Libor Zapletal
Libor Zapletal

Reputation: 14092

Remove first directory components from path of file

I need to remove one directory (the leftmost) from variables in Bash. I found ways how can I remove all the path or use dirname and others but it was removing all or one path component on the right side; it wouldn't help me. So you have a better understanding of what I need, I'll write an example:

I have a/project/hello.c, a/project/docs/README, ... and I want to remove that a/ so after some commands I´ll have project/hello.c and project/docs/README, ...

Upvotes: 76

Views: 62768

Answers (6)

Øyvind Saltvik
Øyvind Saltvik

Reputation: 1

You can pipe to xargs and do new replacements

How I used it to rename all files in directories under ts-src from ts to js and tsx to jsx to same subdirectories.

find ts-src/ -type f -not -name "*.tsx" -not -name "*.ts" \
  -exec bash -c 'echo "${0##*/}" "${0##ts-src/}" "$0"' {} \; | \
    xargs -l bash -c 'echo mkdir -p "src/${1%$0}" && echo cp "$2" "src/$0"'

Upvotes: 0

Goblinhack
Goblinhack

Reputation: 3088

echo a/project/hello.c | cut -d'/' -f2-

Upvotes: 15

daparic
daparic

Reputation: 4444

None of the examples above solved my problem. I wanted to be able to switch java versions by changing the $PATH value. After googling and cannot find sufficient answer, I weaved my own solution below.

Here is an excerpt in my .bashrc:

jv8() {
    export JAVA_HOME=/opt/jdk1.8.0_121
    y=$(echo $PATH | tr ':' '\n' |sed '/\/opt\/jdk/d' | tr '\n' ':')
    export PATH=$JAVA_HOME/bin:$y
}

jv6() {
    export JAVA_HOME=/opt/jdk1.6.0_45
    y=$(echo $PATH | tr ':' '\n' |sed '/\/opt\/jdk/d' | tr '\n' ':')
    export PATH=$JAVA_HOME/bin:$y
}

So, in my bash shell, I can toggle simply by:

$> jv6
java -version
java version "1.6.0_45"
Java(TM) SE Runtime Environment (build 1.6.0_45-b06)
Java HotSpot(TM) 64-Bit Server VM (build 20.45-b01, mixed mode)
$> jv8
java -version
java version "1.8.0_121"
Java(TM) SE Runtime Environment (build 1.8.0_121-b13)
Java HotSpot(TM) 64-Bit Server VM (build 25.121-b13, mixed mode)

Upvotes: -3

Jonathan Leffler
Jonathan Leffler

Reputation: 753525

You can use any of:

x=a/b/c/d
y=a/
echo ${x#a/}
echo ${x#$y}
echo ${x#*/}

All three echo commands produce b/c/d; you could use the value in any way you choose, of course.

The first is appropriate when you know the name you need to remove when writing the script.

The second is appropriate when you have a variable that contains the prefix you need to remove (minor variant: y=a; echo ${x#$y/}).

The third is the most general - it removes any arbitrary prefix up to the first slash. I was pleasantly surprised to find that the * worked non-greedily when I tested it with bash (version 3.2) on MacOS X 10.6.6 - I'll put that down to too much Perl and regex work (because, when I think about it, * in shell doesn't include slashes).

Upvotes: 127

tgdavies
tgdavies

Reputation: 11411

Look at man expr

expr "foo/bar/baz" : '[^/]*/\(.*\)' will do what you want.

Upvotes: 2

Erik
Erik

Reputation: 91270

echo "a/project/hello.c" | sed 's,^[^/]*/,,'

Upvotes: 6

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