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@Queen k
@Queen k
@Queen k
@Queen k hesitantly
 
4 hours later…
07:15
@tripleee hi ;)
if I've collected stuff from a terminal session via /usr/bin/scrip
but that contains a lot of sharacters that the termilan wil interpret but make it a little less then nice to read fro a human.
Appart from cat the file and then doing a manual cut and paste is there an automated way to make the collected output directly readable for humans ?
IIRC the colcrt command is able to scrub some of it, but not all
assuming you mean script
this is a common question, there are probably semistandard tools but nothing properly standard
22
Q: How to clean up output of linux 'script' command

AndrewI'm using the linux 'script' command http://www.linuxcommand.org/man_pages/script1.html to track some interactive sessions. The output files from that contain unprintable characters, including my backspace keystrokes. Is there a way to tidy these output files up so they only contain what was di...

yes ... typo
/usr/bin/script
I saw that ... but col -bp is still leaving a lot of unwanted stuff
the linked Superuser post has mulitple ad-hoc Perl scripts to sort out the remaining problems
but like I said, there is nothing properly standard
I suppose cat and then cut and paste is the only way to properly have it done
but that's time consuming on a long session
cat is probably useless here
07:28
cat on the termina itself that is
ah you mean have the terminal render it and then capture the rendering
and then cut and paste from the terminal
I wonder if I can get xterm od som other terminal to sneak out the stuff for me on a file
I'm sure I'm not the only one looking for a solution
again, did you try the Perl scripts in the question I linked above?
not yet ... but I'm about to do that
cat parrot_hacking | perl -pe 's/\e([^\[\]]|\[.*?[a-zA-Z]|\].*?\a)//g' | col -b > parrot_hacking.txt
much much better
to the point I'm asking myself why did the correct answer go to the other answer ?
 
1 hour later…
08:56
@louigi600 often a good question, accepted does not necessarily mean best
or even correct
09:22
it's just the way it is ...
 
6 hours later…
15:34
1 message moved to friendly bin
1 message moved to friendly bin
Oops, sorry, I did it more to see if anyone was here
I was wondering, I've been trying to work with boolean operators in Bash, but from what I understand, there are no booleans in the sense that they exist in typical compiled languages
Does this mean condiitonals can only be used within their statements? Is it possible to do something like,
"$is_holiday" = [ "$curr_day" = "${ARR[i]}" ]
?
 
3 hours later…
 
3 hours later…

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