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Add Combine All My TILs Into A Single File as a Unix TIL
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@@ -10,7 +10,7 @@ working across different projects via [VisualMode](https://www.visualmode.dev/).
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For a steady stream of TILs, [sign up for my newsletter](https://visualmode.kit.com/newsletter).
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_1749 TILs and counting..._
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_1750 TILs and counting..._
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See some of the other learning resources I work on:
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@@ -1648,6 +1648,7 @@ If you've learned something here, support my efforts writing daily TILs by
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- [Check The Current Working Directory](unix/check-the-current-working-directory.md)
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- [Check The Installed OpenSSL Version](unix/check-the-installed-openssl-version.md)
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- [Clear The Screen](unix/clear-the-screen.md)
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- [Combine All My TILs Into A Single File](unix/combine-all-my-tils-into-a-single-file.md)
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- [Command Line Length Limitations](unix/command-line-length-limitations.md)
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- [Compare Two Variables In A Bash Script](unix/compare-two-variables-in-a-bash-script.md)
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- [Configure cd To Behave Like pushd In Zsh](unix/configure-cd-to-behave-like-pushd-in-zsh.md)
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35
unix/combine-all-my-tils-into-a-single-file.md
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35
unix/combine-all-my-tils-into-a-single-file.md
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@@ -0,0 +1,35 @@
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# Combine All My TILs Into A Single File
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In [Build A Small Text-based Training
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Dataset](https://www.visualmode.dev/build-a-small-text-training-dataset), I went
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over my need for a sizeable and interesting corpus of text that I could use as a
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training dataset I could use to run against [my own naive Byte Pair Encoding
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implementation](https://github.com/jbranchaud/build-an-llm-from-scratch/blob/main/chapter-02/bpe_tokenizer.py).
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My repo of hand-written TILs is a great candidate, but I need those smashed all
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into one file.
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Here is a formatted version of the one-liner I ended up with:
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```bash
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{
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cat README.md; \
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find */ -name '*.md' -print0 \
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| sort -z \
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| xargs -0 -I{} sh -c 'echo "<|endoftext|>"; cat "$1"' _ {}; \
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} > combined.md
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```
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This combines all 1700+ of my TILs into a single file separated by the
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`<|endoftext|>` delimiter.
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The two things I find most interesting about this command are:
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1. The use of a null byte (`\0`) separator between the filenames in case there
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is anything weird (like spaces) in those filenames. This starts with
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`-print0`. The `-z` of `sort` maintains that null byte separator. And then
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`xargs` knows to handle it by the `-0` flag.
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2. We can coerce `xargs` into running multiple commands by having it spawn a
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single shell process that runs each of those commands. To reliably pass the
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filename into that shell process, we have `xargs` constitute it as the second
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argument (`$1`) by substituting in the filename where `{}` appears.
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