Reputation: 1608
How do I write a simple shell script (say script.sh), so that I can pass a URL as an argument while executing?
I want a browser to start with the page opened on that URL. I want to write the command in the script to open a browser and open the URL given in argument.
Upvotes: 93
Views: 211110
Reputation: 206
Openurl utilitiy
A script for opening URLs with aliases stored in an aliases file. Examples:
search|s|google|g
http://www.google.com/search?q={search\+}
search2|s2|yahoo
https://search.yahoo.com/search?p={search\+}
images|img
https://www.google.com/search?site=&tbm=isch&q={search\+}
videos|v|youtube|yt
https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query={search\+}
Here is an example using the Google alias:
openurl google newest smartphones 2024
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 65
For Cygwin under Windows you can't use start. But you can use cygstart:
cygstart https://stackoverflow.com
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 149736
You don't need to write a script for that. There're some tools that you can use depending on your OS:
xdg-open
is available in most Linux distributions. It opens a file or URL in the user's preferred browser (configurable with xdg-settings
).
xdg-open https://stackoverflow.com
open
opens files and URLs in the default or specified application.
open https://stackoverflow.com
open -a Firefox https://stackoverflow.com
You can use the start
command at the command prompt to open an URL in the default (or specified) browser.
start https://stackoverflow.com
start firefox https://stackoverflow.com
The builtin webbrowser
Python module works on many platforms.
python3 -m webbrowser https://stackoverflow.com
Upvotes: 162
Reputation: 1
start "" "browser_location" "address"
For example:
start "" "C:\Program Files (x86)\Google\Chrome\Application\chrome.exe" "https://google.com"
Upvotes: -4
Reputation: 4496
If you want a cross-OS solution and are comfortable using Python (3):
Try this:
import webbrowser
webbrowser.open('https://yoururl.com')
Or in a terminal/cmd:
python -m webbrowser -t "https://yoururl.com"
Upvotes: 6
Reputation: 18192
For Windows,
You can just write start filename_or_URL
start https://www.google.com
It will open the URL in a default browser. If you want to specify the browser you can write:
start chrome https://www.google.com
start firefox https://www.google.com
start iexplore https://www.google.com
Note: The browser name above can be obtained from the exe
file found in program files (sample: C:\Program Files\Internet Explorer\iexplore.exe
) if you wish to open multiple URLs.
start chrome "www.google.com" "www.bing.com"
It was tested with .sh (shellscript file) and .bat files.
Upvotes: 12
Reputation: 21955
Method 1
Suppose your browser is Firefox and your script urlopener
is
#!/bin/bash
firefox "$1"
Run it like
./urlopener "https://google.com"
Sidenote
Replace firefox
with your browser's executable file name.
Method 2
As [ @sato-katsura ] mentioned in the comment, in *nixes you can use an application called xdg-open
. For example,
xdg-open https://google.com
The manual for xdg-open
says
xdg-open - opens a file or URL in the user's preferred application xdg-open opens a file or URL in the user's preferred application. If a URL is provided the URL will be opened in the user's preferred web browser.
If a file is provided the file will be opened in the preferred application for files of that type. xdg-open supports file, ftp, http and https URLs.
As [ this ] answer points out you could change your preferred browser using say:
xdg-settings set default-web-browser firefox.desktop
or
xdg-settings set default-web-browser chromium-browser.desktop
Upvotes: 31
Reputation: 12141
In MacOS, just open
works. So, open "$1"
will open the passed URL in Chrome, if Chrome is the default browser.
Upvotes: 8