string-escape - escape special characters ========================================= Synopsis -------- .. BEGIN SYNOPSIS .. synopsis:: string escape [-n | --no-quoted] [--style=] [STRING ...] string unescape [--style=] [STRING ...] .. END SYNOPSIS Description ----------- .. BEGIN DESCRIPTION ``string escape`` escapes each *STRING* in one of three ways. The first is **--style=script**. This is the default. It alters the string such that it can be passed back to ``eval`` to produce the original argument again. By default, all special characters are escaped, and quotes are used to simplify the output when possible. If **-n** or **--no-quoted** is given, the simplifying quoted format is not used. Exit status: 0 if at least one string was escaped, or 1 otherwise. **--style=var** ensures the string can be used as a variable name by hex encoding any non-alphanumeric characters. The string is first converted to UTF-8 before being encoded. **--style=url** ensures the string can be used as a URL by hex encoding any character which is not legal in a URL. The string is first converted to UTF-8 before being encoded. **--style=regex** escapes an input string for literal matching within a regex expression. The string is first converted to UTF-8 before being encoded. ``string unescape`` performs the inverse of the ``string escape`` command. If the string to be unescaped is not properly formatted it is ignored. For example, doing ``string unescape --style=var (string escape --style=var $str)`` will return the original string. There is no support for unescaping **--style=regex**. .. END DESCRIPTION Examples -------- .. BEGIN EXAMPLES :: >_ echo \x07 | string escape \cg >_ string escape --style=var 'a1 b2'\u6161 a1_20_b2_E6_85_A1_ .. END EXAMPLES