How to split a list by comma not space

血红的双手。 提交于 2019-12-02 17:25:06

Using a subshell substitution to parse the words undoes all the work you are doing to put spaces together.

Try instead:

cat CSV_file | sed -n 1'p' | tr ',' '\n' | while read word; do
    echo $word
done

That also increases parallelism. Using a subshell as in your question forces the entire subshell process to finish before you can start iterating over the answers. Piping to a subshell (as in my answer) lets them work in parallel. This matters only if you have many lines in the file, of course.

Set IFS to ,:

sorin@sorin:~$ IFS=',' ;for i in `echo "Hello,World,Questions,Answers,bash shell,script"`; do echo $i; done
Hello
World
Questions
Answers
bash shell
script
sorin@sorin:~$ 
glenn jackman

I think the canonical method is:

while IFS=, read field1 field2 field3 field4 field5 field6; do 
  do stuff
done < CSV.file

If you don't know or don't care about how many fields there are:

IFS=,
while read line; do
  # split into an array
  field=( $line )
  for word in "${field[@]}"; do echo "$word"; done

  # or use the positional parameters
  set -- $line
  for word in "$@"; do echo "$word"; done

done < CSV.file
kent$  echo "Hello,World,Questions,Answers,bash shell,script"|awk -F, '{for (i=1;i<=NF;i++)print $i}'
Hello
World
Questions
Answers
bash shell
script

Create a bash function

split_on_commas() {
  local IFS=,
  local WORD_LIST=($1)
  for word in "${WORD_LIST[@]}"; do
    echo "$word"
  done
}

split_on_commas "this,is a,list" | while read item; do
  # Custom logic goes here
  echo Item: ${item}
done

... this generates the following output:

Item: this
Item: is a
Item: list

(Note, this answer has been updated according to some feedback)

Read: http://linuxmanpages.com/man1/sh.1.php & http://www.gnu.org/s/hello/manual/autoconf/Special-Shell-Variables.html

IFS The Internal Field Separator that is used for word splitting after expansion and to split lines into words with the read builtin command. The default value is ``''.

IFS is a shell environment variable so it will remain unchanged within the context of your Shell script but not otherwise, unless you EXPORT it. ALSO BE AWARE, that IFS will not likely be inherited from your Environment at all: see this gnu post for the reasons and more info on IFS.

You're code written like this:

IFS=","
for word in $(cat tmptest | sed -n 1'p' | tr ',' '\n'); do echo $word; done;

should work, I tested it on command line.

sh-3.2#IFS=","
sh-3.2#for word in $(cat tmptest | sed -n 1'p' | tr ',' '\n'); do echo $word; done;
World
Questions
Answers
bash shell
script

You can use:

cat f.csv | sed 's/,/ /g' |  awk '{print $1 " / " $4}'

or

echo "Hello,World,Questions,Answers,bash shell,script" | sed 's/,/ /g' |  awk '{print $1 " / " $4}'

This is the part that replace comma with space

sed 's/,/ /g'
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