Charles N Wyble
fda3d3ea40
git-subtree-dir: vendor/git.knownelement.com/ExternalVendorCode/mo git-subtree-split: 7e86c1a5f525f352983077d743c2ce2f5d75f4fa
40 lines
1.1 KiB
Bash
Executable File
40 lines
1.1 KiB
Bash
Executable File
#!/usr/bin/env bash
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cd "$(dirname "$0")" # Go to the script's directory
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# Detect if this is the first item and write a comma if it is.
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# Normally, I would track this using a variable, like so:
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#
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# COMMA_IF_NOT_FIRST_FLAG=false
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# COMMA_IF_NOT_FIRST() {
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# $COMMA_IF_NOT_FIRST || echo ","
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# COMMA_IF_NOT_FIRST_FLAG=true
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# }
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#
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# Since this function executes in a subshell, that approach will not work.
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# Instead, we peek inside mo and see what is being processed. If the variable
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# name in moParse() changes, this will need to get updated as well. An
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# alternate variable that is usable is context, but that is in moLoop() and is
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# two levels levels deep instead of just one.
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COMMA_IF_NOT_FIRST() {
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[[ "${moCurrent#*.}" != "0" ]] && echo ","
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}
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# Create an array that will be embedded into the JSON. If you are manipulating
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# JSON, might I suggest you look at using jq? It's really good at processing
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# JSON.
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items=(
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'{"position":"one","url":"1"}'
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'{"position":"two","url":"2"}'
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'{"position":"three","url":"3"}'
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)
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. ../mo
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cat <<EOF | mo
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{
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{{#items}}
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{{COMMA_IF_NOT_FIRST}}
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{{.}}
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{{/items}}
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}
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EOF
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