Loading commands from file2019 Community Moderator ElectionDifference between the terminal file and the terminal screenLog file visualizer in a Terminal (UNIX) (terminal logging replay)How to set the bash display to not show the vim text after exit?Logging interactive input and output without capturing all typed input and control charactersCan I cheat the docker run -it session by remapping ctrl+p key?Copy a large (over 4k) selection of text from the screen scrollback buffer into the system clipboardHow do I run a command in a new terminal window in the same process as the original?Debian - How to change Terminal background colorsHow do I record all terminal input and output to a local file by default for each session?Move terminal typed input to new line when console application/script displays output text

What percentage of fillings performed today are done with mercury amalgam?

When were female captains banned from Starfleet?

Does Doodling or Improvising on the Piano Have Any Benefits?

Is this toilet slogan correct usage of the English language?

Why is it that I can sometimes guess the next note?

Infinite dials to reset ever?

How do you make your own symbol when Detexify fails?

Why does the Sun have different day lengths, but not the gas giants?

What is this called? Old film camera viewer?

How does a computer interpret real numbers?

Redundant comparison & "if" before assignment

Is the U.S. Code copyrighted by the Government?

If a character has darkvision, can they see through an area of nonmagical darkness filled with lightly obscuring gas?

Is it better practice to read straight from sheet music rather than memorize it?

Is it improper etiquette to ask your opponent what his/her rating is before the game?

How much character growth crosses the line into breaking the character

Fantasy book from my childhood: female protagonist, Blood Ore or Blood Metal for taking attributes

If infinitesimal transformations commute why dont the generators of the Lorentz group commute?

What should you do if you miss a job interview (deliberately)?

Why a symmetric relation is defined: ∀x∀y( xRy⟹yRx) and not ∀x∀y (xRy⟺yRx)?

What should you do when eye contact makes your subordinate uncomfortable?

copy and scale one figure (wheel)

Pre-mixing cryogenic fuels and using only one fuel tank

Are paving bricks differently sized for sand bedding vs mortar bedding?



Loading commands from file



2019 Community Moderator ElectionDifference between the terminal file and the terminal screenLog file visualizer in a Terminal (UNIX) (terminal logging replay)How to set the bash display to not show the vim text after exit?Logging interactive input and output without capturing all typed input and control charactersCan I cheat the docker run -it session by remapping ctrl+p key?Copy a large (over 4k) selection of text from the screen scrollback buffer into the system clipboardHow do I run a command in a new terminal window in the same process as the original?Debian - How to change Terminal background colorsHow do I record all terminal input and output to a local file by default for each session?Move terminal typed input to new line when console application/script displays output text










1















Is it possible to write commands to text file and then loaded it into terminal as file? If yes, how is the command for loading the file? Thank you.



For instance file_commands:



awk -f program.awk d01.active > out1
awk -f program.awk d02.active > out2


It is because of a problem with running an awk program that doesn't work with command



awk -f program.awk d??.active > out


I need to use program.awk for lots of files and this seemed to me as easier solution when I am not able to repair program for that command with ??.



It is related with this question https://stackoverflow.com/questions/55313187/more-input-files-in-awk?noredirect=1#comment97356807_55313187










share|improve this question
























  • You want to load your file as a file or execute it as a list of commands?

    – Jesse_b
    1 hour ago







  • 1





    Isn't this what an ordinary script is? Could you possibly give an example of what it is you want to do?

    – Kusalananda
    59 mins ago











  • I editted my question

    – Lukáš Altman
    52 mins ago















1















Is it possible to write commands to text file and then loaded it into terminal as file? If yes, how is the command for loading the file? Thank you.



For instance file_commands:



awk -f program.awk d01.active > out1
awk -f program.awk d02.active > out2


It is because of a problem with running an awk program that doesn't work with command



awk -f program.awk d??.active > out


I need to use program.awk for lots of files and this seemed to me as easier solution when I am not able to repair program for that command with ??.



It is related with this question https://stackoverflow.com/questions/55313187/more-input-files-in-awk?noredirect=1#comment97356807_55313187










share|improve this question
























  • You want to load your file as a file or execute it as a list of commands?

    – Jesse_b
    1 hour ago







  • 1





    Isn't this what an ordinary script is? Could you possibly give an example of what it is you want to do?

    – Kusalananda
    59 mins ago











  • I editted my question

    – Lukáš Altman
    52 mins ago













1












1








1








Is it possible to write commands to text file and then loaded it into terminal as file? If yes, how is the command for loading the file? Thank you.



For instance file_commands:



awk -f program.awk d01.active > out1
awk -f program.awk d02.active > out2


It is because of a problem with running an awk program that doesn't work with command



awk -f program.awk d??.active > out


I need to use program.awk for lots of files and this seemed to me as easier solution when I am not able to repair program for that command with ??.



It is related with this question https://stackoverflow.com/questions/55313187/more-input-files-in-awk?noredirect=1#comment97356807_55313187










share|improve this question
















Is it possible to write commands to text file and then loaded it into terminal as file? If yes, how is the command for loading the file? Thank you.



For instance file_commands:



awk -f program.awk d01.active > out1
awk -f program.awk d02.active > out2


It is because of a problem with running an awk program that doesn't work with command



awk -f program.awk d??.active > out


I need to use program.awk for lots of files and this seemed to me as easier solution when I am not able to repair program for that command with ??.



It is related with this question https://stackoverflow.com/questions/55313187/more-input-files-in-awk?noredirect=1#comment97356807_55313187







terminal






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 52 mins ago







Lukáš Altman

















asked 1 hour ago









Lukáš AltmanLukáš Altman

465




465












  • You want to load your file as a file or execute it as a list of commands?

    – Jesse_b
    1 hour ago







  • 1





    Isn't this what an ordinary script is? Could you possibly give an example of what it is you want to do?

    – Kusalananda
    59 mins ago











  • I editted my question

    – Lukáš Altman
    52 mins ago

















  • You want to load your file as a file or execute it as a list of commands?

    – Jesse_b
    1 hour ago







  • 1





    Isn't this what an ordinary script is? Could you possibly give an example of what it is you want to do?

    – Kusalananda
    59 mins ago











  • I editted my question

    – Lukáš Altman
    52 mins ago
















You want to load your file as a file or execute it as a list of commands?

– Jesse_b
1 hour ago






You want to load your file as a file or execute it as a list of commands?

– Jesse_b
1 hour ago





1




1





Isn't this what an ordinary script is? Could you possibly give an example of what it is you want to do?

– Kusalananda
59 mins ago





Isn't this what an ordinary script is? Could you possibly give an example of what it is you want to do?

– Kusalananda
59 mins ago













I editted my question

– Lukáš Altman
52 mins ago





I editted my question

– Lukáš Altman
52 mins ago










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















3














If you have a file with a list of shell commands, one per line, then you have a shell script! All you need to do is run it:



sh file_commands


However, that isn't the simplest approach for what I think you need. If you want to run program.awk on each d??.active file in the current directory, you can simply use a loop:



for file in d??.active; do awk -f program.awk "$file" > "$file".out; done


That will create a d01.active.out out file for d01.active, a d02.active.out file for d02.active and so on.






share|improve this answer























  • Brilliant, thank you

    – Lukáš Altman
    28 mins ago


















1














A shell script is essentially a list of commands terminated by line separators that will be interpreted as a list of commands by the specified (or default) interpreter.



To specify an interpreter your file should start with a hashbang (also called shebang).



Examples:



#!/bin/sh
#!/bin/bash
#!/bin/ksh
#!/bin/zsh
#!/usr/bin/env bash


Note: each of these interpreters have their own syntax and set of rules. You should study the manual for whichever one you plan on using.




After your hashbang you can essentially just start listing your commands to be executed each on their own line.



Note: these commands will be executed in order from top to bottom




In your example you would want something like:



#!/bin/sh

awk -f program.awk d01.active > out1
awk -f program.awk d02.active > out2


You would then have to make this file executable and would run it by specifying the full or relative path to the file on the command line. (or by running sh /path/to/file)




This does seem like a potential x-y problem though and can probably be handled in a more programmatic way.



Such as:



#!/bin/bash

for file in d??.active; do
n=$file:1:2
awk -f program.awk "$file" > "out$n"
done





share|improve this answer

























  • Thank you very much

    – Lukáš Altman
    28 mins ago










Your Answer








StackExchange.ready(function()
var channelOptions =
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "106"
;
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
createEditor();
);

else
createEditor();

);

function createEditor()
StackExchange.prepareEditor(
heartbeatType: 'answer',
autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
convertImagesToLinks: false,
noModals: true,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: null,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
imageUploader:
brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
allowUrls: true
,
onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
);



);













draft saved

draft discarded


















StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2funix.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f508204%2floading-commands-from-file%23new-answer', 'question_page');

);

Post as a guest















Required, but never shown

























2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes








2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









3














If you have a file with a list of shell commands, one per line, then you have a shell script! All you need to do is run it:



sh file_commands


However, that isn't the simplest approach for what I think you need. If you want to run program.awk on each d??.active file in the current directory, you can simply use a loop:



for file in d??.active; do awk -f program.awk "$file" > "$file".out; done


That will create a d01.active.out out file for d01.active, a d02.active.out file for d02.active and so on.






share|improve this answer























  • Brilliant, thank you

    – Lukáš Altman
    28 mins ago















3














If you have a file with a list of shell commands, one per line, then you have a shell script! All you need to do is run it:



sh file_commands


However, that isn't the simplest approach for what I think you need. If you want to run program.awk on each d??.active file in the current directory, you can simply use a loop:



for file in d??.active; do awk -f program.awk "$file" > "$file".out; done


That will create a d01.active.out out file for d01.active, a d02.active.out file for d02.active and so on.






share|improve this answer























  • Brilliant, thank you

    – Lukáš Altman
    28 mins ago













3












3








3







If you have a file with a list of shell commands, one per line, then you have a shell script! All you need to do is run it:



sh file_commands


However, that isn't the simplest approach for what I think you need. If you want to run program.awk on each d??.active file in the current directory, you can simply use a loop:



for file in d??.active; do awk -f program.awk "$file" > "$file".out; done


That will create a d01.active.out out file for d01.active, a d02.active.out file for d02.active and so on.






share|improve this answer













If you have a file with a list of shell commands, one per line, then you have a shell script! All you need to do is run it:



sh file_commands


However, that isn't the simplest approach for what I think you need. If you want to run program.awk on each d??.active file in the current directory, you can simply use a loop:



for file in d??.active; do awk -f program.awk "$file" > "$file".out; done


That will create a d01.active.out out file for d01.active, a d02.active.out file for d02.active and so on.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered 45 mins ago









terdonterdon

132k32262441




132k32262441












  • Brilliant, thank you

    – Lukáš Altman
    28 mins ago

















  • Brilliant, thank you

    – Lukáš Altman
    28 mins ago
















Brilliant, thank you

– Lukáš Altman
28 mins ago





Brilliant, thank you

– Lukáš Altman
28 mins ago













1














A shell script is essentially a list of commands terminated by line separators that will be interpreted as a list of commands by the specified (or default) interpreter.



To specify an interpreter your file should start with a hashbang (also called shebang).



Examples:



#!/bin/sh
#!/bin/bash
#!/bin/ksh
#!/bin/zsh
#!/usr/bin/env bash


Note: each of these interpreters have their own syntax and set of rules. You should study the manual for whichever one you plan on using.




After your hashbang you can essentially just start listing your commands to be executed each on their own line.



Note: these commands will be executed in order from top to bottom




In your example you would want something like:



#!/bin/sh

awk -f program.awk d01.active > out1
awk -f program.awk d02.active > out2


You would then have to make this file executable and would run it by specifying the full or relative path to the file on the command line. (or by running sh /path/to/file)




This does seem like a potential x-y problem though and can probably be handled in a more programmatic way.



Such as:



#!/bin/bash

for file in d??.active; do
n=$file:1:2
awk -f program.awk "$file" > "out$n"
done





share|improve this answer

























  • Thank you very much

    – Lukáš Altman
    28 mins ago















1














A shell script is essentially a list of commands terminated by line separators that will be interpreted as a list of commands by the specified (or default) interpreter.



To specify an interpreter your file should start with a hashbang (also called shebang).



Examples:



#!/bin/sh
#!/bin/bash
#!/bin/ksh
#!/bin/zsh
#!/usr/bin/env bash


Note: each of these interpreters have their own syntax and set of rules. You should study the manual for whichever one you plan on using.




After your hashbang you can essentially just start listing your commands to be executed each on their own line.



Note: these commands will be executed in order from top to bottom




In your example you would want something like:



#!/bin/sh

awk -f program.awk d01.active > out1
awk -f program.awk d02.active > out2


You would then have to make this file executable and would run it by specifying the full or relative path to the file on the command line. (or by running sh /path/to/file)




This does seem like a potential x-y problem though and can probably be handled in a more programmatic way.



Such as:



#!/bin/bash

for file in d??.active; do
n=$file:1:2
awk -f program.awk "$file" > "out$n"
done





share|improve this answer

























  • Thank you very much

    – Lukáš Altman
    28 mins ago













1












1








1







A shell script is essentially a list of commands terminated by line separators that will be interpreted as a list of commands by the specified (or default) interpreter.



To specify an interpreter your file should start with a hashbang (also called shebang).



Examples:



#!/bin/sh
#!/bin/bash
#!/bin/ksh
#!/bin/zsh
#!/usr/bin/env bash


Note: each of these interpreters have their own syntax and set of rules. You should study the manual for whichever one you plan on using.




After your hashbang you can essentially just start listing your commands to be executed each on their own line.



Note: these commands will be executed in order from top to bottom




In your example you would want something like:



#!/bin/sh

awk -f program.awk d01.active > out1
awk -f program.awk d02.active > out2


You would then have to make this file executable and would run it by specifying the full or relative path to the file on the command line. (or by running sh /path/to/file)




This does seem like a potential x-y problem though and can probably be handled in a more programmatic way.



Such as:



#!/bin/bash

for file in d??.active; do
n=$file:1:2
awk -f program.awk "$file" > "out$n"
done





share|improve this answer















A shell script is essentially a list of commands terminated by line separators that will be interpreted as a list of commands by the specified (or default) interpreter.



To specify an interpreter your file should start with a hashbang (also called shebang).



Examples:



#!/bin/sh
#!/bin/bash
#!/bin/ksh
#!/bin/zsh
#!/usr/bin/env bash


Note: each of these interpreters have their own syntax and set of rules. You should study the manual for whichever one you plan on using.




After your hashbang you can essentially just start listing your commands to be executed each on their own line.



Note: these commands will be executed in order from top to bottom




In your example you would want something like:



#!/bin/sh

awk -f program.awk d01.active > out1
awk -f program.awk d02.active > out2


You would then have to make this file executable and would run it by specifying the full or relative path to the file on the command line. (or by running sh /path/to/file)




This does seem like a potential x-y problem though and can probably be handled in a more programmatic way.



Such as:



#!/bin/bash

for file in d??.active; do
n=$file:1:2
awk -f program.awk "$file" > "out$n"
done






share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited 12 mins ago

























answered 43 mins ago









Jesse_bJesse_b

14k23471




14k23471












  • Thank you very much

    – Lukáš Altman
    28 mins ago

















  • Thank you very much

    – Lukáš Altman
    28 mins ago
















Thank you very much

– Lukáš Altman
28 mins ago





Thank you very much

– Lukáš Altman
28 mins ago

















draft saved

draft discarded
















































Thanks for contributing an answer to Unix & Linux Stack Exchange!


  • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

But avoid


  • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

  • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.

To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




draft saved


draft discarded














StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2funix.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f508204%2floading-commands-from-file%23new-answer', 'question_page');

);

Post as a guest















Required, but never shown





















































Required, but never shown














Required, but never shown












Required, but never shown







Required, but never shown

































Required, but never shown














Required, but never shown












Required, but never shown







Required, but never shown







Popular posts from this blog

Era Viking Índice Início da Era Viquingue | Cotidiano | Sociedade | Língua | Religião | A arte | As primeiras cidades | As viagens dos viquingues | Viquingues do Oeste e Leste | Fim da Era Viquingue | Fontes históricas | Referências Bibliografia | Ligações externas | Menu de navegação«Sverige då!»«Handel I vikingetid»«O que é Nórdico Antigo»Mito, magia e religião na volsunga saga Um olhar sobre a trajetória mítica do herói sigurd«Bonden var den verklige vikingen»«Vikingatiden»«Vikingatiden»«Vinland»«Guerreiras de Óðinn: As Valkyrjor na Mitologia Viking»1519-9053«Esculpindo símbolos e seres: A arte viking em pedras rúnicas»1679-9313Historia - Tema: VikingarnaAventura e Magia no Mundo das Sagas IslandesasEra Vikinge

What's the metal clinking sound at the end of credits in Avengers: Endgame?What makes Thanos so strong in Avengers: Endgame?Who is the character that appears at the end of Endgame?What happens to Mjolnir (Thor's hammer) at the end of Endgame?The People's Ages in Avengers: EndgameWhat did Nebula do in Avengers: Endgame?Messing with time in the Avengers: Endgame climaxAvengers: Endgame timelineWhat are the time-travel rules in Avengers Endgame?Why use this song in Avengers: Endgame Opening Logo Sequence?Peggy's age in Avengers Endgame

Are there legal definitions of ethnicities/races? The 2019 Stack Overflow Developer Survey Results Are In Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara Planned maintenance scheduled April 17/18, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern)Legal definitions in the United StatesAre there truly legal limits on US interest rates?Are gender identity and sexual orientation federally protected?Why is there an apparent legal bias against digital services?What limits are there to the powers of individual judges in the United States legal system?Are women only scholarships legal under Irish / EU law?Is the term “race” defined by Public Law enacted by Congress of the United StatesIs there a legal definition of race in the US?Neighbors are spying for landlord on Renters is it legal?Are Protected Classes Bi-directional?