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Usage: (shell-str string)
Convert the text of the string into a double quoted string that a normal
shell will process into the original string, almost. It will add the
escape character \\
before two special characters to
accomplish this: the backslash \\
and double quote "
.
Notice: some shells will not correctly handle unusual non-printing characters. This routine works for most reasonably conventional ASCII strings.
WARNING:
This function omits the extra backslash in front of a backslash, however,
if it is followed by either a backquote or a dollar sign. It must do this
because otherwise it would be impossible to protect the dollar sign or
backquote from shell evaluation. Consequently, it is not possible to
render the strings "\\$" or "\\‘". The lesser of two evils.
All others characters are copied directly into the output.
The sub-shell-str
variation of this routine behaves identically,
except that the extra backslash is omitted in front of "
instead
of `
. You have to think about it. I’m open to suggestions.
Meanwhile, the best way to document is with a detailed output example.
If the backslashes make it through the text processing correctly,
below you will see what happens with three example strings. The first
example string contains a list of quoted foo
s, the second is
the same with a single backslash before the quote characters and the
last is with two backslash escapes. Below each is the result of the
raw-shell-str
, shell-str
and sub-shell-str
functions.
foo[0] ''foo'' 'foo' "foo" `foo` $foo raw-shell-str -> \'\''foo'\'\'' '\''foo'\'' "foo" `foo` $foo' shell-str -> "''foo'' 'foo' \"foo\" `foo` $foo" sub-shell-str -> `''foo'' 'foo' "foo" \`foo\` $foo` foo[1] \'bar\' \"bar\" \`bar\` \$bar raw-shell-str -> '\'\''bar\'\'' \"bar\" \`bar\` \$bar' shell-str -> "\\'bar\\' \\\"bar\\\" \`bar\` \$bar" sub-shell-str -> `\\'bar\\' \"bar\" \\\`bar\\\` \$bar` foo[2] \\'BAZ\\' \\"BAZ\\" \\`BAZ\\` \\$BAZ raw-shell-str -> '\\'\''BAZ\\'\'' \\"BAZ\\" \\`BAZ\\` \\$BAZ' shell-str -> "\\\\'BAZ\\\\' \\\\\"BAZ\\\\\" \\\`BAZ\\\` \\\$BAZ" sub-shell-str -> `\\\\'BAZ\\\\' \\\"BAZ\\\" \\\\\`BAZ\\\\\` \\\$BAZ` |
There should be four, three, five and three backslashes for the four examples on the last line, respectively. The next to last line should have four, five, three and three backslashes. If this was not accurately reproduced, take a look at the agen5/test/shell.test test. Notice the backslashes in front of the dollar signs. It goes from zero to one to three for the "cooked" string examples.
Arguments:
string - string to transform
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This document was generated by Bruce Korb on August 21, 2015 using texi2html 1.82.