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Re: Not missing, but very hard to see (was Re: Backslash missing in brac


From: L A Walsh
Subject: Re: Not missing, but very hard to see (was Re: Backslash missing in brace expansion)
Date: Thu, 12 Dec 2019 18:57:53 -0800
User-agent: Thunderbird



On 2019/12/12 13:01, Ilkka Virta wrote:
On 12.12. 21:43, L A Walsh wrote:
On 2019/12/06 14:14, Chet Ramey wrote:

Seems very hard to print out that backquote though.  Closest I got
was bash converting it to "''":

The backquote is in [6], and the backslash disappears, you just get the pair of quotes in [2] because that's how printf %q outputs an empty string.
-----

   I'm sorry, but you are mistaken.

   The characters from 'Z' (0x5A) through 'z' (0x61) are:

0x5A 0x5B 0x5C 0x5D 0x5E 0x5F 0x60 0x61
Z    [    \    ]     ^   _     `    a

the backslash comes between the two square brackets.

Position [6] is the "Grave Accent" (or backquote).

It is quoted properly.

As for %q printing an empty string for 0x5C

        "%q" causes  printf to output the corresponding argument in a
        format that can be reused as shell input.

   For that string to be empty would mean there is no character at hex
value 0x5C (unicode U+005C), which isn't so.

 read -r -a a< <(printf "%q " {Z..a})
 my -p a
declare -a a=([0]="Z" [1]="\\[" [2]="''" [3]="\\]" [4]="\\^" [5]="_" [6]="\\\`" [7]="a")






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