Assuming you allow "for", then the following in bash
for m in {1..12}; do
echo $(date -d $m/1/1 +%b) - $(date -d "$(($m%12+1))/1 - 1 days" +%d) days
done
produces this
Jan - 31 days
Feb - 29 days
Mar - 31 days
Apr - 30 days
May - 31 days
Jun - 30 days
Jul - 31 days
Aug - 31 days
Sep - 30 days
Oct - 31 days
Nov - 30 days
Dec - 31 days
Note: I removed the need for cal
For those that enjoy trivia:
Number months from 1 to 12 and look at the binary representation in four
bits {b3,b2,b1,b0}. A month has 31 days if and only if b3 differs from b0.
All other months have 30 days except for February.
So with the exception of February this works:
for m in {1..12}; do
echo $(date -d $m/1/1 +%b) - $((30+($m>>3^$m&1))) days
done
Result:
Jan - 31 days
Feb - 30 days (wrong)
Mar - 31 days
Apr - 30 days
May - 31 days
Jun - 30 days
Jul - 31 days
Aug - 31 days
Sep - 30 days
Oct - 31 days
Nov - 30 days
Dec - 31 days