简体   繁体   中英

Bash: add string to the end of the file without line break

How can I add string to the end of the file without line break?

for example if i'm using >> it will add to the end of the file with line break:

cat list.txt
yourText1
root@host-37:/# echo yourText2 >> list.txt
root@host-37:/# cat list.txt
yourText1
yourText2

I would like to add yourText2 right after yourText1

root@host-37:/# cat list.txt
yourText1yourText2

You can use the -n parameter of echo. Like this:

$ touch a.txt
$ echo -n "A" >> a.txt
$ echo -n "B" >> a.txt
$ echo -n "C" >> a.txt
$ cat a.txt
ABC

EDIT: Aha, you already had a file containing string and newline. Well, I'll leave this here anyway, might we useful for someone.

Just use printf instead, since it does not print the new line as default:

printf "final line" >> file

Test

Let's create a file and then add an extra line without a trailing new line. Note I use cat -vet to see the new lines.

$ seq 2 > file
$ cat -vet file
1$
2$
$ printf "the end" >> file
$ cat -vet file
1$
2$
the end
sed '$s/$/yourText2/' list.txt > _list.txt_ && mv -- _list.txt_ list.txt

If your sed implementation supports the -i option, you could use:

sed -i.bck '$s/$/yourText2/' list.txt

With the second solution you'll have a backup too (with first you'll need to do it manually).

Alternatively:

ex -sc 's/$/yourText2/|w|q' list.txt 

or

perl -i.bck -pe's/$/yourText2/ if eof' list.txt

The above answers didn't work for me. Posting a Python implementation in case anyone finds it useful.

python -c "txtfile = '/my/file.txt' ; f = open(txtfile, 'r') ; d = f.read().strip() ; f.close() ; d = d + 'the data to append' ; open(txtfile, 'w').write(d)"

The technical post webpages of this site follow the CC BY-SA 4.0 protocol. If you need to reprint, please indicate the site URL or the original address.Any question please contact:yoyou2525@163.com.

 
粤ICP备18138465号  © 2020-2024 STACKOOM.COM