Displaying files and increment them +1












1














I'm creating a script that lists all the nano files in a directory. han than the files are added with a number. (Adding +1 for every file). Then the user is allowed to view the nano file.



Here is what I have so far. I want to point out that all the filenames end with _log so that's why I'm hoping that the grep works like this.



path=~/home/folder/list

list=$(`ls $path | grep -i *_log`)

printf '%sn' "${list[@]}" | nl -v 1

read -p "Number of file to be displayed:" numb

sudo cat $path/${list [numb]}









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    I'm creating a script that lists all the nano files in a directory. han than the files are added with a number. (Adding +1 for every file). Then the user is allowed to view the nano file.



    Here is what I have so far. I want to point out that all the filenames end with _log so that's why I'm hoping that the grep works like this.



    path=~/home/folder/list

    list=$(`ls $path | grep -i *_log`)

    printf '%sn' "${list[@]}" | nl -v 1

    read -p "Number of file to be displayed:" numb

    sudo cat $path/${list [numb]}









    share|improve this question









    New contributor




    User101 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
    Check out our Code of Conduct.























      1












      1








      1







      I'm creating a script that lists all the nano files in a directory. han than the files are added with a number. (Adding +1 for every file). Then the user is allowed to view the nano file.



      Here is what I have so far. I want to point out that all the filenames end with _log so that's why I'm hoping that the grep works like this.



      path=~/home/folder/list

      list=$(`ls $path | grep -i *_log`)

      printf '%sn' "${list[@]}" | nl -v 1

      read -p "Number of file to be displayed:" numb

      sudo cat $path/${list [numb]}









      share|improve this question









      New contributor




      User101 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.











      I'm creating a script that lists all the nano files in a directory. han than the files are added with a number. (Adding +1 for every file). Then the user is allowed to view the nano file.



      Here is what I have so far. I want to point out that all the filenames end with _log so that's why I'm hoping that the grep works like this.



      path=~/home/folder/list

      list=$(`ls $path | grep -i *_log`)

      printf '%sn' "${list[@]}" | nl -v 1

      read -p "Number of file to be displayed:" numb

      sudo cat $path/${list [numb]}






      bash shell-script






      share|improve this question









      New contributor




      User101 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.











      share|improve this question









      New contributor




      User101 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.









      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited Dec 31 '18 at 9:22









      terdon

      128k31249423




      128k31249423






      New contributor




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      asked Dec 31 '18 at 9:03









      User101

      254




      254




      New contributor




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      New contributor





      User101 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.






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      Check out our Code of Conduct.






















          1 Answer
          1






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          oldest

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          2














          If I understand correctly, you want to make an array holding all the files and then display the contents of whichever file corresponds to the number entered by the user. If so, you are making things far more complicated than necessary. This should be enough:



          ## Get the files into the array $list
          list=(/home/folder/list/*_log)

          ## Display the file names
          for i in ${!list[@]}; do
          printf "%s: %sn" $i "${list[i]}";
          done
          ## Get the user input
          read -p "Number of file to be displayed:" numb
          ## display the file (don't use sudo unless absolutely necessary)
          cat "${list[numb]}"


          Note that this will display the file names including the entire path. To display the names only, change the for loop to:



          ## Display the file names
          for i in ${!list[@]}; do
          printf "%s: %sn" $i "${list[i]##*/}"
          done





          share|improve this answer





















          • Still the files aren't displayed however when i type a number i can view the file as I should be. Can't figure out why it won't display all the files though.
            – User101
            Dec 31 '18 at 10:03










          • @User101 I can't help if you don't give a specific example. I suggest you ask a new question and include the name of a file that doesn't work.
            – terdon
            Dec 31 '18 at 10:20











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          1 Answer
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          1 Answer
          1






          active

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          active

          oldest

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          active

          oldest

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          2














          If I understand correctly, you want to make an array holding all the files and then display the contents of whichever file corresponds to the number entered by the user. If so, you are making things far more complicated than necessary. This should be enough:



          ## Get the files into the array $list
          list=(/home/folder/list/*_log)

          ## Display the file names
          for i in ${!list[@]}; do
          printf "%s: %sn" $i "${list[i]}";
          done
          ## Get the user input
          read -p "Number of file to be displayed:" numb
          ## display the file (don't use sudo unless absolutely necessary)
          cat "${list[numb]}"


          Note that this will display the file names including the entire path. To display the names only, change the for loop to:



          ## Display the file names
          for i in ${!list[@]}; do
          printf "%s: %sn" $i "${list[i]##*/}"
          done





          share|improve this answer





















          • Still the files aren't displayed however when i type a number i can view the file as I should be. Can't figure out why it won't display all the files though.
            – User101
            Dec 31 '18 at 10:03










          • @User101 I can't help if you don't give a specific example. I suggest you ask a new question and include the name of a file that doesn't work.
            – terdon
            Dec 31 '18 at 10:20
















          2














          If I understand correctly, you want to make an array holding all the files and then display the contents of whichever file corresponds to the number entered by the user. If so, you are making things far more complicated than necessary. This should be enough:



          ## Get the files into the array $list
          list=(/home/folder/list/*_log)

          ## Display the file names
          for i in ${!list[@]}; do
          printf "%s: %sn" $i "${list[i]}";
          done
          ## Get the user input
          read -p "Number of file to be displayed:" numb
          ## display the file (don't use sudo unless absolutely necessary)
          cat "${list[numb]}"


          Note that this will display the file names including the entire path. To display the names only, change the for loop to:



          ## Display the file names
          for i in ${!list[@]}; do
          printf "%s: %sn" $i "${list[i]##*/}"
          done





          share|improve this answer





















          • Still the files aren't displayed however when i type a number i can view the file as I should be. Can't figure out why it won't display all the files though.
            – User101
            Dec 31 '18 at 10:03










          • @User101 I can't help if you don't give a specific example. I suggest you ask a new question and include the name of a file that doesn't work.
            – terdon
            Dec 31 '18 at 10:20














          2












          2








          2






          If I understand correctly, you want to make an array holding all the files and then display the contents of whichever file corresponds to the number entered by the user. If so, you are making things far more complicated than necessary. This should be enough:



          ## Get the files into the array $list
          list=(/home/folder/list/*_log)

          ## Display the file names
          for i in ${!list[@]}; do
          printf "%s: %sn" $i "${list[i]}";
          done
          ## Get the user input
          read -p "Number of file to be displayed:" numb
          ## display the file (don't use sudo unless absolutely necessary)
          cat "${list[numb]}"


          Note that this will display the file names including the entire path. To display the names only, change the for loop to:



          ## Display the file names
          for i in ${!list[@]}; do
          printf "%s: %sn" $i "${list[i]##*/}"
          done





          share|improve this answer












          If I understand correctly, you want to make an array holding all the files and then display the contents of whichever file corresponds to the number entered by the user. If so, you are making things far more complicated than necessary. This should be enough:



          ## Get the files into the array $list
          list=(/home/folder/list/*_log)

          ## Display the file names
          for i in ${!list[@]}; do
          printf "%s: %sn" $i "${list[i]}";
          done
          ## Get the user input
          read -p "Number of file to be displayed:" numb
          ## display the file (don't use sudo unless absolutely necessary)
          cat "${list[numb]}"


          Note that this will display the file names including the entire path. To display the names only, change the for loop to:



          ## Display the file names
          for i in ${!list[@]}; do
          printf "%s: %sn" $i "${list[i]##*/}"
          done






          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Dec 31 '18 at 9:34









          terdon

          128k31249423




          128k31249423












          • Still the files aren't displayed however when i type a number i can view the file as I should be. Can't figure out why it won't display all the files though.
            – User101
            Dec 31 '18 at 10:03










          • @User101 I can't help if you don't give a specific example. I suggest you ask a new question and include the name of a file that doesn't work.
            – terdon
            Dec 31 '18 at 10:20


















          • Still the files aren't displayed however when i type a number i can view the file as I should be. Can't figure out why it won't display all the files though.
            – User101
            Dec 31 '18 at 10:03










          • @User101 I can't help if you don't give a specific example. I suggest you ask a new question and include the name of a file that doesn't work.
            – terdon
            Dec 31 '18 at 10:20
















          Still the files aren't displayed however when i type a number i can view the file as I should be. Can't figure out why it won't display all the files though.
          – User101
          Dec 31 '18 at 10:03




          Still the files aren't displayed however when i type a number i can view the file as I should be. Can't figure out why it won't display all the files though.
          – User101
          Dec 31 '18 at 10:03












          @User101 I can't help if you don't give a specific example. I suggest you ask a new question and include the name of a file that doesn't work.
          – terdon
          Dec 31 '18 at 10:20




          @User101 I can't help if you don't give a specific example. I suggest you ask a new question and include the name of a file that doesn't work.
          – terdon
          Dec 31 '18 at 10:20










          User101 is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.










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