Below is the snippet of a shell script from a larger script. It removes the quotes from the string that is held by a variable. I am doing it using sed, but is it efficient? If not, then what is the efficient way?

#!/bin/sh opt="\"html\\test\\\"" temp=`echo $opt | sed 's/.\(.*\)/\1/' | sed 's/\(.*\)./\1/'` echo $temp 
3

17 Answers

Use tr to delete ":

 echo "$opt" | tr -d '"' 

NOTE: This does not fully answer the question, removes all double quotes, not just leading and trailing. See other answers below.

6

There's a simpler and more efficient way, using the native shell prefix/suffix removal feature:

temp="${opt%\"}" temp="${temp#\"}" echo "$temp" 

${opt%\"} will remove the suffix " (escaped with a backslash to prevent shell interpretation).

${temp#\"} will remove the prefix " (escaped with a backslash to prevent shell interpretation).

Another advantage is that it will remove surrounding quotes only if there are surrounding quotes.

BTW, your solution always removes the first and last character, whatever they may be (of course, I'm sure you know your data, but it's always better to be sure of what you're removing).

Using sed:

echo "$opt" | sed -e 's/^"//' -e 's/"$//' 

(Improved version, as indicated by jfgagne, getting rid of echo)

sed -e 's/^"//' -e 's/"$//' <<<"$opt" 

So it replaces a leading " with nothing, and a trailing " with nothing too. In the same invocation (there isn't any need to pipe and start another sed. Using -e you can have multiple text processing).

12

If you're using jq and trying to remove the quotes from the result, the other answers will work, but there's a better way. By using the -r option, you can output the result with no quotes.

$ echo '{"foo": "bar"}' | jq '.foo' "bar" $ echo '{"foo": "bar"}' | jq -r '.foo' bar 
2

There is a straightforward way using xargs:

> echo '"quoted"' | xargs quoted 

xargs uses echo as the default command if no command is provided and strips quotes from the input, see e.g. here. Note, however, that this will work only if the string does not contain additional quotes. In that case it will either fail (uneven number of quotes) or remove all of them.

6

The shortest way around - try:

echo $opt | sed "s/\"//g" 

It actually removes all "s (double quotes) from opt (are there really going to be any more double quotes other than in the beginning and the end though? So it's actually the same thing, and much more brief ;-))

2

You can do it with only one call to sed:

$ echo "\"html\\test\\\"" | sed 's/^"\(.*\)"$/\1/' html\test\ 
0

The easiest solution in Bash:

$ s='"abc"' $ echo $s "abc" $ echo "${s:1:-1}" abc 

This is called substring expansion (see Gnu Bash Manual and search for ${parameter:offset:length}). In this example it takes the substring from s starting at position 1 and ending at the second last position. This is due to the fact that if length is a negative value it is interpreted as a backwards running offset from the end of parameter.

1

If you come here for aws cli --query, try --output text.

3

Update

A simple and elegant answer from Stripping single and double quotes in a string using bash / standard Linux commands only:

BAR=$(eval echo $BAR) strips quotes from BAR.

=============================================================

Based on hueybois's answer, I came up with this function after much trial and error:

function stripStartAndEndQuotes { cmd="temp=\${$1%\\\"}" eval echo $cmd temp="${temp#\"}" eval echo "$1=$temp" } 

If you don't want anything printed out, you can pipe the evals to /dev/null 2>&1.

Usage:

$ BAR="FOO BAR" $ echo BAR "FOO BAR" $ stripStartAndEndQuotes "BAR" $ echo BAR FOO BAR 
1

This is the most discrete way without using sed:

x='"fish"' printf " quotes: %s\nno quotes: %s\n" "$x" "${x//\"/}" 

Or

echo $x echo ${x//\"/} 

Output:

 quotes: "fish" no quotes: fish 

I got this from a source.

3
Linux=`cat /etc/os-release | grep "ID" | head -1 | awk -F= '{ print $2 }'` echo $Linux Output: "amzn" 

Simplest ways to remove double quotes from variables are

Linux=`echo "$Linux" | tr -d '"'` 
Linux=$(eval echo $Linux) 
Linux=`echo ${Linux//\"/}` 
Linux=`echo $Linux | xargs` 

All provides the Output without double quotes:

echo $Linux

amzn

I know this is a very old question, but here is another sed variation, which may be useful to someone. Unlike some of the others, it only replaces double quotes at the start or end...

echo "$opt" | sed -r 's/^"|"$//g' 

If you need to match single or double quotes, and only strings that are properly quoted. You can use this slightly more complex regex...

echo $opt | sed -E "s|^(['\"])(.*)\1$|\2|g" 

This uses backrefences to ensure the quote at the end is the same as at the start.

In Bash, you could use the following one-liner:

[[ "${var}" == \"*\" || "${var}" == \'*\' ]] && var="${var:1:-1}" 

This will remove surrounding quotes (both single and double) from the string stored in var while keeping quote characters inside the string intact. Also, this won't do anything if there's only a single leading quote or only a single trailing quote or if there are mixed quote characters at start/end.


Wrapped in a function:

#!/usr/bin/env bash # Strip surrounding quotes from string [$1: variable name] function strip_quotes() { local -n var="$1" [[ "${var}" == \"*\" || "${var}" == \'*\' ]] && var="${var:1:-1}" } str="'hello world'" echo "Before: ${str}" strip_quotes str echo "After: ${str}" 
2

My version

strip_quotes() { while [[ $# -gt 0 ]]; do local value=${!1} local len=${#value} [[ ${value:0:1} == \" && ${value:$len-1:1} == \" ]] && declare -g $1="${value:1:$len-2}" shift done } 

The function accepts variable name(s) and strips quotes in place. It only strips a matching pair of leading and trailing quotes. It doesn't check if the trailing quote is escaped (preceded by \ which is not itself escaped).

In my experience, general-purpose string utility functions like this (I have a library of them) are most efficient when manipulating the strings directly, not using any pattern matching and especially not creating any sub-shells, or calling any external tools such as sed, awk or grep.

var1="\"test \\ \" end \"" var2=test var3=\"test var4=test\" echo before: for i in var{1,2,3,4}; do echo $i="${!i}" done strip_quotes var{1,2,3,4} echo echo after: for i in var{1,2,3,4}; do echo $i="${!i}" done 

I use this regular expression, which avoids removing quotes from strings that are not properly quoted, here the different outputs are shown depending on the inputs, only one with begin-end quote was affected:

echo '"only first' | sed 's/^"\(.*\)"$/\1/' 

Output: >"only first<

echo 'only last"' | sed 's/^"\(.*\)"$/\1/' 

Output: >"only last"<

echo '"both"' | sed 's/^"\(.*\)"$/\1/' 

Output: >both<

echo '"space after" ' | sed 's/^"\(.*\)"$/\1/' 

Output: >"space after" <

echo ' "space before"' | sed 's/^"\(.*\)"$/\1/' 

Output: > "space before"<

There is another way to do it. Like:

echo ${opt:1:-1} 
1

If you try to remove quotes because the Makefile keeps them, try this:

$(subst $\",,$(YOUR_VARIABLE)) 

Based on another answer:

1

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