Differences between revisions 3 and 25 (spanning 22 versions)
Revision 3 as of 2008-03-10 10:52:49
Size: 2625
Editor: 134
Comment: seq might be considered bad style
Revision 25 as of 2015-03-05 00:40:52
Size: 6198
Editor: izabera
Comment: syntax hl
Deletions are marked like this. Additions are marked like this.
Line 1: Line 1:
[[Anchor(faq18)]]
<<Anchor(faq18)>>
Line 6: Line 5:
Bash version 4 allows zero-padding and ranges in its BraceExpansion:

{{{#!highlight bash
# Bash 4 / zsh
for i in {01..10}; do
    ...
}}}

All of the other solutions on this page will assume Bash earlier than 4.0, or a non-Bash shell.
Line 7: Line 16:
{{{#!highlight bash
# Bash / ksh / zsh
for i in 0{1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9} 10
do
    echo "$i"
done
}}}
Line 8: Line 24:
{{{
    for i in 0{1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9} 10
    do
        echo $i
    done
In Bash 3, you can use ranges inside brace expansion (but not zero-padding). Thus, the same thing can be accomplished more concisely like this:

{{{#!highlight bash
# Bash 3
for i in 0{1..9} 10
do
    echo "$i"
done
Line 14: Line 33:
Output:
Line 16: Line 34:
{{{
   00
   01
   02
   03
   [...]
Another example, for output of 0000 to 0034:

{{{#!highlight bash
# Bash 3
for i in {000{0..9},00{10..34}}
do
    echo "$i"
done

# using the outer brace instead of just adding them one next to the other
# allows to use the expansion, for instance, like this:
wget 'http://foo.com/adir/thepages'{000{0..9},00{10..34}}'.html'
Line 23: Line 47:
Line 24: Line 49:
{{{#!highlight bash
# Bash / ksh93 / zsh
for ((i = 1; i <= 10; i++)); do
    i=$(printf %02d "$i")
    ...
done
}}}
Line 25: Line 57:
{{{
    for ((i=1; i<=10; i++)) # Bash 2 for-loop syntax
    do
        printf "%02d " "$i"
    done
Also, unlike the C library `printf`, since {{{printf}}} will implicitly loop if given more arguments than format specifiers, you can simplify this enormously:
{{{#!highlight bash
# Bash 3
printf '%03d\n' {1..300}
Line 31: Line 62:
In Bash 3, you can use ranges inside brace expansion. Also, since {{{printf}}} will implicitly loop if given more arguments than format specifiers, you can simplify this enormously:
Line 33: Line 63:
{{{
   printf "%03d\n" {1..300} # Bash 3 brace expansion
If you don't know in advance what the starting and ending values are:
{{{#!highlight bash
# Bash 3
# start and end are variables containing integers
eval "printf '%03d\n' {$start..$end}"
Line 36: Line 69:
The KornShell and KornShell93 have the {{{typeset}}} command to specify the number of leading zeros:
Line 38: Line 70:
{{{
    $ typeset -Z3 i=4
    $ echo $i
    004
The `eval` is required in Bash because for each command it performs an initial pass of evaluation, going through each word to process brace expansions prior to any other evaluation step. The traditional Csh implementation, which all other applicable shells follow, insert the brace expansion pass sometime between the processing of other expansions and pathname expansion, thus parameter expansion has already been performed by the time words are scanned for brace expansion. There are various pros and cons to Bash's implementation, this being probably the most frequently cited drawback. Given how messy that `eval` solution is, please give serious thought to using a `for` or `while` loop with shell arithmetic instead.

The ksh93 method for specifying field width for sequence expansion is to add a (limited) `printf` format string to the syntax, which is used to format each expanded word. This is somewhat more powerful, but unfortunately incompatible with bash, and ksh does not understand Bash's field padding scheme:

{{{#!highlight bash
#ksh93
echo {0..10..2%02d}
Line 43: Line 78:

ksh93 also has a variable attribute that specifies a field with to pad with leading zeros whenever the variable is referenced. The concept is similar to other attributes supported by Bash such as case modification. Note that ksh never interprets octal literals.

{{{#!highlight bash
# ksh93 / mksh / zsh
$ typeset -Z3 i=4
$ echo $i
004
}}}
Line 44: Line 89:
{{{#!highlight bash
seq -w 1 10
}}}
Line 45: Line 93:
{{{
    seq -w 1 10
or, for arbitrary numbers of leading zeros (here: 3):
{{{#!highlight bash
seq -f "%03g" 1 10
Line 48: Line 97:
or, for arbitrary numbers of leading zeros (here: 3):
Line 50: Line 98:
{{{
    seq -f "%03g" 1 10
Combining {{{printf}}} with {{{seq(1)}}}, you can do things like this:
{{{#!highlight bash
# POSIX shell, GNU utilities
printf "%03d\n" $(seq 300)
Line 53: Line 103:
Combining {{{printf}}} with {{{seq(1)}}}, you can do things like this:
Line 55: Line 104:
{{{
   printf "%03d\n" $(seq 300)
(That may be helpful if you are not using Bash, but you have `seq(1)`, and your version of {{{seq(1)}}} lacks {{{printf}}}-style format specifiers. That's a pretty odd set of restrictions, but I suppose it's theoretically possible. Since `seq` is a nonstandard external tool, it's good to keep your options open.)

Be warned however that using `seq` might be considered bad style; it's even mentioned in [[BashGuide/Practices#Don.27t_Ever_Do_These|Don't Ever Do These]].

Some BSD-derived systems have `jot(1)` instead of `seq(1)`. In accordance with the glorious tradition of Unix, it has a completely incompatible syntax:
{{{#!highlight bash
# POSIX shell, OpenBSD et al.
printf "%02d\n" $(jot 10 1)

# Bourne shell, OpenBSD (at least)
jot -w %02d 10 1
Line 58: Line 116:
(That may be helpful if your version of {{{seq(1)}}} lacks {{{printf}}}-style format specifiers. Since it's a nonstandard external tool, it's good to keep your options open.)
Line 60: Line 117:
Be warned however that seq might be considered bad style, it's even mentioned in ["Don't Ever Do These"]. Finally, the following example works with any BourneShell derived shell (which also has `expr` and `sed`) to zero-pad each line to three bytes:
{{{#!highlight bash
# Bourne
i=0
while test $i -le 10
do
    echo "00$i"
    i=`expr $i + 1`
done |
    sed 's/.*\(...\)$/\1/g'
}}}
Line 62: Line 129:
Finally, the following example works with any BourneShell derived shell to zero-pad each line to three bytes:

{{{
   i=0
   while test $i -le 10
   do
       echo "00$i"
       i=`expr $i + 1`
   done |
       sed 's/.*\(...\)$/\1/g'
}}}
Line 75: Line 131:
Now, since the number one reason this question is asked is for downloading images in bulk, you can use the {{{printf}}} command with {{{xargs(1)}}} and {{{wget(1)}}} to fetch files: But if you're going to rely on an external Unix command, you might as well just do the whole thing in `awk` in the first place:
{{{#!highlight bash
# Bourne
# count variable contains an integer
awk -v count="$count" 'BEGIN {for (i=1;i<=count;i++) {printf("%03d\n",i)} }'
Line 77: Line 137:
{{{
   printf "%03d\n" {$START..$END} | xargs -i% wget $LOCATION/%
# Bourne, with Solaris's decrepit and useless awk:
awk "BEGIN {for (i=1;i<=$count;i++) {printf(\"%03d\\n\",i)} }"
Line 80: Line 140:
Or, in a slightly more general case:
Line 82: Line 141:
{{{
   for i in {1..100}; do
      wget "$prefix$(printf %03d $i).jpg"
      # other commands
   done
----

Now, since the number one reason this question is asked is for downloading images in bulk, you can use the examples above with {{{xargs(1)}}} and {{{wget(1)}}} to fetch files:
{{{#!highlight bash
almost any example above | xargs -i% wget $LOCATION/%
Line 88: Line 147:

The `xargs -i%` will read a line of input at a time, and replace the `%` at the end of the command with the input.

Or, a simpler example using a `for` loop:
{{{#!highlight bash
# Bash 3
for i in {1..100}; do
   wget "$prefix$(printf %03d $i).jpg"
   sleep 5
done
}}}

Or, avoiding the subshells (requires bash 3.1):
{{{#!highlight bash
# Bash 3.1
for i in {1..100}; do
   printf -v n %03d $i
   wget "$prefix$n.jpg"
   sleep 5
done
}}}

----
CategoryShell

How can I use numbers with leading zeros in a loop, e.g. 01, 02?

As always, there are different ways to solve the problem, each with its own advantages and disadvantages.

Bash version 4 allows zero-padding and ranges in its BraceExpansion:

   1 # Bash 4 / zsh
   2 for i in {01..10}; do
   3     ...

All of the other solutions on this page will assume Bash earlier than 4.0, or a non-Bash shell.

If there are not many numbers, BraceExpansion can be used:

   1 # Bash / ksh / zsh
   2 for i in 0{1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9} 10
   3 do
   4     echo "$i"
   5 done

In Bash 3, you can use ranges inside brace expansion (but not zero-padding). Thus, the same thing can be accomplished more concisely like this:

   1 # Bash 3
   2 for i in 0{1..9} 10
   3 do
   4     echo "$i"
   5 done

Another example, for output of 0000 to 0034:

   1 # Bash 3
   2 for i in {000{0..9},00{10..34}}
   3 do
   4     echo "$i"
   5 done
   6 
   7 # using the outer brace instead of just adding them one next to the other
   8 # allows to use the expansion, for instance, like this:
   9 wget 'http://foo.com/adir/thepages'{000{0..9},00{10..34}}'.html'

This gets tedious for large sequences, but there are other ways, too. If you have the printf command (which is a Bash builtin, and is also POSIX standard), it can be used to format a number:

   1 # Bash / ksh93 / zsh
   2 for ((i = 1; i <= 10; i++)); do
   3     i=$(printf %02d "$i")
   4     ...
   5 done

Also, unlike the C library printf, since printf will implicitly loop if given more arguments than format specifiers, you can simplify this enormously:

   1 # Bash 3
   2 printf '%03d\n' {1..300}

If you don't know in advance what the starting and ending values are:

   1 # Bash 3
   2 # start and end are variables containing integers
   3 eval "printf '%03d\n' {$start..$end}"

The eval is required in Bash because for each command it performs an initial pass of evaluation, going through each word to process brace expansions prior to any other evaluation step. The traditional Csh implementation, which all other applicable shells follow, insert the brace expansion pass sometime between the processing of other expansions and pathname expansion, thus parameter expansion has already been performed by the time words are scanned for brace expansion. There are various pros and cons to Bash's implementation, this being probably the most frequently cited drawback. Given how messy that eval solution is, please give serious thought to using a for or while loop with shell arithmetic instead.

The ksh93 method for specifying field width for sequence expansion is to add a (limited) printf format string to the syntax, which is used to format each expanded word. This is somewhat more powerful, but unfortunately incompatible with bash, and ksh does not understand Bash's field padding scheme:

   1 #ksh93
   2 echo {0..10..2%02d}

ksh93 also has a variable attribute that specifies a field with to pad with leading zeros whenever the variable is referenced. The concept is similar to other attributes supported by Bash such as case modification. Note that ksh never interprets octal literals.

   1 # ksh93 / mksh / zsh
   2 $ typeset -Z3 i=4
   3 $ echo $i
   4 004

If the command seq(1) is available (it's part of GNU sh-utils/coreutils), you can use it as follows:

   1 seq -w 1 10

or, for arbitrary numbers of leading zeros (here: 3):

   1 seq -f "%03g" 1 10

Combining printf with seq(1), you can do things like this:

   1 # POSIX shell, GNU utilities
   2 printf "%03d\n" $(seq 300)

(That may be helpful if you are not using Bash, but you have seq(1), and your version of seq(1) lacks printf-style format specifiers. That's a pretty odd set of restrictions, but I suppose it's theoretically possible. Since seq is a nonstandard external tool, it's good to keep your options open.)

Be warned however that using seq might be considered bad style; it's even mentioned in Don't Ever Do These.

Some BSD-derived systems have jot(1) instead of seq(1). In accordance with the glorious tradition of Unix, it has a completely incompatible syntax:

   1 # POSIX shell, OpenBSD et al.
   2 printf "%02d\n" $(jot 10 1)
   3 
   4 # Bourne shell, OpenBSD (at least)
   5 jot -w %02d 10 1

Finally, the following example works with any BourneShell derived shell (which also has expr and sed) to zero-pad each line to three bytes:

   1 # Bourne
   2 i=0
   3 while test $i -le 10
   4 do
   5     echo "00$i"
   6     i=`expr $i + 1`
   7 done |
   8     sed 's/.*\(...\)$/\1/g'

In this example, the number of '.' inside the parentheses in the sed command determines how many total bytes from the echo command (at the end of each line) will be kept and printed.

But if you're going to rely on an external Unix command, you might as well just do the whole thing in awk in the first place:

   1 # Bourne
   2 # count variable contains an integer
   3 awk -v count="$count" 'BEGIN {for (i=1;i<=count;i++) {printf("%03d\n",i)} }'
   4 
   5 # Bourne, with Solaris's decrepit and useless awk:
   6 awk "BEGIN {for (i=1;i<=$count;i++) {printf(\"%03d\\n\",i)} }"


Now, since the number one reason this question is asked is for downloading images in bulk, you can use the examples above with xargs(1) and wget(1) to fetch files:

   1 almost any example above | xargs -i% wget $LOCATION/%

The xargs -i% will read a line of input at a time, and replace the % at the end of the command with the input.

Or, a simpler example using a for loop:

   1 # Bash 3
   2 for i in {1..100}; do
   3    wget "$prefix$(printf %03d $i).jpg"
   4    sleep 5
   5 done

Or, avoiding the subshells (requires bash 3.1):

   1 # Bash 3.1
   2 for i in {1..100}; do
   3    printf -v n %03d $i
   4    wget "$prefix$n.jpg"
   5    sleep 5
   6 done


CategoryShell

BashFAQ/018 (last edited 2019-08-21 16:24:29 by GreyCat)