2009 102: Difference between revisions
Line 18: | Line 18: | ||
== Tutorial == | == Tutorial == | ||
We start with the tool wget. | === Getting acquainted with a tool === | ||
We start with the tool [[wget]]. | |||
First, simply try to run it: | First, simply try to run it: | ||
Line 29: | Line 31: | ||
wget --help | wget --help | ||
</source> | </source> | ||
<source lang="bash"> | |||
wget --help | less | |||
</source> | |||
A [[pipeline]] to the rescue! | |||
<source lang="bash"> | <source lang="bash"> | ||
Line 34: | Line 42: | ||
</source> | </source> | ||
Man has an option to output print-friendly postscript output. It's described on the "man" man page. (Now how would one look up the man page of the man command?). | |||
<source lang="bash"> | |||
man -t wget | |||
</source> | |||
<source lang="bash"> | |||
man -t wget > wget.ps | |||
</source> | |||
<source lang="bash"> | |||
evince wget.ps | |||
</source> | |||
Start with example of how to rip the above page with wget. | Start with example of how to rip the above page with wget. |
Revision as of 22:58, 13 October 2008
this page is under construction ;)
Command Line Media
While the command line, or shell, is a text-based interface, this does not mean that manipulating other kinds of media, image, sound, video, is excluded. Far from it, many command line tools offer extremely useful and uniquely powerful functionality difficult to achieve with GUI programs. In addition, by applying the basics of pipelining and abstraction (through creating your own scripts with parameters), the command line enables highly particular and personal media tools to be created by pulling existing tools together in novel ways.
Making a "frontpage" snapshot tool
An exercise to build a simple tool to support visual comparison of front pages newssites a la Sarah Charlesworth's Modern History (1978). The work, among many other works of interest, can be seen as part of the Order Of Things exhibition, through the end of the year at the MuKHA, Antwerp.
Exercise explores the principle of:
- simple command line tools focused on doing a simple task
- the idea of a pipeline to join various commands together
- introducing the concept of a variable to make a personal "tool"
- cron jobs to automate a process over a long time period
Tutorial
Getting acquainted with a tool
We start with the tool wget.
First, simply try to run it:
wget
wget --help
wget --help | less
A pipeline to the rescue!
man wget
Man has an option to output print-friendly postscript output. It's described on the "man" man page. (Now how would one look up the man page of the man command?).
man -t wget
man -t wget > wget.ps
evince wget.ps
Start with example of how to rip the above page with wget. & re-assemble with montage...
Using the date tool for automatically naming a file.
In general build up from really simple CL exercises of using imagemagick, file manipulations (moving, renaming, copying, deleting)... Introducing public_html...
Necessary Tools / Topics:
- basics shell / file manipulation: cd, pwd, mv, cp
- remote connections with ssh
- wget
- ImageMagick: convert, mogrify, montage
- find
- public_html
- crontab
- date
Concepts:
- variable
- backquoting
- reading man pages
- setting options
A sample:
wget -r -l1 --no-parent -A "*.jpg" "http://www.sarahcharlesworth.net/series-view.php?album_id=34&subalbum_id=53"
mkdir images
find www.sarahcharlesworth.net -iname "*.jpg" -exec mv {} images \;
montage images/* modern.png