # Usage: reverse_array "array"
 shopt -s extdebug
 f()(printf '%s\n' "${BASH_ARGV[@]}"); f "$@"
 shopt -u extdebug
}
Example Usage:
$ reverse_array 1 2 3 4 5
5
4
3
2
1

$ arr=(red blue green)
$ reverse_array "${arr[@]}"
green
blue
red

Remove duplicate array elements

Create a temporary associative array. When setting associative array values and a duplicate assignment occurs, bash overwrites the key. This allows us to effectively remove array duplicates.
CAVEAT: Requires bash 4+
Example Function:
remove_array_dups() {
 # Usage: remove_array_dups "array"
 declare -A tmp_array

 for i in "$@"; do
 [[ $i ]] && IFS=" " tmp_array["${i:- }"]=1
 done

 printf '%s\n' "${!tmp_array[@]}"
}
Example Usage:
$ remove_array_dups 1 1 2 2 3 3 3 3 3 4 4 4 4 4 5 5 5 5 5 5
1
2
3
4
5

$ arr=(red red green blue blue)
$ remove_array_dups "${arr[@]}"
red
green
blue

Random array element

Example Function:
random_array_element() {
 # Usage: random_array_element "array"
 local arr=("$@")
 printf '%s\n' "${arr[RANDOM % $#]}"
}
Example Usage:
$ array=(red green blue yellow brown)
$ random_array_element "${array[@]}"
yellow

# Multiple arguments can also be passed.
$ random_array_element 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
3

Cycle through an array

Each time the printf is called, the next array element is printed. When the print hits the last array element it starts from the first element again.
arr=(a b c d)

cycle() {
 printf '%s ' "${arr[${i:=0}]}"
 ((i=i>=${#arr[@]}-1?0:++i))
}

Toggle between two values

This works the same as above, this is just a different use case.
arr=(true false)

cycle() {
 printf '%s ' "${arr[${i:=0}]}"
 ((i=i>=${#arr[@]}-1?0:++i))
}

LOOPS

Loop over a range of numbers

Alternative to seq.
# Loop from 0-100 (no variable support).
for i in {0..100}; do
 printf '%s\n' "$i"
done

Loop over a variable range of numbers

Alternative to seq.
# Loop from 0-VAR.
VAR=50
for ((i=0;i<=VAR;i++)); do
 printf '%s\n' "$i"
done

Loop over an array

arr=(apples oranges tomatoes)

# Just elements.
for element in "${arr[@]}"; do
 printf '%s\n' "$element"
done

Loop over an array with an index

arr=(apples oranges tomatoes)

# Elements and index.
for i in "${!arr[@]}"; do
 printf '%s\n' "${arr[i]}"
done

# Alternative method.
for ((i=0;i<${#arr[@]};i++)); do
 printf '%s\n' "${arr[i]}"
done

Loop over the contents of a file

while read -r line; do
 printf '%s\n' "$line"
done < "file"

Loop over files and directories

Don’t use ls.
# Greedy example.
for file in *; do
 printf '%s\n' "$file"
done

# PNG files in dir.
for file in ~/Pictures/*.png; do
 printf '%s\n' "$file"
done

# Iterate over directories.
for dir in ~/Downloads/*/; do
 printf '%s\n' "$dir"
done

# Brace Expansion.
for file in /path/to/parentdir/{file1,file2,subdir/file3}; do
 printf '%s\n' "$file"
done

# Iterate recursively.
shopt -s globstar
for file in ~/Pictures/**/*; do
 printf '%s\n' "$file"
done
shopt -u globstar

FILE HANDLING

CAVEAT: bash does not handle binary data properly in versions < 4.4.

Read a file to a string

Alternative to the cat command.
file_data="$(<"file")"

Read a file to an array (by line)

Alternative to the cat command.
# Bash <4
IFS=$'\n' read -d "" -ra file_data < "file"

# Bash 4+
mapfile -t file_data < "file"

Get the first N lines of a file

Alternative to the head command.
CAVEAT: Requires bash 4+
Example Function:
head() {
 # Usage: head "n" "file"
 mapfile -tn "$1" line < "$2"
 printf '%s\n' "${line[@]}"
}
Example Usage:
$ head 2 ~/.bashrc
# Prompt
PS1='➜ '

$ head 1 ~/.bashrc
# Prompt

Get the last N lines of a file

Alternative to the tail command.
CAVEAT: Requires bash 4+
Example Function:
tail() {
 # Usage: tail "n" "file"
 mapfile -tn 0 line < "$2"
 printf '%s\n' "${line[@]: -$1}"
}
Example Usage:
$ tail 2 ~/.bashrc
# Enable tmux.
# [[ -z "$TMUX" ]] && exec tmux

$ tail 1 ~/.bashrc
# [[ -z "$TMUX" ]] && exec tmux

Get the number of lines in a file

Alternative to wc -l.
Example Function (bash 4):
lines() {
 # Usage: lines "file"
 mapfile -tn 0 lines < "$1"
 printf '%s\n' "${#lines[@]}"
}
Example Function (bash 3):
This method uses less memory than the mapfile method and works in bash 3 but it is slower for bigger files.
lines_loop() {
 # Usage: lines_loop "file"
 count=0
 while IFS= read -r _; do
 ((count++))
 done < "$1"
 printf '%s\n' "$count"
}
Example Usage:
$ lines ~/.bashrc
48

$ lines_loop ~/.bashrc
48

Count files or directories in directory

This works by passing the output of the glob to the function and then counting the number of arguments.
Example Function:
count() {
 # Usage: count /path/to/dir/*
 # count /path/to/dir/*/
 printf '%s\n' "$#"
}
Example Usage:
# Count all files in dir.
$ count ~/Downloads/*
232

# Count all dirs in dir.
$ count ~/Downloads/*/
45

# Count all jpg files in dir.
$ count ~/Pictures/*.jpg
64

Create an empty file

Alternative to touch.
# Shortest.
>file

# Longer alternatives:
:>file
echo -n >file
printf '' >file

Extract lines between two markers

Example Function:
extract() {
 # Usage: extract file "opening marker" "closing marker"
 while IFS=$'\n' read -r line; do
 [[ $extract && $line != "$3" ]] &&
 printf '%s\n' "$line"

 [[ $line == "$2" ]] && extract=1
 [[ $line == "$3" ]] && extract=
 done < "$1"
}
Example Usage:
# Extract code blocks from MarkDown file.
$ extract ~/projects/pure-bash/README.md '```sh' '```'
# Output here...

FILE PATHS

Get the directory name of a file path

Alternative to the dirname command.
Example Function:
dirname() {
 # Usage: dirname "path"
 printf '%s\n' "${1%/*}/"
}
Example Usage:
$ dirname ~/Pictures/Wallpapers/1.jpg
/home/black/Pictures/Wallpapers/

$ dirname ~/Pictures/Downloads/
/home/black/Pictures/

Get the base-name of a file path

Alternative to the basename command.
Example Function:
basename() {
 # Usage: basename "path"
 : "${1%/}"
 printf '%s\n' "${_##*/}"
}
Example Usage:
$ basename ~/Pictures/Wallpapers/1.jpg
1.jpg

$ basename ~/Pictures/Downloads/
Downloads

VARIABLES

Assign and access a variable using a variable

$ hello_world="value"

# Create the variable name.
$ var="world"
$ ref="hello_$var"

# Print the value of the variable name stored in 'hello_$var'.
$ printf '%s\n' "${!ref}"
value
Alternatively, on bash 4.3+:
$ hello_world="value"
$ var="world"

# Declare a nameref.
$ declare -n ref=hello_$var

$ printf '%s\n' "$ref"
value

Name a variable based on another variable

$ var="world"
$ declare "hello_$var=value"
$ printf '%s\n' "$hello_world"
value

ESCAPE SEQUENCES

Contrary to popular belief, there is no issue in utilizing raw escape sequences. Using tput abstracts the same ANSI sequences as if printed manually. Worse still, tput is not actually portable. There are a number of tput variants each with different commands and syntaxes (try tput setaf 3 on a FreeBSD system). Raw sequences are fine.

Text Colors

NOTE: Sequences requiring RGB values only work in True-Color Terminal Emulators.
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Text Attributes

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Cursor Movement

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Erasing Text

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PARAMETER EXPANSION

Indirection

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Replacement

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Length

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Expansion

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Case Modification

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Default Value

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BRACE EXPANSION

Ranges

# Syntax: {<START>..<END>}

# Print numbers 1-100.
echo {1..100}

# Print range of floats.
echo 1.{1..9}

# Print chars a-z.
echo {a..z}
echo {A..Z}

# Nesting.
echo {A..Z}{0..9}

# Print zero-padded numbers.
# CAVEAT: bash 4+
echo {01..100}

# Change increment amount.
# Syntax: {<START>..<END>..<INCREMENT>}
# CAVEAT: bash 4+
echo {1..10..2} # Increment by 2.

String Lists

echo {apples,oranges,pears,grapes}

# Example Usage:
# Remove dirs Movies, Music and ISOS from ~/Downloads/.
rm -rf ~/Downloads/{Movies,Music,ISOS}

CONDITIONAL EXPRESSIONS

File Conditionals

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File Comparisons

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Variable Conditionals

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Variable Comparisons

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ARITHMETIC OPERATORS

Assignment

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Arithmetic

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Bitwise

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Logical

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Miscellaneous

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ARITHMETIC

Simpler syntax to set variables

# Simple math
((var=1+2))

# Decrement/Increment variable
((var++))
((var--))
((var+=1))
((var-=1))

# Using variables
((var=var2*arr[2]))

Ternary Tests

# Set the value of var to var2 if var2 is greater than var.
# var: variable to set.
# var2>var: Condition to test.
# ?var2: If the test succeeds.
# :var: If the test fails.
((var=var2>var?var2:var))

TRAPS

Traps allow a script to execute code on various signals. In pxltrm (a pixel art editor written in bash) traps are used to redraw the user interface on window resize. Another use case is cleaning up temporary files on script exit.
Traps should be added near the start of scripts so any early errors are also caught.
NOTE: For a full list of signals, see trap -l.

Do something on script exit

# Clear screen on script exit.
trap 'printf \\e[2J\\e[H\\e[m' EXIT

Ignore terminal interrupt (CTRL+C, SIGINT)

trap '' INT

React to window resize

# Call a function on window resize.
trap 'code_here' SIGWINCH

Do something before every command

trap 'code_here' DEBUG

Do something when a shell function or a sourced file finishes executing

trap 'code_here' RETURN

PERFORMANCE

Disable Unicode

If unicode is not required, it can be disabled for a performance increase. Results may vary however there have been noticeable improvements in neofetch and other programs.
# Disable unicode.
LC_ALL=C
LANG=C

OBSOLETE SYNTAX

Shebang

Use #!/usr/bin/env bash instead of #!/bin/bash.
# Right:

 #!/usr/bin/env bash

# Wrong:

 #!/bin/bash

Command Substitution

Use $() instead of .
# Right.
var="$(command)"

# Wrong.
var=`command`

# $() can easily be nested whereas `` cannot.
var="$(command "$(command)")"

Function Declaration

Do not use the function keyword, it reduces compatibility with older versions of bash.
# Right.
do_something() {
 # ...
}

# Wrong.
function do_something() {
 # ...
}

INTERNAL VARIABLES

Get the location to the bash binary

"$BASH"

Get the version of the current running bash process

# As a string.
"$BASH_VERSION"

# As an array.
"${BASH_VERSINFO[@]}"

Open the user’s preferred text editor

"$EDITOR" "$file"

# NOTE: This variable may be empty, set a fallback value.
"${EDITOR:-vi}" "$file"

Get the name of the current function

# Current function.
"${FUNCNAME[0]}"

# Parent function.
"${FUNCNAME[1]}"

# So on and so forth.
"${FUNCNAME[2]}"
"${FUNCNAME[3]}"

# All functions including parents.
"${FUNCNAME[@]}"

Get the host-name of the system

"$HOSTNAME"

# NOTE: This variable may be empty.
# Optionally set a fallback to the hostname command.
"${HOSTNAME:-$(hostname)}"

Get the architecture of the Operating System

"$HOSTTYPE"

Get the name of the Operating System / Kernel

This can be used to add conditional support for different Operating Systems without needing to call uname.
"$OSTYPE"

Get the current working directory

This is an alternative to the pwd built-in.
"$PWD"

Get the number of seconds the script has been running

"$SECONDS"

Get a pseudorandom integer

Each time $RANDOM is used, a different integer between 0 and 32767 is returned. This variable should not be used for anything related to security (this includes encryption keys etc).
"$RANDOM"

INFORMATION ABOUT THE TERMINAL

Get the terminal size in lines and columns (from a script)

This is handy when writing scripts in pure bash and stty/tput can’t be called.
Example Function:
get_term_size() {
 # Usage: get_term_size

 # (:;:) is a micro sleep to ensure the variables are
 # exported immediately.
 shopt -s checkwinsize; (:;:)
 printf '%s\n' "$LINES $COLUMNS"
}
Example Usage:
# Output: LINES COLUMNS
$ get_term_size
15 55

Get the terminal size in pixels

CAVEAT: This does not work in some terminal emulators.
Example Function:
get_window_size() {
 # Usage: get_window_size
 printf '%b' "${TMUX:+\\ePtmux;\\e}\\e[14t${TMUX:+\\e\\\\}"
 IFS=';t' read -d t -t 0.05 -sra term_size
 printf '%s\n' "${term_size[1]}x${term_size[2]}"
}
Example Usage:
# Output: WIDTHxHEIGHT
$ get_window_size
1200x800

# Output (fail):
$ get_window_size
x

Get the current cursor position

This is useful when creating a TUI in pure bash.
Example Function:
get_cursor_pos() {
 # Usage: get_cursor_pos
 IFS='[;' read -p $'\e[6n' -d R -rs _ y x _
 printf '%s\n' "$x $y"
}
Example Usage:
# Output: X Y
$ get_cursor_pos
1 8

CONVERSION

Convert a hex color to RGB

Example Function:
hex_to_rgb() {
 # Usage: hex_to_rgb "#FFFFFF"
 # hex_to_rgb "000000"
 : "${1/\#}"
 ((r=16#${_:0:2},g=16#${_:2:2},b=16#${_:4:2}))
 printf '%s\n' "$r $g $b"
}
Example Usage:
$ hex_to_rgb "#FFFFFF"
255 255 255

Convert an RGB color to hex

Example Function:
rgb_to_hex() {
 # Usage: rgb_to_hex "r" "g" "b"
 printf '#%02x%02x%02x\n' "$1" "$2" "$3"
}
Example Usage:
$ rgb_to_hex "255" "255" "255"
#FFFFFF

CODE GOLF

Shorter for loop syntax

# Tiny C Style.
for((;i++<10;)){ echo "$i";}

# Undocumented method.
for i in {1..10};{ echo "$i";}

# Expansion.
for i in {1..10}; do echo "$i"; done

# C Style.
for((i=0;i<=10;i++)); do echo "$i"; done

Shorter infinite loops

# Normal method
while :; do echo hi; done

# Shorter
for((;;)){ echo hi;}

Shorter function declaration

# Normal method
f(){ echo hi;}

# Using a subshell
f()(echo hi)

# Using arithmetic
# This can be used to assign integer values.
# Example: f a=1
# f a++
f()(($1))

# Using tests, loops etc.
# NOTE: ‘while’, ‘until’, ‘case’, ‘(())’, ‘[[]]’ can also be used.
f()if true; then echo "$1"; fi
f()for i in "$@"; do echo "$i"; done

Shorter if syntax

# One line
# Note: The 3rd statement may run when the 1st is true
[[ $var == hello ]] && echo hi || echo bye
[[ $var == hello ]] && { echo hi; echo there; } || echo bye

# Multi line (no else, single statement)
# Note: The exit status may not be the same as with an if statement
[[ $var == hello ]] &&
 echo hi

# Multi line (no else)
[[ $var == hello ]] && {
 echo hi
 # ...
}

Simpler case statement to set variable

The : built-in can be used to avoid repeating variable= in a case statement. The $_ variable stores the last argument of the last command. : always succeeds so it can be used to store the variable value.
# Modified snippet from Neofetch.
case "$OSTYPE" in
 "darwin"*)
 : "MacOS"
 ;;

 "linux"*)
 : "Linux"
 ;;

 *"bsd"* | "dragonfly" | "bitrig")
 : "BSD"
 ;;

 "cygwin" | "msys" | "win32")
 : "Windows"
 ;;

 *)
 printf '%s\n' "Unknown OS detected, aborting..." >&2
 exit 1
 ;;
esac

# Finally, set the variable.
os="$_"

OTHER

Use read as an alternative to the sleep command

Surprisingly, sleep is an external command and not a bash built-in.
CAVEAT: Requires bash 4+
Example Function:
read_sleep() {
 # Usage: read_sleep 1
 # read_sleep 0.2
 read -rt "$1" <> <(:) || :
}
Example Usage:
read_sleep 1
read_sleep 0.1
read_sleep 30
For performance-critical situations, where it is not economic to open and close an excessive number of file descriptors, the allocation of a file descriptor may be done only once for all invocations of read:
(See the generic original implementation at https://blog.dhampir.no/content/sleeping-without-a-subprocess-in-bash-and-how-to-sleep-forever)
exec {sleep_fd}<> <(:)
while some_quick_test; do
 # equivalent of sleep 0.001
 read -t 0.001 -u $sleep_fd
done

Check if a program is in the user’s PATH

# There are 3 ways to do this and either one can be used.
type -p executable_name &>/dev/null
hash executable_name &>/dev/null
command -v executable_name &>/dev/null

# As a test.
if type -p executable_name &>/dev/null; then
 # Program is in PATH.
fi

# Inverse.
if ! type -p executable_name &>/dev/null; then
 # Program is not in PATH.
fi

# Example (Exit early if program is not installed).
if ! type -p convert &>/dev/null; then
 printf '%s\n' "error: convert is not installed, exiting..."
 exit 1
fi

Get the current date using strftime

Bash’s printf has a built-in method of getting the date which can be used in place of the date command.
CAVEAT: Requires bash 4+
Example Function:
date() {
 # Usage: date "format"
 # See: 'man strftime' for format.
 printf "%($1)T\\n" "-1"
}
Example Usage:
# Using above function.
$ date "%a %d %b - %l:%M %p"
Fri 15 Jun - 10:00 AM

# Using printf directly.
$ printf '%(%a %d %b - %l:%M %p)T\n' "-1"
Fri 15 Jun - 10:00 AM

# Assigning a variable using printf.
$ printf -v date '%(%a %d %b - %l:%M %p)T\n' '-1'
$ printf '%s\n' "$date"
Fri 15 Jun - 10:00 AM

Get the username of the current user

CAVEAT: Requires bash 4.4+
$ : \\u
# Expand the parameter as if it were a prompt string.
$ printf '%s\n' "${_@P}"
black

Generate a UUID V4

CAVEAT: The generated value is not cryptographically secure.
Example Function:
uuid() {
 # Usage: uuid
 C="89ab"

 for ((N=0;N<16;++N)); do
 B="$((RANDOM%256))"

 case "$N" in
 6) printf '4%x' "$((B%16))" ;;
 8) printf '%c%x' "${C:$RANDOM%${#C}:1}" "$((B%16))" ;;

 3|5|7|9)
 printf '%02x-' "$B"
 ;;

 *)
 printf '%02x' "$B"
 ;;
 esac
 done

 printf '\n'
}
Example Usage:
$ uuid
d5b6c731-1310-4c24-9fe3-55d556d44374

Progress bars

This is a simple way of drawing progress bars without needing a for loop in the function itself.
Example Function:
bar() {
 # Usage: bar 1 10
 # ^----- Elapsed Percentage (0-100).
 # ^-- Total length in chars.
 ((elapsed=$1*$2/100))

 # Create the bar with spaces.
 printf -v prog "%${elapsed}s"
 printf -v total "%$(($2-elapsed))s"

 printf '%s\r' "[${prog// /-}${total}]"
}
Example Usage:
for ((i=0;i<=100;i++)); do
 # Pure bash micro sleeps (for the example).
 (:;:) && (:;:) && (:;:) && (:;:) && (:;:)

 # Print the bar.
 bar "$i" "10"
done

printf '\n'

Get the list of functions in a script

get_functions() {
 # Usage: get_functions
 IFS=$'\n' read -d "" -ra functions < <(declare -F)
 printf '%s\n' "${functions[@]//declare -f }"
}

Bypass shell aliases

# alias
ls

# command
# shellcheck disable=SC1001
\ls

Bypass shell functions

# function
ls

# command
command ls

Run a command in the background

This will run the given command and keep it running, even after the terminal or SSH connection is terminated. All output is ignored.
bkr() {
 (nohup "$@" &>/dev/null &)
}

bkr ./some_script.sh # some_script.sh is now running in the background

AFTERWORD

Thanks for reading! If this bible helped you in any way and you’d like to give back, consider donating. Donations give me the time to make this the best resource possible. Can’t donate? That’s OK, star the repo and share it with your friends!
Rock on. 🤘
Based on https://github.com/dylanaraps/pure-bash-bible
License: MIT.
Aug 17 2021

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