It's convenient for your aliases to use command-line arguments. For example, let's think about an alias named phone:
alias phone 'cat ~/phonelist | grep -i'
After you define that alias, you could type phone smith. The shell would find the phone alias and execute it with the argument (smith) at the end (10.2) this way:
cat ~/phonelist | grep -i smith
Using cat and a pipe that way is inefficient (13.2). It might be more sensible to have an alias that worked like this:
grep -iname
~/phonelist
How do we do this?
The C shell's
history (11.7)
facility lets us use the
notation !$
to refer to the last word in the previous command;
the notation !*
refers to all the arguments of the previous command.
Assuming that we only want to look up aliases one at a time, we can
use !$
and write our alias like this:
alias phone grep -i \!$ ~/phonelist
When we use the phone command, its final argument will be substituted
into the alias. That is, when we type phone bill
, the shell
executes the command grep -i bill ~/phonelist
.
In this example, we needed another kind of quoting. We had to put a
backslash before the exclamation point to prevent the shell from
replacing !$
with the previous command's last argument. That is, we
don't want the
shell to expand !$
when we define the alias - that's
nonsense. We want the shell to insert the previous argument when we
use the alias (in which case, the previous argument is just the
argument for the alias itself - clear?).
But why couldn't we just use single quotes or double quotes (8.14)? This isn't the right place for a full explanation, but neither single quotes nor double quotes protect the exclamation point. The backslash does . (8.15) If you want to be convinced, experiment with some commands like:
%echo '!!'
Print your last command %echo '\!!'
Print !!
The first echo command shows that the shell performs history
substitution (i.e., replaces !!
with your previous command) in spite
of the single quotes. The second example shows that the backslash can
prevent the shell from interpreting !
as a special character.
Let's look at another alias. We want to pipe the output of ls -l into more (25.3). In this case, we would want all the arguments from the command line instead of merely the last argument (or the only argument). Here's the alias:
alias lm 'ls -l \!* | more'
This time, we needed both kinds of quoting:
A backslash prevents the shell from interpreting the exclamation point
immediately.
Single quotes protect the pipe symbol and the asterisk (*
).
If you don't protect them both, and only protect the pipe (with a
backslash), look what happens:
%alias lm ls -l \!* more
alias: No match.
Because the backslash temporarily stops the special meaning of the !
,
the shell next tries to find filenames that match the
wildcard (1.16)
pattern !*
.
That fails (except in the unusual case when you have a file in the
current directory whose name starts with a !
).
NOTE: Here's a good general rule for quoting aliases. Unless you're trying to do something special with an alias and you understand quoting well, put single quotes (
'
) around the whole definition and put a backslash before every exclamation point (/!
).
Finally, if you want to pick one argument from the command line, use
/!:
n
, where n
is the number of the argument. Here's one final
alias.
It uses
cat (25.2)
to add a header file to the file named in the first argument, then
writes them both into the file named in the second argument:
~ | alias addhead 'cat ~/txt/header \!:1 > \!:2' |
---|
This alias has two arguments: the file to which you want to add a header and the output file. When you type:
%addhead foo bar
the C shell substitutes the filename foo
for /!:1
, and the
filename bar
for /!:2
, executing the command:
cat ~/txt/header foo > bar
-
,