This Topic is about Linux Admin – Read and Write to Files.
Both reading and writing to files in BASH can done with the input and output redirectors. We have come across each in previous scripts.
#!/bin/bash myFile = "myLines.txt" while read -a FILENAME; do if [ `echo $FILENAME | grep 004` ]; then echo "line was $FILENAME" >> LineFile.txt break fi echo $FILENAME done < $myFile
Instead of echoing to the terminal, our conditional branch now echoes to a file named LineFile.txt.
Reading from files has been presented in two ways, cat and read. read is usually always considered a best practice. While cat just passes the streams of text from a file. read implies to the script reading an actual file and takes accountability for a file being read.
The following script reads the text file again, puts each line into an array, then prints the array to the terminal.
#!/bin/bash myFile = "myLines.txt" line = () while read -r FILELINE; do line+=($FILELINE) done < $myFile for i in `seq 0 ${#line[@]}`; do echo $i " -> " ${line[$i]} done
Following is the output.
0 -> line001 1 -> line002 2 -> line003 3 -> line004 4 -> line005 5 -> line006 6 -> line007 7 -> line008 8 -> line009 9 -> line010
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