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Re: [Help-bash] Reading and handling "control" characters from a file


From: Davide Brini
Subject: Re: [Help-bash] Reading and handling "control" characters from a file
Date: Sun, 22 Apr 2012 01:56:46 +0200

On Sun, 22 Apr 2012 01:48:49 +0200, Davide Brini <address@hidden> wrote:

> > > Shouldn't the single quote trick work here? eg
> > > 
> > > $ a=$(printf '\x4\n')
> > > $ printf "%d\n" "'$a"
> > > 4
> > > 
> > 
> > Yes, I thought that was the solution for a brief time, but it still
> > fails when the character is a newline, for some odd reason.  Bash seems
> > to be rather fickle when it comes to certain things, allowing this,
> > objecting to that.
> 
> You must be doing something odd, because newline works for me:
> 
> $ a=$'\n'
> $ printf "%d\n" "'$a"
> 10
> $ printf -v byte "%d" \'"$a"
> $ echo "$byte"
> 10
> 
> Check how you're handling whatever you think should contain the newline
> before converting it.

Maybe I see, you're using "read" to get the values. In that case, use the
-d '' option to read so bash will only stop at NULs and newlines will be
read just like any other character.

-- 
D.



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