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Re: Request to a new feature on read
From: |
Greg Wooledge |
Subject: |
Re: Request to a new feature on read |
Date: |
Thu, 16 Apr 2015 10:50:20 -0400 |
User-agent: |
Mutt/1.4.2.3i |
On Thu, Apr 16, 2015 at 09:39:08AM -0500, Dan Douglas wrote:
> On Thu, Apr 16, 2015 at 9:32 AM, Greg Wooledge <wooledg@eeg.ccf.org> wrote:
> > On Thu, Apr 16, 2015 at 09:29:56AM -0500, Dan Douglas wrote:
> >> I find myself in need of something along the lines of Python's
> >> `re.split` and `re.findall` all the time. E.g. splitting an ip into an
> >> array of octets.
> >
> > IFS=. read -ra octets <<< "$ip"
>
> Sure, but validation is then separate if needed. There are plenty of
> applications where you want either a multi-character or non-static
> delimiter, possibly with pattern matching on the data at the same
> time.
I don't see why such features should be compiled into bash's read builtin.
I'd have no problem with adding better splitting/joining/parsing features
in a more general context, probably operating on a string variable, but
certainly not operating on a file descriptor.
Doesn't the underlying C library only guarantee you a single character of
lookahead when reading? (Or maybe a single byte. I'm way out of date.
My knowledge of C comes from the days when char = byte.) You can't do
all this fancy perl-RE-style lookahead stuff on a stream with only a
single byte/char of lookahead.
Re: Request to a new feature on read, Valentin Bajrami, 2015/04/16