Out of curiosity, and because I work in XR, what do you used those glasses for?
How about watch -n 5 your_command
instead?
Anyway an event based solution, maybe via xev
filter on randr
category could be more elegant. Still, whatever works for you! Thanks for sharing.
What about the condition that when the external display is disconnected, the main display should be reenabled?
Serious question, why use a semicolon to put do and then on the end of the previous line?
Especially when do/done are the open and close control directives for a block.
Don't you think bash looks much cleaner when you use it how it was designed?
I'd write
while true; do
X
done
for the same reason I'd write
if [ something ]; then
X
fi
or in another language
if (something) {
X
}
Because it's all part of the same statement and having a single line with just do
or {
seems silly and implies (to me) that the lines aren't related.
In defense of OP, I do this a lot and go for similar moves in other languages too if the conditional bit is just a line or two. Pro choice!
Bash doesn't ever look clean.
It's just a brace on same line/new line stylistic choice with extra steps.
About that, I used to also think that brace on new line is clearer, but after seeing a lot more code I have switched sides, both are clear enough to me, so I'd rather have fewer lines
Yes totally a personalstyle choice. To me, using a semicolon to save a line looks more ugly ; then ;)
Not OP but this is how I learned it and how it's presented in the help file.
$ help while
while: while COMMANDS; do COMMANDS-2; done
$ help if
if: if COMMANDS; then COMMANDS; [ elif COMMANDS; then COMMANDS; ]... [ else COMMANDS; ] fi
Thats the concise help text to keep it short and easy to read.
The first line in the GNU Bash manual section on loop constructs says "Note that wherever a ‘;’ appears in the description of a command’s syntax, it may be replaced with one or more newlines."
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