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This means that if your script is called by some script, it will be executed as well, so all of its declarations are available to that script. There is no way around this.
Typed objects
Once upon a time, type coercion was not allowed, but it has been implemented now. This means that you can declare variables of a certain type, and an operation will be automatically performed to coerce the variable to that type. You can only use this feature to declare a new variable with a specific type. You can't assign a variable of one type to a variable of another type.
Regex
There was an error in the regex implementation.
Collapse
This can be used to collapse a group of things. It might be used to include the operator (/) for a common group of files. For example, you might have several files with the same extension:.png,.png, and.jpg. You might want to include the operator for this group, so you could write this: cat *.png | xargs -i's/.png$/.jpg/' sh -c 'echo [1_TEXT]'
Options
You can place an's' parameter to xargs if you want to pass a number of options to xargs. You can optionally specify a single option at the end of the option list. You can also specify multiple options, separated by commas, that will all be treated as one option. So you could write: xargs -i's/.png$/.jpg/' -n 2 -n 2 sh -c 'echo [1_TEXT]'
Command line length limit
On the Linux command line, it is possible to specify the maximum length for the command line. By default, there is a limit of 4096 characters. You can increase this limit to 262144 characters by changing the value of 'ulimit' in the shell.
The '!' operator
The '!' operator can be used to negate the previous operator. So it is possible to write: cat *.png | xargs -i's/.png$/.jpg/' sh -c 'echo $!' 827ec27edc