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#1326 2010-09-28 08:32:32

Ogion
Member
From: Germany
Registered: 2007-12-11
Posts: 367

Re: Post your handy self made command line utilities

@the topic with the searches for files..

ogion@Gont ~/programming % time ll **/**(.) | wc -l  
2432
ls -lh --color=auto **/**(.)  0,21s user 0,09s system 87% cpu 0,338 total
wc -l  0,01s user 0,00s system 4% cpu 0,328 total

This one is powered by zsh, **/** are all files recursively, and (.) specifies that i only want regular files.

ogion@Gont ~/programming % time find . -type f -exec ls -lh --color=auto  {} \;  | wc -l
2607
find . -type f -exec ls -lh --color=auto {} \;  20,36s user 7,45s system 80% cpu 34,336 total
wc -l  0,02s user 0,10s system 0% cpu 34,335 total

This is GNU find…
GNU find 'found more' because zsh ignored all hidden files, in this case all and completely .hg / .git or .cvsignore files, while gnu find included hidden files. (They weren't that much though, in comparison to the number of non-hidden files).

The numbers tell me to use zsh smile

Ogion

EDIT: I just noticed though, doing this in for example my home dir results in an argumentlist that is too long for ls..

Last edited by Ogion (2010-09-28 09:03:35)


(my-dotfiles)
"People willing to trade their freedom for temporary security deserve neither and will lose both." - Benjamin Franklin
"Enlightenment is man's leaving his self-caused immaturity." - Immanuel Kant

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#1327 2010-09-28 14:18:02

brisbin33
Member
From: boston, ma
Registered: 2008-07-24
Posts: 1,796
Website

Re: Post your handy self made command line utilities

Ogion wrote:

The numbers tell me to use zsh smile

...

I just noticed though, doing this in for example my home dir results in an argumentlist that is too long for ls..

And that's exactly why find is slower.

The zsh example is a scaled up version of:

ls -lh /foo /bar /baz /bat

Whereas the find example is a scaled up version of:

ls -lh /foo
ls -lh /bar
ls -lh /baz
ls -lh /bat

which do you think will be slower? smile

The find command is built to handle an arbitrarily deep directory, but that comes with a performance hit.  You can only access the performance of shell globbing or xargs if the directory will be small enough for the tool you're handing the arguments off to.

Anyway, a fun little example of "the right tool for the right job" I suppose.

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#1328 2010-09-28 15:55:42

Gen2ly
Member
From: Sevierville, TN
Registered: 2009-03-06
Posts: 1,529
Website

Re: Post your handy self made command line utilities

A looping clock for the terminal, I got the redraw string from someone here on the forums (sorry I forgot the name right now):

#!/bin/bash
# loop time from the command line

while true; do 
  echo -n "$(date "+%T") "                                                      
  sleep 1
  echo -ne "\x0d\E[2K"
done

Setting Up a Scripting Environment | Proud donor to wikipedia - link

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#1329 2010-09-28 16:03:10

skanky
Member
From: WAIS
Registered: 2009-10-23
Posts: 1,847

Re: Post your handy self made command line utilities

Gen2ly wrote:

A looping clock for the terminal, I got the redraw string from someone here on the forums (sorry I forgot the name right now):

#!/bin/bash
# loop time from the command line

while true; do 
  echo -n "$(date "+%T") "                                                      
  sleep 1
  echo -ne "\x0d\E[2K"
done

That's nice. I've been using urxvt's built-in perl clock, but there are times when that covers some application's display as you can't seem to move it.
Having that instead could be useful.


"...one cannot be angry when one looks at a penguin."  - John Ruskin
"Life in general is a bit shit, and so too is the internet. And that's all there is." - scepticisle

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#1330 2010-09-28 16:09:16

karol
Archivist
Registered: 2009-05-06
Posts: 25,440

Re: Post your handy self made command line utilities

while true; do
printf "\r$(date "+%T")"
  sleep 1
done

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#1331 2010-09-29 15:08:17

TaylanUB
Member
Registered: 2009-09-16
Posts: 150

Re: Post your handy self made command line utilities

Was about to recommend karol's version. Gives less flicker. (I think it entirely eliminates flicker as we don't "clear" the screen but just write the new time onto it.)

Shortest version; might wanna make it a function by the way:

while sleep 1
do printf '\r%s ' "$(date +%T)"
done

``Common sense is nothing more than a deposit of prejudices laid down by the mind before you reach eighteen.''
~ Albert Einstein

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#1332 2010-09-29 15:35:33

karol
Archivist
Registered: 2009-05-06
Posts: 25,440

Re: Post your handy self made command line utilities

TaylanUB wrote:

Was about to recommend karol's version. Gives less flicker. (I think it entirely eliminates flicker as we don't "clear" the screen but just write the new time onto it.)

Shortest version; might wanna make it a function by the way:

while sleep 1
do printf '\r%s ' "$(date +%T)"
done

The echo approach has it's benefits. You can follow Mega-G33k's script evolution here.

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#1333 2010-10-14 20:59:00

jlcordeiro
Member
From: Portugal
Registered: 2009-05-23
Posts: 76

Re: Post your handy self made command line utilities

I'm not used to programming bash, so this code looks ugly as hell... I just made it, because I got tired of looking for possible dependencies when creating aur packages.

Assuming that you already compiled the program and that it is working:
ldd the executable file
pacman -Qo to find all packages needed
remove the packages required by other needed packages

I don't handle libraries that aren't owned by any package because the error message is good enough for me.

#!/bin/bash

p=`pacman -Qo \`ldd $1 | cut -d' ' -f3\` | cut -d' ' -f5 | sort | uniq`

for i in $p; do
    req=0;
    for j in $p; do
        if [ $i != $j -a `pacman -Qi $i | grep Required | grep -c $j` -eq 1 ]; then
            req=1;
        fi
    done
    if [ $req -eq 0 ]; then
        echo NEED $i
    fi
done

Last edited by jlcordeiro (2010-10-14 21:01:00)

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#1334 2010-10-14 21:03:30

Daenyth
Forum Fellow
From: Boston, MA
Registered: 2008-02-24
Posts: 1,244

Re: Post your handy self made command line utilities

Replace those backticks with $(), they make eyes bleed. Also try to avoid [, use [[ or (( instead depending on the context. If the program is part of a package, just run namcap on it and it will do all this for you. You shouldn't be installing anything unpackaged anyway tongue

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#1335 2010-10-15 05:21:09

ShadowKyogre
Member
From: Hell! XP No... I'm not telling
Registered: 2008-12-19
Posts: 476
Website

Re: Post your handy self made command line utilities

It's rather large: http://pastebin.org/194774
Lets me check my dA messages without opening my browser, whether my menu is splintered or not. I definitely need to make the output more customizable for conky and/or a zenity notification icon.


For every problem, there is a solution that is:
Clean
Simple and most of all...wrong!
Github page

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#1336 2010-10-16 04:18:27

ConnorBehan
Package Maintainer (PM)
From: Long Island NY
Registered: 2007-07-05
Posts: 1,359
Website

Re: Post your handy self made command line utilities

jlcordeiro wrote:

Assuming that you already compiled the program and that it is working:
ldd the executable file
pacman -Qo to find all packages needed
remove the packages required by other needed packages

I would go to the trouble of using "readelf -d" as "ldd" sometimes gives false dependencies.


6EA3 F3F3 B908 2632 A9CB E931 D53A 0445 B47A 0DAB
Great things come in tar.xz packages.

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#1337 2010-10-17 13:07:09

karabaja4
Member
From: Croatia
Registered: 2008-09-14
Posts: 1,001
Website

Re: Post your handy self made command line utilities

Extract contents of rar files in a directory with recursive directory walk.
Useful for extracting multiple TV shows at once:

- Looks for *.rar files WITHOUT partXY.rar extension and extract ONLY that one, thus extracting the archives that are named *.rar, *.r01, *.r02...
- Looks for part1.rar, part01.rar, part001.rar files and extracts ONLY those, thus extracting partX.rar - partY.rar files.
- Skips subs archives.
- Defined output directory for extracted files.

#!/usr/bin/python2

import os
import sys
import re
import signal
import subprocess

#signal handler function
def handler(signum, frame):
    sys.stdout.write (" \033[1;31mBye!\033[0m\n")
    sys.exit(0)
    
sys.stdout.write ("* Recursive unrar script 1.1 - by karabaja4\n")
argValid = False

#define signal
signal.signal(signal.SIGINT, handler)

#if argument path is defined
if (len(sys.argv) == 2):
    
    argPath = os.path.normpath(sys.argv[1])
    if os.path.exists(argPath): argValid = True

#dir is defined and valid
if (argValid):
    
    sys.stdout.write ("\n\033[1;32m==>\033[0m Root directory successfully read from command line!\n")
    rootDir    = argPath + "/"
    extractDir = argPath + "/../"

#or else use default dirs
else:
    
    sys.stdout.write ("\n\033[1;31m==>\033[0m Warning: Arguments invalid or not defined, defaulting to hardcoded!\n")
    rootDir    = "/home/igor/Downloads/"
    extractDir = "/home/igor/"

#print dirs
sys.stdout.write ("\033[1;33m==>\033[0m Root directory    : \033[0;32m%s\033[0m\n"   % rootDir)
sys.stdout.write ("\033[1;33m==>\033[0m Extract directory : \033[0;32m%s\033[0m\n\n" % extractDir)

#walk the dir
for root, subFolders, files in os.walk(rootDir):
    for filename in files:
        
        #join filename with path
        filePath = os.path.join(root, filename)
        
        #format the string with backslashes
        filePath = filePath.replace(" ", "\ ")
        filePath = filePath.replace("!", "\!")
        filePath = filePath.replace(r"'", r"\'") #fix the goddamn quotation mark
        
        #filter all except part1.rar, part01.rar, part001.rar, and rar without part substring
        if re.match("^.*\.rar$", filePath):
            if not re.search("part[2-9]\.rar|part0[2-9]\.rar|part[1-9][0-9]\.rar|part00[2-9]\.rar|part0[1-9][0-9]\.rar|part[1-9][0-9][0-9]\.rar|Subs|subs|subpack", filePath):

                sys.stdout.write ("\033[1;33m==>\033[0m Extracting: \033[0;33m%s\033[0m ... " % (filename))
                sys.stdout.flush()
                                                
                #run unrar
                p = subprocess.Popen("unrar " + "x " + filePath + " " + extractDir + " > /dev/null", shell=True)
                sts = os.waitpid(p.pid, 0)[1]
                                                
                sys.stdout.write ("\033[1;32mDone!\033[0m\n")

#end
sys.stdout.write ("\033[1;32m==>\033[0m Nothing else to do!\n")

Improvement suggestions welcome!

EDIT: updated #1

Last edited by karabaja4 (2010-10-18 22:10:13)

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#1338 2010-10-18 10:21:26

jlcordeiro
Member
From: Portugal
Registered: 2009-05-23
Posts: 76

Re: Post your handy self made command line utilities

I made something like that in bash a while back, but I don't try to look for part1.rar or part001.rar because I never got episodes with more than 99 parts.

#!/bin/bash

dir='/dados/series'

if [ $# -eq 0 ]; then
    dir='.'
else
    if [ $# -eq 1 ]; then
        dir=$1
    else
        echo "Too many input arguments."
        exit 1
    fi
fi

c1=`find $dir -name '*.part01.rar' 2>/dev/null`
c2=`find $dir -name '*.rar' 2>/dev/null | grep -v .part\.\..rar$`

for i in $c1 $c2; do
   unrar e $i
done
exit

And I'm looking for suggestions as well. I wanted to be able check/uncheck files as a way to learn ncurses, but I don't have the time right now.

Last edited by jlcordeiro (2010-10-18 10:24:09)

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#1339 2010-10-18 16:04:36

Procyon
Member
Registered: 2008-05-07
Posts: 1,819

Re: Post your handy self made command line utilities

Move the cursor with the mouse in the bash prompt.

Inside the code you have to change ps=4 to how long your PS1 is. If it's multi-line, just the last line.

The y-axis and button are ignored, so clicking anywhere in the terminal will move the cursor to the respective x-axis coordinate.

#! /bin/false
#! Source with bash

# bind -x seems to only work indirectly in this case.
# http://unix.derkeiler.com/Newsgroups/comp.unix.shell/2003-11/0926.html
bind -x $'"\201":mousemove.fn'
bind '"\e[M":'$'"\201"'

# Turn on mouse reporting
# Hold shift to get normal behavior
echo -ne '\e[?9h'
# Turn it off with
# echo -ne '\e[?9l'

function mousemove.fn() {
    local b x y ps
    # Only works if you know how long your PS1 is.
    # bind -x clears the line so it can't be derived from the current cursor position.
    ps=4

    # http://myfreebsd.homeunix.net/freebsd/mouse_events_shell.html
    read -s -n 3 -t 0.01
    printf -v b "%d" "'${REPLY:0:1}"
    printf -v x "%d" "'${REPLY:1:1}"
    printf -v y "%d" "'${REPLY:2:1}"
    case $b in
        96) b=scrollup;;
        97) b=scrolldown;;
        32) b=left;;
        34) b=right;;
        33) b=middle;;
        *)  b=unknown;;
    esac
    [[ $x < 0 ]] && x=$((x + 255))
    [[ $y < 0 ]] && y=$((x + 255))
    x=$((x - 32))
    y=$((y - 32))

    READLINE_POINT=$(( x - ps - 1 ))
}

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#1340 2010-10-18 22:56:18

portwolf
Member
Registered: 2008-09-09
Posts: 9

Re: Post your handy self made command line utilities

karabaja4 wrote:

Extract contents of rar files in a directory with recursive directory walk.
Useful for extracting multiple TV shows at once:

- Looks for *.rar files WITHOUT partXY.rar extension and extract ONLY that one, thus extracting the archives that are named *.rar, *.r01, *.r02...
- Looks for part1.rar, part01.rar, part001.rar files and extracts ONLY those, thus extracting partX.rar - partY.rar files.
- Skips subs archives.
- Defined output directory for extracted files.

#!/usr/bin/python2

import os
import sys
import re
import signal
import subprocess

#signal handler function
def handler(signum, frame):
    sys.stdout.write (" \033[1;31mBye!\033[0m\n")
    sys.exit(0)
    
sys.stdout.write ("* Recursive unrar script 1.1 - by karabaja4\n")
argValid = False

#define signal
signal.signal(signal.SIGINT, handler)

#if argument path is defined
if (len(sys.argv) == 2):
    
    argPath = os.path.normpath(sys.argv[1])
    if os.path.exists(argPath): argValid = True

#dir is defined and valid
if (argValid):
    
    sys.stdout.write ("\n\033[1;32m==>\033[0m Root directory successfully read from command line!\n")
    rootDir    = argPath + "/"
    extractDir = argPath + "/../"

#or else use default dirs
else:
    
    sys.stdout.write ("\n\033[1;31m==>\033[0m Warning: Arguments invalid or not defined, defaulting to hardcoded!\n")
    rootDir    = "/home/igor/Downloads/"
    extractDir = "/home/igor/"

#print dirs
sys.stdout.write ("\033[1;33m==>\033[0m Root directory    : \033[0;32m%s\033[0m\n"   % rootDir)
sys.stdout.write ("\033[1;33m==>\033[0m Extract directory : \033[0;32m%s\033[0m\n\n" % extractDir)

#walk the dir
for root, subFolders, files in os.walk(rootDir):
    for filename in files:
        
        #join filename with path
        filePath = os.path.join(root, filename)
        
        #format the string with backslashes
        filePath = filePath.replace(" ", "\ ")
        filePath = filePath.replace("!", "\!")
        filePath = filePath.replace(r"'", r"\'") #fix the goddamn quotation mark
        
        #filter all except part1.rar, part01.rar, part001.rar, and rar without part substring
        if re.match("^.*\.rar$", filePath):
            if not re.search("part[2-9]\.rar|part0[2-9]\.rar|part[1-9][0-9]\.rar|part00[2-9]\.rar|part0[1-9][0-9]\.rar|part[1-9][0-9][0-9]\.rar|Subs|subs|subpack", filePath):

                sys.stdout.write ("\033[1;33m==>\033[0m Extracting: \033[0;33m%s\033[0m ... " % (filename))
                sys.stdout.flush()
                                                
                #run unrar
                p = subprocess.Popen("unrar " + "x " + filePath + " " + extractDir + " > /dev/null", shell=True)
                sts = os.waitpid(p.pid, 0)[1]
                                                
                sys.stdout.write ("\033[1;32mDone!\033[0m\n")

#end
sys.stdout.write ("\033[1;32m==>\033[0m Nothing else to do!\n")

Improvement suggestions welcome!

EDIT: updated #1

I use this on zsh instead:

for file in */*.rar; do x $file; done;

where x is an alias for another shellscript in my zshrc:

# {{{ Unpack-Script cuz me is tooo layzaaaaay
x () {
  if [ -f $1 ] ; then
      case $1 in
          *.tar.bz2)   tar xvjf $1    ;;
          *.tar.gz)    tar xvzf $1    ;;
          *.bz2)       bunzip2 $1     ;;
          *.rar)       unrar x $1     ;;
          *.gz)        gunzip $1      ;;
          *.tar)       tar xvf $1     ;;
          *.tbz2)      tar xvjf $1    ;;
          *.tgz)       tar xvzf $1    ;;
          *.zip)       unzip $1       ;;
          *.Z)         uncompress $1  ;;
          *.7z)        7z x $1        ;;
          *.xz)        tar -xvf $1   ;;
          *)           echo "don't know how to extract '$1'..." ;;
      esac
  else
      echo "'$1' is not a valid file!"
  fi
}

I didnt wrote that, I got that too from the forums here.

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#1341 2010-10-18 23:00:01

karol
Archivist
Registered: 2009-05-06
Posts: 25,440

Re: Post your handy self made command line utilities

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#1342 2010-10-19 15:25:36

falconindy
Developer
From: New York, USA
Registered: 2009-10-22
Posts: 4,111
Website

Re: Post your handy self made command line utilities

Read man pages for software that might not be installed, courtesy of http://man.cx.

#!/bin/bash

#
# http://man.cx manpage extractor
# requires: xmllint (libxml2)
#

BASEURL='http://man.cx'
XMLLINT='xmllint --html'
XPATH_EXPR='--xpath //*[@id="manpage"]/pre'

usage() {
  echo "Usage: ${0##*/} [section] manpage" >&2
}

case $# in
  1) PAGE=$1 ;;
  2) SECTION="($1)"
     PAGE=$2 ;;
  *) usage; exit 1 ;;
esac

curl -s $BASEURL/$PAGE$SECTION | $XMLLINT $XPATH_EXPR - 2>/dev/null | sed 's|</\?[^>]\+>||g;s|&lt\;|<|g;s|&gt\;|>|g' | ${PAGER:-less}

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#1343 2010-10-19 17:25:59

Dieter@be
Forum Fellow
From: Belgium
Registered: 2006-11-05
Posts: 2,001
Website

Re: Post your handy self made command line utilities

falconindy wrote:

Read man pages for software that might not be installed, courtesy of http://man.cx.

aw....sum


< Daenyth> and he works prolifically
4 8 15 16 23 42

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#1344 2010-10-19 19:01:13

akurei
Member
From: Bochum, NRW, Germany
Registered: 2009-05-25
Posts: 152
Website

Re: Post your handy self made command line utilities

This script switches between /usr/bin/python2 and /usr/bin/python (python3) in the "transition-phase", for example if you need to build chromium-dev (it needs python2).

#!/bin/bash
if [ `whoami` != "root" ]
then
    echo "Please run as root!"
    exit 1
fi

if ! [ -f /opt/pyswitch/pp ] 
then
    # Create python backup directory
    mkdir -p /opt/pyswitch/
    # Get current Python location
    PP=`which python`
    # Save old destination to file pp in backup dir
    echo -ne $PP > /opt/pyswitch/pp
    # Move python to backup destination
    mv $PP /opt/pyswitch/python.bak
    # Make symlink to python2
    ln -s `which python2` $PP
    echo "$PP is now python2"
else
    # Get old Path
    PP=`cat /opt/pyswitch/pp`
    # Remove the file
    rm /opt/pyswitch/pp
    # Remove symlink
    rm $PP
    # mv python3 back
    mv /opt/pyswitch/python.bak $PP
    echo "$PP is now python3"
fi

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#1345 2010-10-19 20:34:11

skanky
Member
From: WAIS
Registered: 2009-10-23
Posts: 1,847

Re: Post your handy self made command line utilities

falconindy wrote:

Read man pages for software that might not be installed, courtesy of http://man.cx.

You could use lynx -dump, but the output of this one is a nicer format. smile


"...one cannot be angry when one looks at a penguin."  - John Ruskin
"Life in general is a bit shit, and so too is the internet. And that's all there is." - scepticisle

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#1346 2010-10-23 18:02:00

laochailan
Member
Registered: 2010-01-08
Posts: 17

Re: Post your handy self made command line utilities

I wrote some little script to render math formulas using xelatex. The original idea and prototype comes from some guy on the irc. He wrote a php script doing the same thing with latex, i just simplified the concept.

#!/bin/zsh

function quiterr {
        cat eq.log | tail -n20
        exit 1
}

mkdir -p /tmp/rendereq
cd /tmp/rendereq

cat >eq.tex << EOF
\documentclass{scrartcl}
\pagestyle{empty}
\usepackage{amsmath}

\begin{document}
\begin{equation*}
\begin{split}
$@
\end{split}
\end{equation*}
\end{document}
EOF

xelatex -halt-on-error eq.tex >/dev/null || quiterr
pdfcrop --margins "2 2 2 2" eq.pdf eq1.pdf >/dev/null

filename="${$(md5 eq.tex | tr '[:upper:]' '[:lower:]')%% *}.png"

convert -density 300 eq1.pdf /srv/http/tmp/$filename

echo loc: /srv/http/tmp/$filename
echo url: http://$yoururl/tmp/$filename

Something annoying is that the shell tends to escape all your backslashes away before they reach the tex file. so you have to write the arguments in single quotes. but it does the trick for now hmm

Last edited by laochailan (2010-10-23 18:02:25)

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#1347 2010-10-23 21:23:35

egan
Member
From: Mountain View, CA
Registered: 2009-08-17
Posts: 273

Re: Post your handy self made command line utilities

laochailan wrote:

I wrote some little script to render math formulas using xelatex. The original idea and prototype comes from some guy on the irc. He wrote a php script doing the same thing with latex, i just simplified the concept.
Something annoying is that the shell tends to escape all your backslashes away before they reach the tex file. so you have to write the arguments in single quotes. but it does the trick for now hmm

Here's a similar thing I made. I have a separate script to upload to imgur (it also records the links in a history file).

#!/bin/bash

##
# tex2img	-- quickly get png output from latex code (for math)
#
# usage		-- tex2img [SIZE] STRING
#			-SIZE is standard LaTeX size command name
#			 without any substring 'size'
#			-Few measures preventing stupidity
#			-Single-quoting is recommended
#
# notes		-- requires tclip
#		-- uses $$ environment only
#
# todo		-- add safeguards
#
# written	-- 25 August, 2010 by Egan McComb
#
# revised	--
##

size="\LARGE"

usage()
{
	echo "Usage: $(basename $0) [SIZE] STRING" >&2
	echo -e "\t-SIZE is standard LaTeX size command name" >&2
	echo -e "\t without any substring 'size'" >&2
	echo -e "\t-Few measures preventing stupidity" >&2
	echo -e "\t are in place" >&2
	echo -e "\t-Single-quoting is recommended" >&2
}

compile()
{
	latex -interaction=batchmode "$@"
}

convert()
{
	dvipng -q -T tight -o "$@"
}

chkargs()
{
	if (( ! $# ))
	then
		echo "Error: Too few arguments" >&2
		usage
		exit $ERR_NARGS
	elif (( $# == 2 ))
	then
		case "$1" in
			tiny)
				size="\tiny";;
			script)
				size="\scriptsize";;
			footnote)
				size="\footnotesize";;
			small)
				size="\small";;
			normal)
				size="\normal";;
			large)
				size="\large";;
			Large)
				size="\Large";;
			LARGE)
				size="\LARGE";;
			huge)
				size="\huge";;
			Huge)
				size="\Huge";;
			*)
				echo "Error: Invalid argument '$1'" >&2
				usage
				exit $ERR_VARGS
		esac
		text="$2"
	elif (( $# > 2 ))
	then
		echo "Error: Too many arguments" >&2
		usage
		exit $ERR_NARGS
	else
		text="$@"
	fi
}

clean()
{
	rm -f ${file/%tex/aux} ${file/%tex/dvi} ${file/%tex/log} $file
}

##----MAIN----##
chkargs "$@"
file=$(mktemp $(basename $0).XXX.tex)
cat > $file <<- EOF
	\documentclass{article}
	\usepackage[american]{babel}
	\usepackage{amsmath}
	\usepackage{amssymb}
	\usepackage{amsfonts}
	\pagestyle{empty}
	\newcommand{\abs}[1]{\lvert#1\rvert}
	\newcommand{\s}{\Rightarrow}
	\begin{document}
	$size
	\$\$${text}\$\$
	\end{document}
	EOF
compile $file > /dev/null || { echo "Error: Unable to compile LaTeX code" >&2; clean; exit 2; }
convert ${file/%tex/png} ${file/%tex/dvi} > /dev/null || { echo "Errors occurred in conversion" >&2; clean; exit 2; }
clean

echo "${file/%tex/png}" | tclip

exit 0
#!/bin/bash

##
# tclip		-- tee stdin to clipboard and stdout
#
# usage		-- tclip
#
# notes		-- not safe for large data 
#
# todo		-- remove intermediate variable
#
# written	-- 7 July, 2010 by Egan McComb
#
# revised	--
##

if [[ -t 0 ]]
then
	echo "Error: No input given" >&2
	exit
fi

read -r input
echo -n $input | xclip
echo $input

exit 0

Last edited by egan (2012-01-05 23:53:45)

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#1348 2010-10-23 21:25:44

egan
Member
From: Mountain View, CA
Registered: 2009-08-17
Posts: 273

Re: Post your handy self made command line utilities

Imgur script. It pops the URL onto STDOUT and to the X clipboard, as well as recording it with the delete URL in the file denoted by $HFILE. You need an API key.

#!/bin/bash

##
# imgur		-- upload image to imgur.com
#
# usage		-- imgur FILE
#
# notes		-- requires tclip
#		-- stores history in $hfile
#
# todo		-- thumbnail link?
#
# written	-- 25 August, 2010 by Egan McComb
#
# revised --
##

apikey="XXXAPIKEYXXX"

hfile="$HOME/bin/.imgur_history"

usage()
{
	echo "Usage: $(basename $0) FILE" >&2
}

chkargs()
{
	if (( $# != 1 ))
	then
		if (( ! $# ))
		then
			echo "Error: Too few arguments" >&2
			usage
			exit $ERR_NARGS
		else
			echo "Error: Too many arguments" >&2
			usage
			exit $ERR_NARGS
		fi
	elif [[ ! -f "$1" ]]
	then
		echo "Error: Invalid file '$1'" >&2
		usage
		exit $ERR_VARGS
	else
		image="$1"
	fi
}

##----MAIN----##
if ! netbool.sh
then
	echo "Error: Internet connectivity poor" >&2
	exit 1
fi

chkargs "$@"

response=$(curl -sF "key=$apikey" -F "image=@$image" http://imgur.com/api/upload.xml)

if (( $? != 0 ))
then
	echo "Error: Upload failed" >&2
	exit 1
elif (( $(grep -c "<error_msg>" <<< $response) > 0 ))
then
	echo "Error: imgur says:" >&2
	echo $response | sed -r 's/.*<error_msg>(.*)<\/error_msg>.*/\1/' >&2
	exit 2
fi

iurl=$(sed -r 's/.*<original_image>(.*)<\/original_image>.*/\1/' <<< $response)
durl=$(sed -r 's/.*<delete_page>(.*)<\/delete_page>.*/\1/' <<< $response)

date +%T\ on\ %D >> $hfile
echo "$iurl" | tee -a $hfile | tclip
echo "$durl" >> $hfile

exit 0
#!/bin/bash

##
# netbool.sh    -- check for proper Internet connectivity
#
# usage         -- netbool.sh
#
# notes         -- designed for use in other scripts
#
# todo          -- more elegant way to do this?
#
# written       -- 29 December, 2011 by Egan McComb
#
# revised       --
##

if ping -c 1 example.com &> /dev/null
then
        exit 0
else
        exit 1
fi
#!/bin/bash

##
# tclip		-- tee stdin to clipboard and stdout
#
# usage		-- tclip
#
# notes		-- not safe for large data 
#
# todo		-- remove intermediate variable
#
# written	-- 7 July, 2010 by Egan McComb
#
# revised	--
##

if [[ -t 0 ]]
then
	echo "Error: No input given" >&2
	exit
fi

read -r input
echo -n $input | xclip
echo $input

exit 0

Last edited by egan (2012-01-05 23:52:06)

Offline

#1349 2010-10-24 06:59:58

laochailan
Member
Registered: 2010-01-08
Posts: 17

Re: Post your handy self made command line utilities

$$ … $$ isn't that good. it's the old plain TeX notation for math stuff and not recommended in latex afaik. \[ \] or the equation/equation* environments looks a bit better sometimes and you have the advantage that you can align your equations using some subenvironment like align or split.

Offline

#1350 2010-10-31 18:41:00

ninian
Member
From: United Kingdom
Registered: 2008-02-24
Posts: 726
Website

Re: Post your handy self made command line utilities

You've probably seen much of it before, but I've posted my DeiMenu scripts online at Apps To Go. These provide a dynamic application menu framework based on the great Suckless dmenu program. DeiMenu has been designed to make it easier to administer menus for several users and/or those in some sort of a hierarchy, be it in an office or in the family!

Comments most welcome.

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