How can I iterate through a simple range of ints using a for loop in ksh?
For example, my script currently does this...
for i in 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
do
#stuff
done
...but I'd like to extend the range way above 7. Is there a better syntax?
Curly brackets?
for i in {1..7}
do
#stuff
done
ksh93
; ksh
was based on the older, limited, ksh88
. Same for Solaris up to and including Solaris 10.
Mar 5, 2014 at 11:36
{01..219}
works (in zsh), i.e. evaluates to "01 02 ... 09 10 11 .. 99 100 101 102 ... 219".
While loop?
while [[ $i -lt 1000 ]] ; do
# stuff
(( i += 1 ))
done
((i+=1))
by i=$((i+1))
if POSIX compliance is desired.
Aug 23, 2011 at 8:03
i=0
. I'm running AIX 6.1.0.0 without seq
which worked on my 7.1.0.0
new install.
{1..1000}
doesn't work in AIX
on OpenBSD, use jot:
for i in `jot 10`; do echo $i ; done;
ksh93, Bash and zsh all understand C-like for
loop syntax:
for ((i=1; i<=9; i++))
do
echo $i
done
Unfortunately, while ksh and zsh understand the curly brace range syntax with constants and variables, Bash only handles constants (including Bash 4).
Using seq
:
for i in $(seq 1 10)
do
echo $i
done
The following will work on AIX / Linux / Solaris ksh.
#!/bin/ksh
d=100
while (( $d < 200 ))
do
echo "hdisk$d"
(( d=$d+1 ))
done
Optionally if you wanted to pad to 5 places, i.e. 00100 .. 00199 you could begin with:
#!/bin/ksh
typeset -Z5 d
-Scott
Just a few examples I use in AIX because there is no range operator or seq, abusing perl instead.
Here's a for loop, using perl like seq:
for X in `perl -e 'print join(" ", 1..10)'` ; do something $X ; done
This is similar, but I prefer while read loops over for. No backticks or issues with spaces.
perl -le 'print "$_ " for 1..10;' | while read X ; do xargs -tn1 ls $X ; done
My fav, do bash-like shell globbing, in this case permutations with perl.
perl -le 'print for glob "e{n,nt,t}{0,1,2,3,4,5}"' | xargs -n1 rmdev -dl