On Wed, 04 Jan 2012, James Hartleroad wrote:
But I have a shell script removeCTLM.ksh that has an embedded cntl-m as
part of a regular expression, for example sed 's/^M//g' $file > tmpfile
If this is a shell programming question rather than a subversion
question, then I suggest changing the scr
David Chapman wrote on Wed, Jan 04, 2012 at 16:11:27 -0800:
> #!/bin/bash -f
> sed 's/\r//g' $1 > tmpfile
>
> Rather than use a special character, I used the shell's escape sequence.
No you didn't. The single quotes protect the \ and it is passed
literally to sed's argv[1].
Daniel
(/bin/bash !=
On 1/4/2012 12:56 PM, James Hartleroad wrote:
For autopopulate I’ve setup for shell scripts to be text/plain, native
eol and executable
*.ksh= svn:mime-type=text/plain;svn:eol-style=native;svn:executable
But I have a shell script removeCTLM.ksh that has an embedded cntl-m
as part of a regul
For autopopulate I’ve setup for shell scripts to be text/plain, native eol
and executable
*.ksh= svn:mime-type=text/plain;svn:eol-style=native;svn:executable
But I have a shell script removeCTLM.ksh that has an embedded cntl-m as
part of a regular expression, for example sed 's/^M//g' $fi