The way to iterate over a range in bash is
for i in {0..10}; do echo $i; done
What would be the syntax for iterating over the sequence with a step? Say, I would like to get only even number in the above example.
The way to iterate over a range in bash is
for i in {0..10}; do echo $i; done
What would be the syntax for iterating over the sequence with a step? Say, I would like to get only even number in the above example.
I'd do
for i in `seq 0 2 10`; do echo $i; done
(though of course seq 0 2 10
will produce the same output on its own).
Note that seq
allows floating-point numbers (e.g., seq .5 .25 3.5
) but bash's brace expansion only allows integers.
Bash 4's brace expansion has a step feature:
for {0..10..2}; do
..
done
No matter if Bash 2/3 (C-style for loop, see answers above) or Bash 4, I would prefer anything over the 'seq' command.
i
, then you can't do for {0..10..${i}}
.. it fails.
May 17, 2014 at 8:18
Pure Bash, without an extra process:
for (( COUNTER=0; COUNTER<=10; COUNTER+=2 )); do
echo $COUNTER
done
{0..10..2}
-style, e.g. when the range is really large.
#!/bin/bash
for i in $(seq 1 2 10)
do
echo "skip by 2 value $i"
done
seq
command:$ seq 4
1
2
3
4
$ seq 2 5
2
3
4
5
$ seq 4 2 12
4
6
8
10
12
$ seq -w 4 2 12
04
06
08
10
12
$ seq -s, 4
1,2,3,4
brace expansion {m..n..s} is more efficient than seq. AND it allows a bit of output formatting:
$ echo {0000..0010..2}
0000 0002 0004 0006 0008 0010
which is useful if one numbers e.g. files and want's a sorted output of 'ls'.