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unixcsh

How would you include newline characters in a C-shell echo command?


This sounds ridiculously easy, and it is with other shells. But I can't seem to figure out how to get echo to display newlines. For example -

cat myFile

shows the file as it actually exists, which is what I want -

this
is
my
file

whereas my script, which contains the following -

#!/bin/csh
set var = `cat myFile`
echo "$var"

removes all the newlines, which is not what I want -

this is my file

Thanks in advance.


Solution

  • The problem isn't with the echo command, it's with csh's handling of backticks. When you execute

    set var = `cat myFile`
    

    the newlines from myfile are never stored in $var; they're converted to spaces. I can't think of any way to force a csh variable to include newlines read from a file, though there might be a way to do it.

    sh and its derivatives do behave the way you want. For example:

    $ x="`printf 'foo\nbar'`"
    $ echo $x
    foo bar
    $ echo "$x"
    foo
    bar
    $ 
    

    The double quotes on the assignment cause the newlines (except for the last one) to be preserved. echo $x replaces the newlines with spaces, but echo "$x" preserves them.

    Your best bet is to do something other than trying to store the contents of a file in a variable. You said in a comment that you're trying to send an e-mail with the contents of a log file. So feed the contents of the file directly to whatever mail command you're using. I don't have all the details, but it might look something like this:

    ( echo this ; echo that ; echo the-other ; cat myFile ) | some-mail-command
    

    Obligatory reference: http://www.faqs.org/faqs/unix-faq/shell/csh-whynot/