Yes, you can use Python from the command line. python -c <stuff>
will run <stuff>
as Python code. Example:
python -c "import sys; print sys.path"
There isn't a direct equivalent to the -p
option for Perl (the automatic input/output line-by-line processing), but that's mostly because Python doesn't use the same concept of $_
and whatnot that Perl does - in Python, all input and output is done manually (via raw_input()
/input()
, and print
/print()
).
For your particular example:
cat results.txt | python -c "import re, sys; print ''.join(re.sub(r'.+(d.d+).
', r'1 ', line) for line in sys.stdin)"
(Obviously somewhat more unwieldy. It's probably better to just write the script to do it in actual Python.)
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