Difference between revisions of "BASH/C2/Arithmetic-Comparison/English-timed"
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− | | | + | | '''equal to (-eq)''' '''not equal to (-ne)''' |
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| 00:12 | | 00:12 | ||
− | | | + | | '''less than (-lt)''''''less than equal to (-le)''' |
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| 00:15 | | 00:15 | ||
− | | | + | | '''greater than (-gt)''' and'''greater than equal to (-ge)''' '''commands'''. |
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− | | | + | | '''Ubuntu Linux 12.04''' Operating System |
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| 00:30 | | 00:30 | ||
− | | | + | | '''GNU BASH''' version '''4.1.10''' |
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− | | | + | |03:52 |
− | | | + | |Now type the code as shown here, in your "example2.sh" file. |
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| 03:58 | | 03:58 | ||
− | | | + | |Let me explain the code. |
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− | | | + | |04:00 |
− | | | + | |This program will check whether the word count is- |
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| 04:04 | | 04:04 | ||
− | | | + | | greater or less than one |
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| 04:07 | | 04:07 | ||
− | | | + | | Between one and hundred or above hundred. |
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| 05:01 | | 05:01 | ||
| Here, in this '''if''': | | Here, in this '''if''': | ||
− | + | '''- (hyphen) ge '''command checks whether word count is greater than or equal to one and | |
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| 05:09 | | 05:09 | ||
− | | | + | | '''- (hyphen) le '''command checks whether word count is less than or equal to hundred. |
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− | | 06:51 | + | |06:51 |
− | | | + | |In this tutorial we learnt: |
− | + | '''equal to''' | |
− | + | '''not equal to''' | |
− | + | '''less than''' | |
− | + | '''less than equal to''' | |
− | + | '''greater than''' and | |
− | + | '''greater than equal to''' '''commands'''. | |
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Latest revision as of 16:09, 23 March 2017
Time | Narration |
00:01 | Welcome to the spoken tutorial on Arithmetic Comparison in BASH. |
00:07 | In this tutorial, we will learn: |
00:09 | equal to (-eq) not equal to (-ne) |
00:12 | less than (-lt)'less than equal to (-le)' |
00:15 | greater than (-gt) andgreater than equal to (-ge) commands. |
00:19 | We will do this with the help of some examples. |
00:23 | For this tutorial, I am using: |
00:26 | Ubuntu Linux 12.04 Operating System |
00:30 | GNU BASH version 4.1.10 |
00:34 | GNU Bash version 4 or above is recommended for practice. |
00:39 | I already have a working example of arithmetic operators. |
00:43 | Let me switch to it. |
00:45 | I have named the file example1.sh. |
00:50 | Open a file in any editor of your choice and type the code as shown. |
00:56 | You must be familiar how to do so, by now. |
01:00 | In this program, we will check whether a given file is empty or not. |
01:06 | Let me explain the code. |
01:08 | This is the shebang line. |
01:10 | First of all, “Enter filename” will be printed on the console. |
01:15 | read command reads one line of data from the standard input. |
01:20 | This command is enclosed within backticks. |
01:24 | Backtick has a very special meaning. |
01:27 | Everything you type between backtick is evaluated. |
01:32 | cat command will display the content of the file. |
01:37 | wc will print newline, word and byte counts for each file. |
01:43 | - (hyphen) w will print the word count. |
01:47 | What will happen is - |
01:49 | First the cat command will read the file. |
01:53 | This is the input file |
01:55 | which is then piped or sent to the wc command. |
02:00 | So, this statement counts the words in a given file. |
02:05 | The output is stored in variable x. |
02:08 | This is the if statement. |
02:10 | - (hyphen) eq command checks whether word count is equal to zero. |
02:16 | If the condition is True, we will print a message "File has zero words”. |
02:22 | "fi" is the end of first if condition. |
02:26 | Here is another if condition. |
02:28 | Here, - (hyphen) ne command checks whether word count is not equal to zero. |
02:35 | If the condition is True, we print “File has so-and-so words”. |
02:40 | $x (dollar x) will give the word count. |
02:43 | This is the end of 2nd if condition. |
02:46 | Save your program file. |
02:48 | Let us execute our program. |
02:51 | Open the terminal. |
02:53 | First let's create a file list.txt. |
02:57 | Type: touch list.txt. |
03:01 | Now, let's add a line in the file. |
03:04 | Type:
echo within double quotes “How are you” after the double quotes greater than sign list.txt. |
03:13 | Now let's make our script executable. |
03:16 | Type:
chmod plus x example1 dot sh |
03:21 | Now, type: dot slash example1.sh |
03:26 | "Enter filename:" is displayed. |
03:28 | Type: list.txt |
03:31 | The output is displayed as: "list.txt has 3 words". |
03:36 | Now let's learn about another set of operators. |
03:40 | Let me switch to another file. |
03:43 | This is example2.sh . |
03:46 | Please open a file in your editor and name it as "example2.sh". |
03:52 | Now type the code as shown here, in your "example2.sh" file. |
03:58 | Let me explain the code. |
04:00 | This program will check whether the word count is- |
04:04 | greater or less than one |
04:07 | Between one and hundred or above hundred. |
04:11 | We have our shebang line here. |
04:14 | read statement takes input as filename from the user. |
04:19 | Here, - (hyphen) c command is used to print the byte counts. |
04:24 | In the if statement, - (hyphen) lt command checks whether word count is less than one. |
04:31 | If the condition is True then we print “No characters present in the file”. |
04:37 | "fi" ends the if condition. |
04:40 | The next if statement contains a nested if statement. |
04:45 | First, - (hyphen) gt command checks whether word count is greater than one. |
04:51 | If 'yes' then this echo statement will be executed. |
04:56 | There are multiple conditions within this if statement. |
05:01 | Here, in this if:
- (hyphen) ge command checks whether word count is greater than or equal to one and |
05:09 | - (hyphen) le command checks whether word count is less than or equal to hundred. |
05:17 | If both the conditions are satisfied then it prints: |
05:21 | "Number of characters ranges between 1 and 100". |
05:25 | Please note that both conditions should be True to satisfy the entire if condition. |
05:33 | This is because we have included ampersand in-between both the conditions. |
05:39 | "fi" is the end of this if statement. |
05:43 | Then the next if statement will be evaluated. |
05:47 | - (hyphen) gt command checks whether word count is greater than hundred. |
05:53 | If the condition is satisfied, we print "Number of characters is above hundred". |
06:00 | "fi" is the end of if statement. |
06:04 | Here we end the 2nd if statement. |
06:07 | Now come back to our terminal. |
06:10 | Let us execute the program. |
06:13 | chmod plus x example2 dot sh |
06:18 | dot slash example2 dot sh |
06:22 | Type list.txt . |
06:25 | The output is displayed as "list.txt has more than one character". |
06:31 | "Number of characters ranges between one and hundred". |
06:36 | Now, add or remove characters to the list.txt file. |
06:40 | Then observe which if statement gets executed. |
06:46 | This brings us to the end of this tutorial. |
06:49 | Let us summarize. |
06:51 | In this tutorial we learnt:
equal to not equal to less than less than equal to greater than and greater than equal to commands. |
07:03 | As an assignment, write a program to demonstrate the use of not equal to operator. |
07:09 | Hint: - (hyphen) ne. |
07:12 | Watch the video available at the link shown below. |
07:15 | It summarizes the Spoken-Tutorial project. |
07:18 | If you do not have good bandwidth, you can download and watch it. |
07:23 | The Spoken Tutorial Project team: |
07:25 | Conducts workshops using spoken tutorials. |
07:28 | Gives certificates to those who pass an online test. |
07:32 | For more details, please write to contact@spoken-tutorial.org |
07:40 | Spoken Tutorial project is a part of the Talk to a Teacher project. |
07:43 | It is supported by the National Mission on Education through ICT, MHRD, Government of India. |
07:51 | More information on this mission is available at the link shown below. |
07:56 | The script has been contributed by FOSSEE and spoken-tutorial team. |
08:02 | This is Ashwini Patil from IIT Bombay, signing off. |
08:06 | Thank you for joining. |