How do I print some text in bash and pad it with spaces to a certain width?

PHLAK picture PHLAK · Jun 14, 2011 · Viewed 46.8k times · Source

I'm echoing some text in a bash script with a variable in it, and want to pad that variable so it will always have the appropriate ammount of spaces to the right to keep the rest of the text aligned.

Here's an example of what I want:

Echoing random number 1080    [ OK ]
Echoing random number 443     [ OK ]
Echoing random number 34842   [ OK ]

The numerical value would be of varying length (probably no longer than 5 or 6 digits).

I know that printf can do this and right align the variable by doing the following:

printf "Echoing random number %5s   [ OK ]" $RAND_NUM

However, this would format the text like this:

Echoing random number  1080   [ OK ]
Echoing random number   443   [ OK ]
Echoing random number 34842   [ OK ]

And of course just echoing with spaces doens't work:

echo "Echoing random number ${RAND_NUM}   [ OK ]"

Produces this:

Echoing random number 1080   [ OK ]
Echoing random number 443   [ OK ]
Echoing random number 34842   [ OK ]

Is there a way to print the text like my first example?

Answer

John Kugelman picture John Kugelman · Jun 14, 2011

Use - to left align a field.

printf "Echoing random number %-5s   [ OK ]" $RAND_NUM

Alternatively, if you're on a Red Hat Linux system there are predefined functions that will print out green OK and red FAILED prompts (the ones you see during bootup):

#!/bin/bash

. /etc/init.d/functions

echo -n "Frobbing widget:"
frob_widget && echo_success || echo_failure
echo