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Loading commands from file



2019 Community Moderator ElectionDifference between the terminal file and the terminal screenLog file visualizer in a Terminal (UNIX) (terminal logging replay)How to set the bash display to not show the vim text after exit?Logging interactive input and output without capturing all typed input and control charactersCan I cheat the docker run -it session by remapping ctrl+p key?Copy a large (over 4k) selection of text from the screen scrollback buffer into the system clipboardHow do I run a command in a new terminal window in the same process as the original?Debian - How to change Terminal background colorsHow do I record all terminal input and output to a local file by default for each session?Move terminal typed input to new line when console application/script displays output text










5















Is it possible to write commands to text file and then loaded it into terminal as file? If yes, how is the command for loading the file? Thank you.



For instance file_commands:



awk -f program.awk d01.active > out1
awk -f program.awk d02.active > out2


It is because of a problem with running an awk program that doesn't work with command



awk -f program.awk d??.active > out


I need to use program.awk for lots of files and this seemed to me as easier solution when I am not able to repair program for that command with ??.



It is related with this question https://stackoverflow.com/questions/55313187/more-input-files-in-awk?noredirect=1#comment97356807_55313187










share|improve this question



















  • 3





    Isn't this what an ordinary script is? Could you possibly give an example of what it is you want to do?

    – Kusalananda
    yesterday















5















Is it possible to write commands to text file and then loaded it into terminal as file? If yes, how is the command for loading the file? Thank you.



For instance file_commands:



awk -f program.awk d01.active > out1
awk -f program.awk d02.active > out2


It is because of a problem with running an awk program that doesn't work with command



awk -f program.awk d??.active > out


I need to use program.awk for lots of files and this seemed to me as easier solution when I am not able to repair program for that command with ??.



It is related with this question https://stackoverflow.com/questions/55313187/more-input-files-in-awk?noredirect=1#comment97356807_55313187










share|improve this question



















  • 3





    Isn't this what an ordinary script is? Could you possibly give an example of what it is you want to do?

    – Kusalananda
    yesterday













5












5








5


2






Is it possible to write commands to text file and then loaded it into terminal as file? If yes, how is the command for loading the file? Thank you.



For instance file_commands:



awk -f program.awk d01.active > out1
awk -f program.awk d02.active > out2


It is because of a problem with running an awk program that doesn't work with command



awk -f program.awk d??.active > out


I need to use program.awk for lots of files and this seemed to me as easier solution when I am not able to repair program for that command with ??.



It is related with this question https://stackoverflow.com/questions/55313187/more-input-files-in-awk?noredirect=1#comment97356807_55313187










share|improve this question
















Is it possible to write commands to text file and then loaded it into terminal as file? If yes, how is the command for loading the file? Thank you.



For instance file_commands:



awk -f program.awk d01.active > out1
awk -f program.awk d02.active > out2


It is because of a problem with running an awk program that doesn't work with command



awk -f program.awk d??.active > out


I need to use program.awk for lots of files and this seemed to me as easier solution when I am not able to repair program for that command with ??.



It is related with this question https://stackoverflow.com/questions/55313187/more-input-files-in-awk?noredirect=1#comment97356807_55313187







terminal






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited yesterday







Lukáš Altman

















asked yesterday









Lukáš AltmanLukáš Altman

695




695







  • 3





    Isn't this what an ordinary script is? Could you possibly give an example of what it is you want to do?

    – Kusalananda
    yesterday












  • 3





    Isn't this what an ordinary script is? Could you possibly give an example of what it is you want to do?

    – Kusalananda
    yesterday







3




3





Isn't this what an ordinary script is? Could you possibly give an example of what it is you want to do?

– Kusalananda
yesterday





Isn't this what an ordinary script is? Could you possibly give an example of what it is you want to do?

– Kusalananda
yesterday










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















9














If you have a file with a list of shell commands, one per line, then you have a shell script! All you need to do is run it:



sh file_commands


However, that isn't the simplest approach for what I think you need. If you want to run program.awk on each d??.active file in the current directory, you can simply use a loop:



for file in d??.active; do awk -f program.awk "$file" > "$file".out; done


That will create a d01.active.out out file for d01.active, a d02.active.out file for d02.active and so on.






share|improve this answer






























    5














    A shell script is essentially a list of commands terminated by line separators that will be interpreted as a list of commands by the specified (or default) interpreter.



    To specify an interpreter your file should start with a hashbang (also called shebang).



    Examples:



    #!/bin/sh
    #!/bin/bash
    #!/bin/ksh
    #!/bin/zsh
    #!/usr/bin/env bash


    Note: each of these interpreters have their own syntax and set of rules. You should study the manual for whichever one you plan on using.




    After your hashbang you can essentially just start listing your commands to be executed each on their own line.



    Note: these commands will be executed in order from top to bottom




    In your example you would want something like:



    #!/bin/sh

    awk -f program.awk d01.active > out1
    awk -f program.awk d02.active > out2


    You would then have to make this file executable and would run it by specifying the full or relative path to the file on the command line. (or by running sh /path/to/file)




    This does seem like a potential x-y problem though and can probably be handled in a more programmatic way.



    Such as:



    #!/bin/bash

    for file in d??.active; do
    n=$file:1:2
    awk -f program.awk "$file" > "out$n"
    done





    share|improve this answer
























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      2 Answers
      2






      active

      oldest

      votes








      2 Answers
      2






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes









      9














      If you have a file with a list of shell commands, one per line, then you have a shell script! All you need to do is run it:



      sh file_commands


      However, that isn't the simplest approach for what I think you need. If you want to run program.awk on each d??.active file in the current directory, you can simply use a loop:



      for file in d??.active; do awk -f program.awk "$file" > "$file".out; done


      That will create a d01.active.out out file for d01.active, a d02.active.out file for d02.active and so on.






      share|improve this answer



























        9














        If you have a file with a list of shell commands, one per line, then you have a shell script! All you need to do is run it:



        sh file_commands


        However, that isn't the simplest approach for what I think you need. If you want to run program.awk on each d??.active file in the current directory, you can simply use a loop:



        for file in d??.active; do awk -f program.awk "$file" > "$file".out; done


        That will create a d01.active.out out file for d01.active, a d02.active.out file for d02.active and so on.






        share|improve this answer

























          9












          9








          9







          If you have a file with a list of shell commands, one per line, then you have a shell script! All you need to do is run it:



          sh file_commands


          However, that isn't the simplest approach for what I think you need. If you want to run program.awk on each d??.active file in the current directory, you can simply use a loop:



          for file in d??.active; do awk -f program.awk "$file" > "$file".out; done


          That will create a d01.active.out out file for d01.active, a d02.active.out file for d02.active and so on.






          share|improve this answer













          If you have a file with a list of shell commands, one per line, then you have a shell script! All you need to do is run it:



          sh file_commands


          However, that isn't the simplest approach for what I think you need. If you want to run program.awk on each d??.active file in the current directory, you can simply use a loop:



          for file in d??.active; do awk -f program.awk "$file" > "$file".out; done


          That will create a d01.active.out out file for d01.active, a d02.active.out file for d02.active and so on.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered yesterday









          terdonterdon

          133k32264443




          133k32264443























              5














              A shell script is essentially a list of commands terminated by line separators that will be interpreted as a list of commands by the specified (or default) interpreter.



              To specify an interpreter your file should start with a hashbang (also called shebang).



              Examples:



              #!/bin/sh
              #!/bin/bash
              #!/bin/ksh
              #!/bin/zsh
              #!/usr/bin/env bash


              Note: each of these interpreters have their own syntax and set of rules. You should study the manual for whichever one you plan on using.




              After your hashbang you can essentially just start listing your commands to be executed each on their own line.



              Note: these commands will be executed in order from top to bottom




              In your example you would want something like:



              #!/bin/sh

              awk -f program.awk d01.active > out1
              awk -f program.awk d02.active > out2


              You would then have to make this file executable and would run it by specifying the full or relative path to the file on the command line. (or by running sh /path/to/file)




              This does seem like a potential x-y problem though and can probably be handled in a more programmatic way.



              Such as:



              #!/bin/bash

              for file in d??.active; do
              n=$file:1:2
              awk -f program.awk "$file" > "out$n"
              done





              share|improve this answer





























                5














                A shell script is essentially a list of commands terminated by line separators that will be interpreted as a list of commands by the specified (or default) interpreter.



                To specify an interpreter your file should start with a hashbang (also called shebang).



                Examples:



                #!/bin/sh
                #!/bin/bash
                #!/bin/ksh
                #!/bin/zsh
                #!/usr/bin/env bash


                Note: each of these interpreters have their own syntax and set of rules. You should study the manual for whichever one you plan on using.




                After your hashbang you can essentially just start listing your commands to be executed each on their own line.



                Note: these commands will be executed in order from top to bottom




                In your example you would want something like:



                #!/bin/sh

                awk -f program.awk d01.active > out1
                awk -f program.awk d02.active > out2


                You would then have to make this file executable and would run it by specifying the full or relative path to the file on the command line. (or by running sh /path/to/file)




                This does seem like a potential x-y problem though and can probably be handled in a more programmatic way.



                Such as:



                #!/bin/bash

                for file in d??.active; do
                n=$file:1:2
                awk -f program.awk "$file" > "out$n"
                done





                share|improve this answer



























                  5












                  5








                  5







                  A shell script is essentially a list of commands terminated by line separators that will be interpreted as a list of commands by the specified (or default) interpreter.



                  To specify an interpreter your file should start with a hashbang (also called shebang).



                  Examples:



                  #!/bin/sh
                  #!/bin/bash
                  #!/bin/ksh
                  #!/bin/zsh
                  #!/usr/bin/env bash


                  Note: each of these interpreters have their own syntax and set of rules. You should study the manual for whichever one you plan on using.




                  After your hashbang you can essentially just start listing your commands to be executed each on their own line.



                  Note: these commands will be executed in order from top to bottom




                  In your example you would want something like:



                  #!/bin/sh

                  awk -f program.awk d01.active > out1
                  awk -f program.awk d02.active > out2


                  You would then have to make this file executable and would run it by specifying the full or relative path to the file on the command line. (or by running sh /path/to/file)




                  This does seem like a potential x-y problem though and can probably be handled in a more programmatic way.



                  Such as:



                  #!/bin/bash

                  for file in d??.active; do
                  n=$file:1:2
                  awk -f program.awk "$file" > "out$n"
                  done





                  share|improve this answer















                  A shell script is essentially a list of commands terminated by line separators that will be interpreted as a list of commands by the specified (or default) interpreter.



                  To specify an interpreter your file should start with a hashbang (also called shebang).



                  Examples:



                  #!/bin/sh
                  #!/bin/bash
                  #!/bin/ksh
                  #!/bin/zsh
                  #!/usr/bin/env bash


                  Note: each of these interpreters have their own syntax and set of rules. You should study the manual for whichever one you plan on using.




                  After your hashbang you can essentially just start listing your commands to be executed each on their own line.



                  Note: these commands will be executed in order from top to bottom




                  In your example you would want something like:



                  #!/bin/sh

                  awk -f program.awk d01.active > out1
                  awk -f program.awk d02.active > out2


                  You would then have to make this file executable and would run it by specifying the full or relative path to the file on the command line. (or by running sh /path/to/file)




                  This does seem like a potential x-y problem though and can probably be handled in a more programmatic way.



                  Such as:



                  #!/bin/bash

                  for file in d??.active; do
                  n=$file:1:2
                  awk -f program.awk "$file" > "out$n"
                  done






                  share|improve this answer














                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer








                  edited yesterday

























                  answered yesterday









                  Jesse_bJesse_b

                  14k23572




                  14k23572



























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