Commands using printf (206)

  • Converts a number of bytes provided as input, to a human readable number. Show Sample Output


    2
    human_filesize() { awk -v sum="$1" ' BEGIN {hum[1024^3]="Gb"; hum[1024^2]="Mb"; hum[1024]="Kb"; for (x=1024^3; x>=1024; x/=1024) { if (sum>=x) { printf "%.2f %s\n",sum/x,hum[x]; break; } } if (sum<1024) print "1kb"; } '}
    ArtBIT · 2011-12-02 18:21:20 3
  • Unlike other alternatives, this command only relies on bash builtins and should also work on windows platforms with the bash executable. Sparseness corresponds to the number 128 and can be adjusted. To print all possible digits instead of only 0 and 1 replace RANDOM%2 by RANDOM%10 or RANDOM%16 to add letters [A-F]. Show Sample Output


    2
    while true; do printf "\e[32m%X\e[0m" $((RANDOM%2)); for ((i=0; i<$((RANDOM%128)); i++)) do printf " "; done; done
    seb1245 · 2012-11-27 10:40:42 11

  • 2
    today() { printf '%(%Y-%m-%d)T\n' -1; } ## bash-4
    cfajohnson · 2013-01-27 06:17:25 6
  • opposite of https://www.commandlinefu.com/commands/view/10014/urldecoding-with-one-pure-bash-builtin ;-) Show Sample Output


    2
    function URLEncode { local dataLength="${#1}"; local index; for ((index = 0;index < dataLength;index++)); do local char="${1:index:1}"; case $char in [a-zA-Z0-9.~_-]) printf "$char"; ;; *) printf "%%%02X" "'$char"; ;; esac; done; }
    emphazer · 2018-09-14 12:08:10 355

  • 2
    printf '*%.s' {1..40}; echo
    metropolis · 2019-07-01 07:41:18 48
  • No need to use perl, awk, nor /usr/bin/date -- bash's "printf" builtin will do it. Show Sample Output


    2
    printf '%(%FT%T)T\n' 1606752450
    Mozai · 2021-06-20 05:11:20 176
  • Sometimes, in a shell script, you need a random number bigger than the range of $RANDOM. This will print a random number made of four hex values extracted from /dev/urandom. Show Sample Output


    1
    printf %d 0x`dd if=/dev/urandom bs=1 count=4 2>/dev/null | od -x | awk 'NR==1 {print $2$3}'`
    introp · 2009-02-18 16:23:09 6

  • 1
    echo '123/7' |bc -l |xargs printf "%.3f\n"
    mrttlemonde · 2009-03-18 14:20:32 5

  • 1
    printf "%d\n" "'A" "'B"
    twfcc · 2009-10-17 09:50:44 4
  • printf treats first char after single ' as numeric equivalent


    1
    ord() { printf "%d\n" "'$1"; }
    zude · 2009-10-17 22:02:52 3

  • 1
    printf "%s\n" .*
    cfajohnson · 2009-11-20 21:41:02 3
  • Prompts the user for username and password, that are then exported to http_proxy for use by wget, yum etc Default user, webproxy and port are used. Using this script prevent the cleartext user and pass being in your bash_history and on-screen Show Sample Output


    1
    set-proxy () { P=webproxy:1234; DU="fred"; read -p "username[$DU]:" USER; printf "%b"; UN=${USER:-$DU}; read -s -p "password:" PASS; printf "%b" "\n"; export http_proxy="http://${UN}:${PASS}@$P/"; export ftp_proxy="http://${UN}:${PASS}@$P/"; }
    shadycraig · 2010-02-04 13:12:59 5
  • This one uses hex conversion to do the converting and is in shell/sed only (should probably still use the python/perl version).


    1
    uri_escape(){ echo -E "$@" | sed 's/\\/\\\\/g;s/./&\n/g' | while read -r i; do echo $i | grep -q '[a-zA-Z0-9/.:?&=]' && echo -n "$i" || printf %%%x \'"$i" done }
    infinull · 2010-02-13 01:39:51 41
  • underline() will print $1, followed by a series of '=' characters the width of $1. An optional second argument can be used to replace '=' with a given character. This function is useful for breaking lots of data emitted in a for loop into sections which are easier to parse visually. Let's say that 'xxxx' is a very common pattern occurring in a group of CSV files. You could run grep xxxx *.csv This would print the name of each csv file before each matching line, but the output would be hard to parse visually. for i in *.csv; do printf "\n"; underline $i; grep "xxxx" $i; done Will break the output into sections separated by the name of the file, underlined. Show Sample Output


    1
    underline() { echo $1; for (( i=0; $i<${#1}; i=$i+1)); do printf "${2:-=}"; done; printf "\n"; }
    bartonski · 2010-02-26 05:46:49 8
  • The function 'box' takes either one or two arguments. The first argument is a line of text to be boxed, the second argument (optional) is a character to use to draw the box. By default, the drawing character will be '='. The function 'n()' is a helper function used to draw the upper and lower lines of the box, its arguments are a length, and an character to print. (I used 'n' because 'line', 'ln' and 'l' are all commonly used) Show Sample Output


    1
    box() { l=${#1}+4;x=${2:-=};n $l $x; echo "$x $1 $x"; n $l $x; }; n() { for (( i=0; $i<$1; i=$i+1)); do printf $2; done; printf "\n"; }
    bartonski · 2010-02-26 06:56:59 3

  • 1
    pmap $(pgrep [ProcessName] -n) | gawk '/total/ { a=strtonum($2); b=int(a/1024); printf b};'
    lv4tech · 2010-04-28 08:16:28 3
  • This one liner; combines all sequentially numbered files; in this example IMG_0001.png to IMG_1121.png by generating the shell script, making the shell script executable and then running the shell script to combine the 1121 png into a single png file named _final.png tested on Mac OS X 10.6.3 with ImageMagick 6.5.8-0 2009-11-22 Q16 http://www.imagemagick.org


    1
    echo -n "convert " > itcombino.sh; printf "IMG_%00004u.png " {1..1121} >> itcombino.sh; echo -n "-layers merge _final.png" >> itcombino.sh; chmod +x itcombino.sh && ./itcombino.sh
    IsraelTorres · 2010-05-22 03:56:30 5
  • The first argument is the interpreter for your script, the second argument is the name of the script to create. Show Sample Output


    1
    shebang() { if i=$(which $1); then printf '#!%s\n\n' $i > $2 && vim + $2 && chmod 755 $2; else echo "'which' could not find $1, is it in your \$PATH?"; fi; }
    bartonski · 2011-03-09 14:47:32 25
  • A shorter version Show Sample Output


    1
    while cat /proc/net/dev; do sleep 1; done | awk '/eth0/ {o1=n1; o2=n2; n1=$2; n2=$10; printf "in: %9.2f\t\tout: %9.2f\r", (n1-o1)/1024, (n2-o2)/1024}'
    quadcore · 2011-03-26 02:52:14 3
  • Watch the temperatures of your CPU cores in real time at the command line. Press CONTROL+C to end. GORY DETAILS: Your computer needs to support sensors (many laptops, for example, do not). You'll need to install the lm-sensors package if it isn't already installed. And it helps to run the `sensors-detect` command to set up your sensor kernel modules first. At the very end of the sensors-detect interactive shell prompt, answer YES to add the new lines to the list of kernel modules loaded at boot. Show Sample Output


    1
    while :; do sensors|grep ^Core|while read x; do printf '% .23s\n' "$x"; done; sleep 1 && clear; done;
    linuxrawkstar · 2011-04-20 06:41:57 7
  • Replace service --status-all 2>&1 by service --status-all 2>/dev/null to hide all services with the status [ ? ]


    1
    services() { printf "$(service --status-all 2>&1|sed -e 's/\[ + \]/\\E\[42m\[ + \]\\E\[0m/g' -e 's/\[ - \]/\\E\[41m\[ - \]\\E\[0m/g' -e 's/\[ ? \]/\\E\[43m\[ ? \]\\E\[0m/g')\n";}
    stanix · 2011-04-23 12:38:09 4

  • 1
    arp-scan -I eth0 -l | perl -ne '/((\d{1,3}\.){3}\d{1,3})/ and $ip=$1 and $_=`nmblookup -A $ip` and /([[:alnum:]-]+)\s+<00>[^<]+<ACTIVE>/m and printf "%15s %s\n",$ip,$1'
    bandie91 · 2011-07-08 07:41:41 3
  • Check the API. You shouldn't need sed. The print-newline at the end is to prevent zsh from inserting a % after the end-of-output. Also works with http://v.gd Show Sample Output


    1
    isgd () { curl 'http://is.gd/create.php?format=simple&url='"$1" ; printf "\n" }
    dbbolton · 2011-08-14 23:31:39 3
  • This one line Perl script will display the smallest to the largest files sizes in all directories on a server. Show Sample Output


    1
    du -k | sort -n | perl -ne 'if ( /^(\d+)\s+(.*$)/){$l=log($1+.1);$m=int($l/log(1024)); printf ("%6.1f\t%s\t%25s %s\n",($1/(2**(10*$m))),(("K","M","G","T","P")[$m]),"*"x (1.5*$l),$2);}' | more
    Q_Element · 2012-02-07 15:49:19 10
  • Counts the files present in the different directories recursively. One only has to change maxdepth to have further insight in the directory hierarchy. Found at unix.stackexchange.com: http://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/4105/how-do-i-count-all-the-files-recursively-through-directories Show Sample Output


    1
    find -maxdepth 3 -type d | while read -r dir; do printf "%s:\t" "$dir"; find "$dir" | wc -l; done
    brainstorm · 2012-10-15 15:00:09 7
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draw line separator (using knoppix5 idea)
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Sort lines using the Xth characted as the start of the sort string
Tells sort to ignore all characters before the Xth position in the first field per line. If you have a list of items one per line and want to ignore the first two characters for sorting purposes, you would type "sort -k1.3". Change the "1" to change the field being sorted. The decimal value is the offset in the specified field to sort by.

Extract title from HTML files
This command can be used to extract the title defined in HTML pages

Install pip with Proxy
Installs pip packages defining a proxy

Bash prompt with user name, host, history number, current dir and just a touch of color
I put that line in my .bash_profile (OS X) and .bashrc (Linux). Here is a summary of what the \char means: n=new line, u=user name, h=host, !=history number, w=current work directory The \[\e[32m\] sequence set the text to bright green and \[\e[0m\] returns to normal color. For more information on what you can set in your bash prompt, google 'bash prompt'

Which processes are listening on a specific port (e.g. port 80)
swap out "80" for your port of interest. Can use port number or named ports e.g. "http"

Colorize grep output

Create a file of a given size in linux
If you're trying to create a sparse file, you can use dd by 'skip'ing to the last block instance. ls -ls shows the actual size vs. the reported size

Command line calculator
This opens a python command line. You can use math and random and float-division is enabled (without appending .0 to integers). I just don't know how to specify a standard precision.

Make vim open in tabs by default (save to .profile)
I always add this to my .profile rc so I can do things like: "vim *.c" and the files are opened in tabs.


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