I’m looking for the easiest and most readable way to remove a field from a path. So for example, I have /this/is/my/complicated/path/here, and I would like to remove the 5th field (“/complicated”) from the string, using bash commands, so that it becomes /this/is/my/path.
I could do this with
echo "/this/is/my/complicated/path/here" | cut -d/ -f-4
echo "/"
echo "/this/is/my/complicated/path/here" | cut -d/ -f6-
but I would like this done in just one easy command, something that would like
echo "/this/is/my/complicated/path" | tee >(cut -d/ -f-4) >(cut -d/ -f6-)
except that this doesn’t work.
With
cut, you can specify a comma separated list of fields to print:So, it’s not really necessary to use two commands.