0

The arguments are separated using spaces:

sh test.sh "a b c "

In the test.sh, how should you use a for loop to get the argument a b c?

2
  • why do you need a for loop?
    – tristan
    Dec 31, 2013 at 6:02
  • It would be clearer if you had a second argument -- for instance, "a b c" "d e f" -- and specified how you wanted that one handled. If you would iterate over the two arguments in that case, the first example in the answer by @JonathanLeffler is perfect, and I'm unclear on why it hasn't been accepted yet. Dec 31, 2013 at 13:18

2 Answers 2

1

As a single argument:

for i in "$@"
do
    echo "$i"
done

As separate arguments:

for i in $*  # Or $@
do
    echo "$i"
done

And if you invoke:

./test.sh a b c

but you want all three arguments treated as one, then:

for i in "$*"
do
    echo "$i"
done

(The loop is really not needed; echo "$*" would do the job.)

0

Even this will do:

#!/bin/sh -e
for i; do
    echo :$i:
done

This is equivalent to: for i in "$@"; do ...

So you will get:

$ sh script.sh 'a b c '
:a b c :

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