The Problem
You're using the value of i as if it were an array index. It isn't, because SAMPLE1 and SAMPLE2 are separate variables, not an array.
In addition, when calling echo SAMPLE{$i}
you are only appending the value of i to the word "SAMPLE." The only variable you are dereferencing in this statement is $i, which is why you got the results you did.
Ways to Address the Problem
There are two main ways to address this:
- Multi-stage dereferencing of an interpolated variable, via the eval builtin or indirect variable expansion.
- Iterating over an array, or using i as an index into an array.
Dereferencing with eval
The easiest thing to do in this situation is to use eval:
SAMPLE1='1-first.with.custom.name'
SAMPLE2='2-second.with.custom.name'
for (( i = 1; i <= 2; i++ )); do
eval echo \$SAMPLE${i}
done
This will append the value of i to the end of the variable, and then reprocess the resulting line, expanding the interpolated variable name (e.g. SAMPLE1 or SAMPLE2).
Dereferencing with Indirect Variables
The accepted answer for this question is:
SAMPLE1='1-first.with.custom.name'
SAMPLE2='2-second.with.custom.name'
for (( i = 1; i <= 2; i++ ))
do
var="SAMPLE$i"
echo ${!var}
done
This is technically a three-step process. First, it assigns an interpolated variable name to var, then dereferences the variable name stored in var, and finally expands the result. It looks a little cleaner, and some people are more comfortable with this syntax than with eval, but the result is largely the same.
Iterating Over an Array
You can simplify both the loop and the expansion by iterating over an array instead of using variable interpolation. For example:
SAMPLE=('1-first.with.custom.name' '2-second.with.custom.name')
for i in "${SAMPLE[@]}"; do
echo "$i"
done
This has added benefits over the other methods. Specifically:
- You don't need to specify a complex loop test.
- You access individual array elements via the $SAMPLE[$i] syntax.
- You can get the total number of elements with the ${#SAMPLE} variable expansion.
Practical Equivalency for Original Example
All three methods will work for the example given in the original question, but the array solution provides the most overall flexibility. Choose whichever one works best for the data you have on hand.