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04:19
@Luiserebii it's not clear what you expect this to mean. It actually means, run the command in the variable is_holiday with arguments =, [, etc
if you fix the superficial syntax errors, something like
is_holiday=$([ "$curr_day" = "${ARR[i]}" ])
is valid syntax, and evaluates to the output of [ with these arguments, which is empty regardless of whether it's true or not
but if those things are otherwise more or less about right you can do
is_holiday=$([ "$curr_day" = "${ARR[i]}" ] && echo true || echo false)
which sets is_holiday to either true or false
these are command names so you can subsequently say if $is_holiday and it will evaluate to if true (which is true ... unsurprisingly) or if false
04:54
@Queen k
@Queen k
@Queen f
actually
 
2 hours later…
06:56
@triplee what would be the neatest way to add a column of fake data right after the first (but not last) column of data produces by a command ?
like add a column of zeros after something that looks like this:
TCP 172.16.10.227:64882 172.16.10.226:5432 ESTABLISHED 12568
to make it look like this
TCP 0 172.16.10.227:64882 172.16.10.226:5432 ESTABLISHED 12568
sed:
sed 's/TCP /TCP 0 /'
?
@louigi600 yeah, if it's that simple
in more complex cases maybe Awk '{ $1 = $1 " 0" }'
well since I'm already using awk:
NETSTAT () { command netstat.exe -p tcp -a -n -b -o | awk '/^LISTENING/ ....}
can I combine the 2 in one thing ?
depends what's after /^LISTENING/ but probably
print the whole line
yeah, then '/^LISTENING/ { $1 = $1 " 0"; print }'
07:10
this way also the unix and windows netstat ntpl equiv have the things in the same columns
well I need to add 2 columns after the first column ... but your help was precious
so this is what I'm going to use:
case $(uname -o) in
  Cygwin) NETSTAT () { command netstat.exe -p tcp -a -n -b -o | awk '/LISTENING/ {$1 = $1 " 0 0"; print}'; };;
  *) NETSTAT () { command netstat -ntpl --protocol=inet; };;
esac
it was the closest I could get windows netstat to look like unix netstat
looks good! (-:
07:36
08:31
hi, anyone in?
somewhat, but even if we aren't, just ask and wait
this channel is more for programming but im kinda having trouble with just linux terminal stuff
if you can describe your trouble maybe we can at least tell you where to go
okay sweet, hang on ill get to the issue
So I'm using kerberos and the kinit command, but in a seperate terminal it wont contact a KDC
Teacher of course is a dick says i should try to find my own solutions instead of getting help for every menial problem
Meanwhile his commands dont work
To no avail
but im not sure if im doing this 'Then, export KRB5_CONFIG=~/.surfsara-krb5.conf (either run it or add it to ~/.bashrc, and run . ~/.bashrc).' right
@mtbrands well it depends on what you want .... if you want it to be automatically loaded when you login .bashrc, .bash_profile or .profile are the right places to have it automatically loaded
im sorry im not sure i entirely understand what you mean with that
im fine to use kinit every time, as long as it actually works
export KRB5_CONFIG=~/.surfsara-krb5.conf
is just exporting an environment variable
okay
so there are concrete steps i still need to take
you could run kinit from your .profile if no cached credentials are usable
klist might help out figure if there ane any in a usable state
09:16
apparently i didnt need the leading dot in the export command, thanks teacher for putting the leading dot there for no reason
but yeah thanks
a leading dot on a filename makes it like a windows hidden file
on unix it has no other effect appart from having ls not show such files unless told to do so
in every other aspect a file with a leading . in it's name is a normal file regardles of it being text, shell script, binary executable .....
the value has to point to an existing file name, of course; what you call the file is up to you, as long as you are consistent
watch out that
. somefile
means to source a file
while
.something
is a filename
if the instructions you received are not consistent, that would seem like a bug, but if they don't want bug reports, not much more you can do (except maybe tell your fellow students there is a problem in the instructions ... perhaps)
@Queen k
09:30
@tripleee kindof OT: how often do you revise the bash manual or has it become embedded permanently in your head ?
@louigi600 it's too big to memorize, sometimes I search for some details (like whether an option is a set option or a shopt option -- that's a real killer) but these days, googling is often more fruitful (and Stack Overflow tends to figure nicely in the answers)
because id seems you know the bash manual off by heart
20 years of practice helps but there are certainly areas where I don't have a lot of experience
make that 25
I've been using linux for more the 20 years now ... but I suppose I've not been writing bash scripts for 20 years ... might make the difference ...
I try to push myself to use Python more but the shell is just so convenient
09:35
I suppose I could say that I started writing bash scripts in 2004 ... now we'll see if these last few years make the difference and let me catch up with you :D
Im basically a linux virgin, get thrown into this course with no knowledge
theres tutorials and guides but apparently you have to deviate from those half the time
which, is not something i have to skill to do so
but thanks very much guys!
@mtbrands many are written for circumstances which are very local or long since obsolete
everyone starts at some date .... and no one was born with knowledge
the Bash wikis have pretty good materials and reviews of further resources on other sites
Im still quite bitter at the teacher though
09:37
mywiki.wooledge.org and the bash hackers wiki
this course is supposed to be about big data, but its more 99% linux black magic
see the bash tag info for the exact URLs
"Books and Resources" very near the end of the page
well the teacher has a point .... finding your own workaround for a problem cal help you learn other things along the way
@mtbrands are you going to work on artificial inteligence ?
no sure, but these little obscure command things, how do you find them without getting help?
Thats actually my major @louigi600
and keep an eye out on this chat as there's a lot to lern from tripleee
09:41
@mtbrands if you don't like the "sink or swim" approach there are some good books
Kernighan & Pike "The Unix Programming Environment" from 1984 is very very dated but still enjoyable and useful
well this feels like sink or swim heres a lifevest but oh sorry its filled with bricks
for Unix system administration I sort of liked the Nemeth & Snyder et al. book
and its just for this single assignment
but that was again some 20 years ago
@mtbrands if you don't want to buy books just read the bash manual and every time something is not quite clear google to make it clear (or ask tripleee who knows the manual off by heart (-: )
 
11 hours later…
21:01
Is there a nicest way to add a --help functionality to bash functions setted in ~/.bashrc? Or do I've to manually do the check inside the function? I'm not finding anything useful in the web (or maybe I'm searching the wrong way). Altough I'm very sure I'll have to check it inside
cbg
Is there a nicest way to add a --help functionality to bash functions setted in ~/.bashrc? Or do I've to manually do the check inside the function? I'm not finding anything useful in the web (or maybe I'm searching the wrong way). Altough I'm very sure I'll have to check it inside
1 message moved from Python
21:46
Is it possible to colorize the numbers listed in the output of select statement? And/or vice versa.. e.g. Colorize the items but not the reference numbers? Every time I attempt this, the columns output gets all screwy, which I assume is because of the escape codes.
I suppose I could ask this on the main site. I just hate to ask a question if the answer could simply be "No." :)

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