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{{Warn|'''Note 1''' Be careful when setting IFS before a <tt>for</tt> loop, even if you restore the default value after the loop: everything inside the loop will use the non-standard IFS value and it may not work as expected.<br>For more details on <tt>IFS</tt> and possible pitfalls while using it, see [[bash Environment Variables#IFS|IFS]].}} | {{Warn|'''Note 1''' Be careful when setting IFS before a <tt>for</tt> loop, even if you restore the default value after the loop: everything inside the loop will use the non-standard IFS value and it may not work as expected.<br><br>For more details on <tt>IFS</tt> and possible pitfalls while using it, see [[bash Environment Variables#IFS|IFS]].}} | ||
{{Warn|b}} | {{Warn|b}} |
Revision as of 20:35, 18 April 2017
External
Internal
Overview
The for built-in command expand words, and execute commands once for each member in the resultant list, with i bound to the current member.
for i in words; do commands; done
Alternatively, for:
for i do commands; done
commands executes for each positional parameter (as if in "$@" had been specified.
Yes another alternative form:
for (( i=0; i<${#names[@]}; i++ )); do local name=${names[${i}]} echo "${name}" done
Iterating through $1, $2, $3 ...
The Simple Version
for i do echo ${i} done
Using the Argument Array
TODO
Iterating through a space separated list
s="a b c" for i in ${s} do echo ${i} done
or
s="a b c" for i in ${s}; do echo ${i}; done
Note the use of ";"
Iterating over Lines in the Same bash Process
IFS="$(printf '\n\r')" for line in $(cat ./file.txt); do echo "${line}" done IFS="$(printf ' \t\n')"
Note 1 Be careful when setting IFS before a for loop, even if you restore the default value after the loop: everything inside the loop will use the non-standard IFS value and it may not work as expected.
For more details on IFS and possible pitfalls while using it, see IFS.
b
Iterating over a File List
Use a globbing expression after in and the shell will replace it with the list of files matching the expression:
for f in dir/B*; do echo ${f} done
If file names match, the replacement closely matches the expression (example "dir/BMW.txt dir/Bentley.txt").
In case no filename match, the for body is executed with he literal expression ("dir/B*" in the example above).