• @joyjoyOP
    link
    English
    2
    edit-2
    1 year ago

    Is your issue about just syntax?

    for part in $text; do
      echo "xX${part}Xx"
    done
    

    In bash, this loops over each word in a variable. If you want each line, you’ll need to use a while read loop instead.

    while read -r line; do
      echo "xX${line}Xx"
    done <<< "$text"
    
    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      21 year ago

      I think my issue may be more than just syntax, I really am inexperienced lol, all just learning as I go (unix philosophy and all lol, I kid).

      The for loop I stole from the internet for use with ffmpeg is

      for i in *$input; do ffmpeg -i "$i" "${i%.*}$output"; done

      So I know what it does, it takes the input (read by the script earlier) filetype and changes it to the output filetype also read earlier for all of the files of $input type in the current directory, and I know how I got input and output as variables, and I know the ffmpeg -i foo -o bar command, but I get completely lost on "$i" "${i%.*}$output";. I don’t really understand when to use what brackets or where I need semicolons and why, though I do understand that $ calls a variable and * is an operator to designate “all,” I’m not entirely sure what this part of my script is doing (as this loop is the part I copied from stackexchange, and only half understood it “but it worked so fuck it” lol.)

      • @joyjoyOP
        link
        English
        31 year ago

        The ${} syntax manipulates a variable. In this instance, I believe % removes a suffix. # is for a prefix. I can never remember which is which.

        Semicolons just separate statements. You can replace them with a new line to get the same effect.