Accessing last x characters of a string in Bash

2019-01-21 05:06发布

问题:

I found out that with ${string:0:3} one can access the first 3 characters of a string. Is there a equivalently easy method to access the last three characters?

回答1:

Last three characters of string:

${string: -3}

or

${string:(-3)}

(mind the space between : and -3 in the first form).

Please refer to the Shell Parameter Expansion in the reference manual:

${parameter:offset}
${parameter:offset:length}

Expands to up to length characters of parameter starting at the character
specified by offset. If length is omitted, expands to the substring of parameter
starting at the character specified by offset. length and offset are arithmetic
expressions (see Shell Arithmetic). This is referred to as Substring Expansion.

If offset evaluates to a number less than zero, the value is used as an offset
from the end of the value of parameter. If length evaluates to a number less than
zero, and parameter is not ‘@’ and not an indexed or associative array, it is
interpreted as an offset from the end of the value of parameter rather than a
number of characters, and the expansion is the characters between the two
offsets. If parameter is ‘@’, the result is length positional parameters
beginning at offset. If parameter is an indexed array name subscripted by ‘@’ or
‘*’, the result is the length members of the array beginning with
${parameter[offset]}. A negative offset is taken relative to one greater than the
maximum index of the specified array. Substring expansion applied to an
associative array produces undefined results.

Note that a negative offset must be separated from the colon by at least one
space to avoid being confused with the ‘:-’ expansion. Substring indexing is
zero-based unless the positional parameters are used, in which case the indexing
starts at 1 by default. If offset is 0, and the positional parameters are used,
$@ is prefixed to the list.

Since this answer gets a few regular views, let me add a possibility to address John Rix's comment; as he mentions, if your string has length less than 3, ${string: -3} expands to the empty string. If, in this case, you want the expansion of string, you may use:

${string:${#string}<3?0:-3}

This uses the ?: ternary if operator, that may be used in Shell Arithmetic; since as documented, the offset is an arithmetic expression, this is valid.



回答2:

You can use tail:

$ foo="1234567890"
$ echo -n $foo | tail -c 3
890

A somewhat roundabout way to get the last three characters would be to say:

echo $foo | rev | cut -c1-3 | rev


回答3:

Another workaround is to use grep -o with a little regex magic to get three chars followed by the end of line:

$ foo=1234567890
$ echo $foo | grep -o ...$
890

To make it optionally get the 1 to 3 last chars, in case of strings with less than 3 chars, you can use egrep with this regex:

$ echo a | egrep -o '.{1,3}$'
a
$ echo ab | egrep -o '.{1,3}$'
ab
$ echo abc | egrep -o '.{1,3}$'
abc
$ echo abcd | egrep -o '.{1,3}$'
bcd

You can also use different ranges, such as 5,10 to get the last five to ten chars.



回答4:

To generalise the question and the answer of gniourf_gniourf (as this is what I was searching for), if you want to cut a range of characters from, say, 7th from the end to 3rd from the end, you can use this syntax:

${string: -7:4}

Where 4 is the length of course (7-3).

In addition, while the solution of gniourf_gniourf is obviously the best and neatest, I just wanted to add an alternative solution using cut:

echo $string | cut -c $((${#string}-2))-$((${#string}))

This is more readable if you do it in two lines by defining the length ${#string} as a separate variable.