The link gets the definition from vocabulary.com. In case you are behind firewall, use --proxy URL in the curl option. Show Sample Output
Remove lines from a bibtex file that have abstracts in them.
Delete the beginning of each line until first match of given character, in this case it's ":" Does it on all lines. The given character is deleted also, and can be a space.
This command lists all currently installed packages in ubuntu in a single line, for example to use later with apt install. Show Sample Output
To be used with other port scanners and or for help with iptables --dport 1000:2000 style expansion Show Sample Output
Get newest kernel version by parsing the most bleeding-edge Makefile possible. Useful for doing things like writing live ebuilds and/or self-updating PKGBUILDs for testing purposes. Breakdown: * wget -qO - https://raw.githubusercontent.com/torvalds/linux/master/Makefile — retrieve Makefile and pipe to stdout * head -n5 — only the first 5 lines are relevant, that's where all the version variables are grep -E '\ \=\ [0-9]{1,}' — version variables always have an equals sign followed by a number * cut -d' ' -f3 — extract the individual numbers from the version variables * tr '\n' '.' — replace newlines with periods * sed -e "s/\.$// — remove trailing period Show Sample Output
It his example removes ' dog', last space included. Show Sample Output
From a saved page of google search results, split out all of the links for the results. Useful for creating apache rewrite rules from.
So you have a web site and you've plastered your significant other's name all over it. But you broke up with them and have some new love in your life. How do you find all those instances of their name and replace them?
Jan Nelson from Grockit came up with this for us when we needed to rename all of our fixtures.
NOT MINE! Taken from hackzine.com blog. It creates a tree-style output of all the (sub)folders and (sub)files from the current folder and down(deeper) Quoting some of hackzine's words "Murphy Mac sent us a link to a handy find/sed command that simulates the DOS tree command that you might be missing on your Mac or Linux box. [..split...] Like most things I've seen sed do, it does quite a bit in a single line of code and is completely impossible to read. Sure it's just a couple of substitutions, but like a jack in the box, it remains a surprise every time I run it." Show Sample Output
Extensible to other ugly extensions like *.JPG, *.Jpg etc.. Leave out the last pipe to sh to perform a dry run.
G option cause a file to be spacing line by line. Show Sample Output
With this command you can use shell variables inside sed scripts. This is useful if the script MUST remain in an external file, otherwise you can simply use an inline -e argument to sed.
It happened to me that I got a season of a tv-show which had all files under the same folder like /home/blah/tv_show/season1/file{1,2,3,4,5,...}.avi
But I like to have them like this:
/home/blah/tv_show/season1/e{1,2,3,4,5,...}/file{1,2,3,4,5,...}.avi
So I can have both the srt and the avi on one folder without cluttering much. This command organizes everything assuming that the filename contains Exx where xx is the number of the episode.
You may need to set:
IFS=$'\n'
if your filenames have spaces.
You can replace "sort -nu" with "sort -u" for a word list sorted or "sort -R" for a random-sorted line (edit: corrected) Show Sample Output
This command will generate "CHECK TABLE `db_name.table_name` ;" statements for all tables present in databases on a MySQL server, which can be piped into the mysql command. (Can also be altered to perform OPTIMIZE and REPAIR functions.) Tested on MySQL 4.x and 5.x systems in a Linux environment under bash. Show Sample Output
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