Issue
Say I have the paths
a/b/c/d/e/f
a/b/c/d
How do I get the below?
e/f
Solution
You can strip one string from the other with:
echo "${string1#"$string2"}"
See:
$ string1="a/b/c/d/e/f"
$ string2="a/b/c/d"
$ echo "${string1#"$string2"}"
/e/f
From man bash
-> Shell parameter expansion:
${parameter#word}
${parameter##word}
The word is expanded to produce a pattern just as in filename expansion. If the pattern matches the beginning of the expanded value of parameter, then the result of the expansion is the expanded value of parameter with the shortest matching pattern (the ‘#’ case) or the longest matching pattern (the ‘##’ case) deleted.
With spaces:
$ string1="hello/i am here/foo/bar"
$ string2="hello/i am here/foo"
$ echo "${string1#"$string2"}"
/bar
To "clean" multiple slashes, you can follow Roberto Reale's suggestion and canonicalize the paths with readlink -m
to allow comparison with strings with the same real path up:
$ string1="/a///b/c//d/e/f/"
$ readlink -m $string1
/a/b/c/d/e/f
Answered By - fedorqui Answer Checked By - Dawn Plyler (WPSolving Volunteer)