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bug#22128: dirname enhancement


From: Nellis, Kenneth
Subject: bug#22128: dirname enhancement
Date: Thu, 10 Dec 2015 17:46:25 +0000

I got it. You don't like the idea. That's fine. Please close the ticket.
--Ken


> -----Original Message-----
> From: Bob Proulx [mailto:address@hidden
> Sent: Thursday, December 10, 2015 12:41 PM
> To: Nellis, Kenneth
> Cc: address@hidden
> Subject: Re: bug#22128: dirname enhancement
> 
> Nellis, Kenneth wrote:
> > Still, my -f suggestion would be easier to type,
> > but I welcome your alternatives.
> 
> Here is the problem.  You would like dirname to read a list from a
> file.  Someone else will want it to read a file list of files listing
> files.  Another will want to skip one header line.  Another will want
> to skip multiple header lines.  Another will want the exact same
> feature in basename too.  Another will want file name modification so
> that it can be used to rename directories.  And on and on and on.
> Trying to put every possible combination of feature into every utility
> leads to unmanageable code bloat.
> 
> What do all of those have in common?  They are all specific features
> that are easily available by using the features of the operating
> system.  That is the entire point of a Unix-like operating system.  It
> already has all of the tools needed.  You tell it what you want it to
> do using those features.  That is the way the operating system is
> designed.  Utilities such as dirname are simply small pieces in the
> complete solution.
> 
> In this instance the first thing I thought of when I read your dirname
> -f request was a loop.
> 
>    while read dir; do dirname $dir; done < list
> 
> Pádraig suggested xargs which was even shorter.
> 
>   xargs dirname < filename
> 
> Both of those directly do exactly what you had asked to do.  The
> technique works not only with dirname but with every other command on
> the system too.  A technique that works with everything is much better
> than something that only works in one small place.
> 
> Want to get the basename instead?
> 
>    while read dir; do basename $dir; done < list
> 
> Want to modify the result to add a suffix?
> 
>    while read dir; do echo $dir.myaddedsuffix; done < list
> 
> Want to modify the name in some custom way?
> 
>    while read dir; do echo $dir | sed 's/foo/bar/; done < list
> 
> Want a sorted unique list modified in some custom way?
> 
>    while read dir; do echo $dir | sed 's/foo/bar/'; done < list | sort -u
> 
> The possibilities are endless and as they say limited only by your
> imagination.  Anything you can think of doing you can tell the system
> to do it for you.  Truly a marvelous thing to be so empowered.
> 
> Note that in order to be completely general and work with arbitrary
> names that have embedded newlines then proper quoting is required and
> the wisdom of today says always use null terminated strings.  But if
> you are using a file of names then I assume you are operating on a
> restricted and sane set of characters so this won't matter to you.
> I do that all of the time.
> 
> Bob






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