How do you get the length of a string stored in a variable and assign that to another variable?
myvar="some string"
echo ${#myvar}
# 11
How do you set another variable to the output 11
?
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How do you get the length of a string stored in a variable and assign that to another variable?
myvar="some string"
echo ${#myvar}
# 11
How do you set another variable to the output 11
?
In addition to fedorqui's correct answer, I would like to show the difference between string length and byte length:
myvar='Généralités'
chrlen=${#myvar}
oLang=$LANG oLcAll=$LC_ALL
LANG=C LC_ALL=C
bytlen=${#myvar}
LANG=$oLang LC_ALL=$oLcAll
printf "%s is %d char len, but %d bytes len.\n" "${myvar}" $chrlen $bytlen
will render:
Généralités is 11 char len, but 14 bytes len.
you could even have a look at stored chars:
myvar='Généralités'
chrlen=${#myvar}
oLang=$LANG oLcAll=$LC_ALL
LANG=C LC_ALL=C
bytlen=${#myvar}
printf -v myreal "%q" "$myvar"
LANG=$oLang LC_ALL=$oLcAll
printf "%s has %d chars, %d bytes: (%s).\n" "${myvar}" $chrlen $bytlen "$myreal"
will answer:
Généralités has 11 chars, 14 bytes: ($'G\303\251n\303\251ralit\303\251s').
Nota: According to Isabell Cowan's comment, I've added setting to $LC_ALL
along with $LANG
.
Argument work same as regular variables
strLen() {
local bytlen sreal oLang=$LANG oLcAll=$LC_ALL
LANG=C LC_ALL=C
bytlen=${#1}
printf -v sreal %q "$1"
LANG=$oLang LC_ALL=$oLcAll
printf "String '%s' is %d bytes, but %d chars len: %s.\n" "$1" $bytlen ${#1} "$sreal"
}
will work as
strLen théorème
String 'théorème' is 10 bytes, but 8 chars len: $'th\303\251or\303\250me'
printf
correction tool:If you:
for string in Généralités Language Théorème Février "Left: ←" "Yin Yang ☯";do
printf " - %-14s is %2d char length\n" "'$string'" ${#string}
done
- 'Généralités' is 11 char length
- 'Language' is 8 char length
- 'Théorème' is 8 char length
- 'Février' is 7 char length
- 'Left: ←' is 7 char length
- 'Yin Yang ☯' is 10 char length
Not really pretty... For this, there is a little function:
strU8DiffLen () {
local bytlen oLang=$LANG oLcAll=$LC_ALL
LANG=C LC_ALL=C
bytlen=${#1}
LANG=$oLang LC_ALL=$oLcAll
return $(( bytlen - ${#1} ))
}
Then now:
for string in Généralités Language Théorème Février "Left: ←" "Yin Yang ☯";do
strU8DiffLen "$string"
printf " - %-$((14+$?))s is %2d chars length, but uses %2d bytes\n" \
"'$string'" ${#string} $((${#string}+$?))
done
- 'Généralités' is 11 chars length, but uses 14 bytes
- 'Language' is 8 chars length, but uses 8 bytes
- 'Théorème' is 8 chars length, but uses 10 bytes
- 'Février' is 7 chars length, but uses 8 bytes
- 'Left: ←' is 7 chars length, but uses 9 bytes
- 'Yin Yang ☯' is 10 chars length, but uses 12 bytes
But there left some strange UTF-8 behaviour, like double-spaced chars, zero spaced chars, reverse deplacement and other that could not be as simple...
Have a look at diffU8test.sh or diffU8test.sh.txt for more limitations.
To get the length of a string stored in a variable, say:
myvar="some string"
size=${#myvar}
To confirm it was properly saved, echo
it:
$ echo "$size"
11
$rulename
starts with the $RULE_PREFIX
prefix: [ "${rulename:0:${#RULE_PREFIX}}" == "$RULE_PREFIX" ]
– Thomas Guyot-Sionnest
Jul 21 '15 at 14:13
#myvar
and {#myvar}
?
– Lerner Zhang
Sep 19 '16 at 6:03
${#parameter}
: The length in characters of the expanded value of parameter is substituted.
– fedorqui 'SO stop harming'
Oct 21 '16 at 14:31
I wanted the simplest case, finally this is a result:
echo -n 'Tell me the length of this sentence.' | wc -m;
36
echo '' | wc -m
=> 1
. You'd need to use -n
: echo -n '' | wc -m
=> 0
... in which case it's a good solution :)
– AJP
Oct 11 '17 at 15:06
-n do not output the trailing newline
– dmatej
Oct 11 '17 at 19:11
You can use:
MYSTRING="abc123"
MYLENGTH=$(printf "%s" "$MYSTRING" | wc -c)
wc -c
or wc --bytes
for byte counts = Unicode characters are counted with 2, 3 or more bytes.wc -m
or wc --chars
for character counts = Unicode characters are counted single until they use more bytes.mylen=$(printf "%s" "$HOME/.ssh" | wc -c)
whereas the accepted solution fails and you need to myvar=$HOME/.ssh
first.
– JL Peyret
Feb 13 '20 at 21:44
${#var}
. You still need LC_ALL
/ LANG
set to an UTF-8 locale, otherwise -m
will return byte count.
– nyuszika7h
Aug 19 '20 at 11:16
In response to the post starting:
If you want to use this with command line or function arguments...
with the code:
size=${#1}
There might be the case where you just want to check for a zero length argument and have no need to store a variable. I believe you can use this sort of syntax:
if [ -z "$1" ]; then
#zero length argument
else
#non-zero length
fi
See GNU and wooledge for a more complete list of Bash conditional expressions.
If you want to use this with command line or function arguments, make sure you use size=${#1}
instead of size=${#$1}
. The second one may be more instinctual but is incorrect syntax.
size=${#1}
is certainly valid.
– Charles Duffy
Jun 5 '14 at 20:18
#
isn't replacing the $
-- the $
outside the braces is still the expansion operator. The #
is the length operator, as always.
– Charles Duffy
Jun 7 '14 at 1:25
Using your example provided
#KISS (Keep it simple stupid)
size=${#myvar}
echo $size
Here is couple of ways to calculate length of variable :
echo ${#VAR}
echo -n $VAR | wc -m
echo -n $VAR | wc -c
printf $VAR | wc -m
expr length $VAR
expr $VAR : '.*'
and to set the result in another variable just assign above command with back quote into another variable as following:
otherVar=`echo -n $VAR | wc -m`
echo $otherVar
http://techopsbook.blogspot.in/2017/09/how-to-find-length-of-string-variable.html