• (⬤ᴥ⬤)@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    4 months ago

    i was wondering if there was any program akin to autohotkey for linux, i found one that does text replacement and it’s fine but i really liked the stuff you could do with autohotkey, i had an entire popup menu of little tools on windows

    • Fijxu@programming.dev
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      4 months ago

      I don’t remember the name but there is one alternative that is made on Python and you can write the rules on Python.

      I don’t know if it works on Wayland tho.

    • adr1an@programming.devOPM
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      4 months ago

      Perhaps xdotool (assumming X11 and not wayland, there might be a fork? idk). Random self-reference trivia fact: I never used AHK, heard many great things about it and regretted a lot being on Linux by then. This was ~11 years ago. Then, some years later, at a gig I needed to type pre-formatted emails (like every 2 weeks, answering the same) and for that I used xdotool and assigned the commands as custom shortcuts under KDE :) it was one of my proudest moments towards Open Source Software.

  • needanke@feddit.org
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    3 months ago

    can anyone help me figure out, why the following shell script does not work:

    #!/bin/bash
    while IFS= read -d $'\0' -r "dir" ; do 
          dir=${dir:2};
          echo "${dir}"\#;
          cd "'""${dir}""'" ;
          ls;
          ##doing something else
         # cd  ..;
    done < <(find ./  -mindepth 1 -maxdepth 1 -type d -print0)
    

    I am running it in a location with a lots of folders containing spaces (think of it like this:

    /location containing spaces# ls
    'foo ba' 'baa foo ' 'tee pot'
    

    I get errors of the following form:

    script.sh: line 5: cd: 'baa foo ': No such file or directory

    but when I manually enter cd 'baa foo' it works fine. Why could that be? (the echo retuns something like “foo baa #” .) It really confuses me that the cd with the exact same string works when I enter it manually. I have allready tried leaving out the quotes in the cd command and escaping the spaces using dir=$(printf %q "${dir}"); before the cd but that did not work either.

    tbh I am new to shell scripts so maybe there is something obvious I overlooked.

    • adr1an@programming.devOPM
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      3 months ago

      You’re probably over-complicating things. Have you heard about the find -print0 | xargs -0 idiom? all that variable interpolation (dir=${dir:2}) and quoting "'""${dir}""'" is better to be dealt by the built-in shell tools. Or you could write a script for the whole body of that while loop, and then call find . -exec ./action.sh {} \;. Same script could be used with the previously mentioned idiom too, you’d need to use bash -c ./action.sh though. One advantage of “find | xargs” is that you can run these concurrently, paralellizing the action to all your dirs, in groups, of say 4 of them… and so on… it’s cool and simple.