Is it possible to loop over tuples in Bash?
As an example, it would be great if the following worked:
for (i,j) in ((c,3), (e,5)); do echo "$i and $j"; done
Is there a workaround that somehow lets me loop over tuples?
Is it possible to loop over tuples in Bash?
As an example, it would be great if the following worked:
for (i,j) in ((c,3), (e,5)); do echo "$i and $j"; done
Is there a workaround that somehow lets me loop over tuples?
$ for i in c,3 e,5; do IFS=","; set -- $i; echo $1 and $2; done
c and 3
e and 5
About this use of set
(from man builtins
):
Any arguments remaining after option processing are treated as values for the positional parameters and are assigned, in order, to $1, $2, ... $n
The IFS=","
sets the field separator so every $i
gets segmented into $1
and $2
correctly.
Via this blog.
A more correct version, as suggested by @SLACEDIAMOND:
$ OLDIFS=$IFS; IFS=','; for i in c,3 e,5; do set -- $i; echo $1 and $2; done; IFS=$OLDIFS
c and 3
e and 5
IFS
should be saved and reset to its original value if this is run on the command line. Also, the new IFS
can be set once, before the loop runs, rather than every iteration.
Mar 15, 2012 at 3:46
set -- $i
Mar 15, 2012 at 11:35
IFS
, only set it for the set
command: for i in c,3 e,5; do IFS="," set -- $i; echo $1 and $2; done
. Please edit your answer: If all readers would choose only one of the listed solutions, there's no sense in having to read the full development history. Thanks for this cool trick!
tuples="a,1 b,2 c,3"
and put IFS=','
as in the edited version , and instead of c,3 e,5
use $tuples
it doesn't print well at all. But instead if I put IFS=','
just after the do
keyword in the for loop, it works well when using $tuples
as well as litteral values. Just thought it was worth saying.
IFS
to split iterations. i.e. If you loop over an array like arr=("c,3" "e,5")
and put IFS
before the for loop, the value of $i
will be just c
and e
, it will split away 3
and 5
so set
won't parse correctly because $i
won't have anything to parse. This mean that if the values to iterate are not inlined, the IFS
should be put inside the loop, and the outside value should respect the intended separator for the variable to iterate upon. In the cases of $tuples
it should be simply IFS=
which is default and splits upon whitespace.
Based on the answer given by Eduardo Ivanec without setting/resetting the IFS
, one could simply do:
for i in "c 3" "e 5"
do
set -- $i # Convert the "tuple" into the param args $1 $2...
echo $1 and $2
done
The output:
c and 3
e and 5
$1
, $2
being utilized within your function because you're passing parameters? i.e. how do you distinguish between the 1st & 2nd parameter passed on vs. the 1st & 2nd item of the tuples?
This Bash style guide illustrates how read
can be used to split strings at a delimiter and assign them to individual variables. So using that technique you can parse the string and assign the variables with a one liner like the one in the loop below:
for i in c,3 e,5; do
IFS=',' read item1 item2 <<< "${i}"
echo "${item1}" and "${item2}"
done
Use an associative array (also known as a dictionary and hashMap):
animals=(dog cat mouse)
declare -A sound=(
[dog]=barks
[cat]=purrs
[mouse]=cheeps
)
declare -A size=(
[dog]=big
[cat]=medium
[mouse]=small
)
for animal in "${animals[@]}"; do
echo "$animal ${sound[$animal]} and it is ${size[$animal]}"
done
GNU bash, version 4.4.23(1)-release-(x86_64-apple-darwin17.5.0)
, which was installed via brew, so YMMV.
GNU bash, version 4.3.11(1)-release-(x86_64-pc-linux-gnu)
from Ubuntu 14.04 within docker container.
-A
we have -a
.
c=('a' 'c')
n=(3 4 )
for i in $(seq 0 $((${#c[*]}-1)))
do
echo ${c[i]} ${n[i]}
done
Might sometimes be more handy.
To explain the ugly
part, as noted in the comments:
seq 0 2 produces the sequence of numbers 0 1 2. $(cmd) is command substitution, so for this example the output of seq 0 2
, which is the number sequence. But what is the upper bound, the $((${#c[*]}-1))
?
$((somthing)) is arithmetic expansion, so $((3+4)) is 7 etc. Our Expression is ${#c[*]}-1
, so something - 1. Pretty simple, if we know what ${#c[*]}
is.
c is an array, c[*] is just the whole array, ${#c[*]} is the size of the array which is 2 in our case. Now we roll everything back: for i in $(seq 0 $((${#c[*]}-1)))
is for i in $(seq 0 $((2-1)))
is for i in $(seq 0 1)
is for i in 0 1
. Because the last element in the array has an index which is the length of the Array - 1.
$ echo 'c,3;e,5;' | while IFS=',' read -d';' i j; do echo "$i and $j"; done
c and 3
e and 5
But what if the tuple is greater than the k/v that an associative array can hold? What if it's 3 or 4 elements? One could expand on this concept:
###---------------------------------------------------
### VARIABLES
###---------------------------------------------------
myVars=(
'ya1,ya2,ya3,ya4'
'ye1,ye2,ye3,ye4'
'yo1,yo2,yo3,yo4'
)
###---------------------------------------------------
### MAIN PROGRAM
###---------------------------------------------------
### Echo all elements in the array
###---
printf '\n\n%s\n' "Print all elements in the array..."
for dataRow in "${myVars[@]}"; do
while IFS=',' read -r var1 var2 var3 var4; do
printf '%s\n' "$var1 - $var2 - $var3 - $var4"
done <<< "$dataRow"
done
Then the output would look something like:
$ ./assoc-array-tinkering.sh
Print all elements in the array...
ya1 - ya2 - ya3 - ya4
ye1 - ye2 - ye3 - ye4
yo1 - yo2 - yo3 - yo4
And the number of elements are now without limit. Not looking for votes; just thinking out loud. REF1, REF2
brew install shellcheck bash dash bash-completion@2
. This will get the latest GNU bash - just like on Linux; so everything is the same everywhere :-)
echo $SHELL
find out. On a new macOS it should be ZSH; in that case, do yourself a favor and install Oh My ZSH - it's just superior.
Using GNU parallel:
parallel echo {1} and {2} ::: c e :::+ 3 5
Or:
parallel -N2 echo {1} and {2} ::: c 3 e 5
Or:
parallel --colsep , echo {1} and {2} ::: c,3 e,5
gnu parallel
Apr 28, 2017 at 18:29
Using printf
in a process substitution:
while read -r k v; do
echo "Key $k has value: $v"
done < <(printf '%s\n' 'key1 val1' 'key2 val2' 'key3 val3')
Key key1 has value: val1
Key key2 has value: val2
Key key3 has value: val3
Above requires bash
. If bash
is not being used then use simple pipeline:
printf '%s\n' 'key1 val1' 'key2 val2' 'key3 val3' |
while read -r k v; do echo "Key $k has value: $v"; done
while read key value
do echo $key $value
done < file_discriptor
For example:
$ while read key value; do echo $key $value ;done <<EOF
> c 3
> e 5
> EOF
c 3
e 5
$ echo -e 'c 3\ne 5' > file
$ while read key value; do echo $key $value ;done <file
c 3
e 5
$ echo -e 'c,3\ne,5' > file
$ while IFS=, read key value; do echo $key $value ;done <file
c 3
e 5
In cases where my tuple definitions are more complex, I prefer to have them in a heredoc:
while IFS=", " read -ra arr; do
echo "${arr[0]} and ${arr[1]}"
done <<EOM
c, 3
e, 5
EOM
This combines looping over lines of a heredoc with splitting the lines at some desired separating character.
A bit more involved, but may be useful:
a='((c,3), (e,5))'
IFS='()'; for t in $a; do [ -n "$t" ] && { IFS=','; set -- $t; [ -n "$1" ] && echo i=$1 j=$2; }; done