3

Just a little question about the right way of doing Post-increment in bash.

while true; do
  VAR=$((CONT++))
  echo "CONT: $CONT"
  sleep 1
done

VAR starts at 1 in this case.

CONT: 1
CONT: 2
CONT: 3

But if I do this:

while true; do
  echo "CONT: $((CONT++))"
  sleep 1
done

It starts at 0.

CONT: 0
CONT: 1
CONT: 2

Seems that the the first case is behaving ok, because ((CONT++)) would evaluate CONT (undefined,¿0?) and add +1.

How can I get a behaviour like in echo statement to assign to a variable?

EDIT: In my first example, instead of echoing CONT, I should have echoed VAR, that way it works OK, so it was my error from the beginning.

4 Answers 4

10

both cases are OK and reasonable.

foo++ will first return current value (before auto-incrementing) of foo, then auto-increment.

in your 1st case, if you change into echo "CONT: $VAR", it will give same result as case 2.

If you want to have 1,2,3..., with auto-increment, you could try:

echo "CONT: $((++CONT))"
5
  • Thanks, I understand it, but I would like to do it in the assignment to a variable, not in an echo. In an echo it works OK, but not when I assign to variable (I dont know the right way to start from 0).
    – JorgeeFG
    Feb 22, 2013 at 13:55
  • I just noticed that it works good and was my error in the first example, instead of echoing VAR, I echoed CONT. Thats why it wasnt working.
    – JorgeeFG
    Feb 22, 2013 at 13:58
  • @Jorge your first case ($VAR) is starting from 0
    – Kent
    Feb 22, 2013 at 13:58
  • Remember, though, that if you use something like declare -i counter=0, then counter will be an integer instead of a string. Thus, using $((counter++)) is no longer necessary to perform arithmetic. ((counter++)) will do. Jul 9, 2019 at 3:45
  • So, if I have the command echo $((age++)) for example, then does that mean command substitution has higher precedence than post increment?
    – 1zverg
    Jul 16, 2020 at 17:15
2

Let's simplify your code to make it easier to understand.

The following:

  VAR=$((CONT++))
  echo "CONT: $CONT"

can be broken down into the following steps:

  VAR=$CONT            # assign CONT to VAR
  CONT=$((CONT+1))     # increment CONT
  echo "CONT: $CONT"   # print CONT

Similary, the following the statement:

echo "CONT: $((CONT++))"

is equivalent to:

echo "CONT: $CONT"    # print CONT
CONT=$((CONT+1))      # then increment CONT

Hope this helps explain why you see that behaviour.

1
  • I just noticed that it works good and was my error in the first example, instead of echoing VAR, I echoed CONT. Thats why it wasnt working.
    – JorgeeFG
    Feb 22, 2013 at 13:59
1

Post increment means, return the previous value and then increment the value.

In your first example, you use the value after it was incremented. In your second example you use it before you increment it.

If you want the same result as in the first example, you must use prefix increment

while true; do
    echo "CONT: $((++CONT))"
    sleep 1
done
2
  • Thanks, I understand it, but I would like to do it in the assignment to a variable, not in an echo. In an echo it works OK, but not when I assign to variable (I dont know the right way to start from 0).
    – JorgeeFG
    Feb 22, 2013 at 13:55
  • I just noticed that it works good and was my error in the first example.
    – JorgeeFG
    Feb 22, 2013 at 13:57
0

((CONT++)) is what increments the variable. Adding the "$" is for other purposes.

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