When trying the execute the following in bash
foo=foo
my_array[$foo]=bar
I get the error 'bash: foo: expression recursion level exceeded (error token is "foo")'. But this works fine:
foo=hello
my_array[$foo]=bar
Why is this happening?
The problem is that you are not declaring your array to be associative, so it's assumed to be a numeric array. When bash tries to evaluate
my_array[$foo]=bar
what he comes into is
my_array[foo]=bar
but the array index ain't still numeric, so he tries to evaluate it again, leading into
my_array[foo]=bar
as you don't need to use the $ when in between square brackets. You can see that this goes on and on until a recursion level exceeded exception is thrown.
To solve it, just declare the array as associative:
declare -A my_array
my_array[$foo]=bar
and expands it into my_array[hello]=bar
, then it tries to evaluate it again but finds no match for $hello, so assumes it to be a literal string and thus stops evaluation, considering the array as an associative one.
bar
to ${my_array[0]}, it does not turn the array into an associative one.
a=b b=c c=d d=e e=f f=a; ((a))
will have the same effect. win32's solution is correct - associative arrays can only be explicitly declared using one of the declaration commands that have -A
.