Reputation: 1737
I have a script where the user should be able to enter a string with spaces. So far I have:
#bin/csh
echo "TEST 1"
echo -n "Input : "
set TEST = $<
echo "Var | " $TEST
set TEST=`echo $TEST`
echo "Var after echo | " $TEST
set TEST=`echo $TEST | sed 's/ /_/g'`
echo "Var after change | " $TEST
If I enter the string "r r r" at "input", $TEST would only take "r". I want to be able to set $TEST to "r r r". Is this possible? If I enter a string like "1 1 1" I get an error:
set: Variable name must begin with a letter.
What's the reason for this?
Upvotes: 4
Views: 32516
Reputation: 882136
It's because you're not using quotes in your SET
statement. When you enter "r r r"
as your input, the two different variants (unquoted and quoted) are equivalent to:
set TEST=$< :is equivalent to: set TEST=r r r
set TEST="$<" :is equivalent to: set TEST="r r r"
The first of those simply sets TEST
to "r"
and r
to ""
(twice!). The second sets TEST
to "r r r"
. That's because csh
lets you do multiple assignments like:
set a=1 b=2 c d=4
So you need to use the quoted variant of SET
. Examine the following transcript to see how it works:
[pax ~]$ set x=$< ; echo .$x.
hello
.hello.
[pax ~]$ set x="$<" ; echo $x ; echo .$b.$c.
a b c
.a b c.
b: Undefined variable.
[pax ~]$ set x=$< ; echo $x ; echo .$b.$c.
a b c
.a.
...
[pax ~]$ set x=$< ; echo $x ; echo .$b.$c.
a b=7 c=urk!
.a.
.7.urk!.
The reason you're getting the error you describe with input of "1 1 1"
is because you're effectively executing:
set TEST=1 1 1
and csh
is taking this to mean that you want to create the variable TEST
set to "1"
followed by the variable 1
, which doesn't start with a letter, hence not allowed. With the quoted variant, this becomes:
set TEST="1 1 1"
which will do what you expect.
Upvotes: 5