1

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?

1 Answer 1

3

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
4
  • Thanks, this solved the problem. But why does the second example in my question work then? Apr 21, 2012 at 12:24
  • My guess is that, when bash evaluates 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.
    – Win32
    Apr 21, 2012 at 13:20
  • @Win32: I guess it assings bar to ${my_array[0]}, it does not turn the array into an associative one.
    – choroba
    Apr 21, 2012 at 14:27
  • Indexed arrays evaluate shell arithmetic expressions and use the result as the index to dereference. Arithmetic variables must be integers. If they are strings then Bash looks to the variable named by the value of the arithmetic variable recursively until coming across an integer. This is limited, so if the lookup is too deep, or cyclical, then an arithmetic recursion error is thrown: 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.
    – ormaaj
    Apr 21, 2012 at 16:10

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