6033
Comment: restore some deleted content; clean up the previous "clean-up"
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3574
Fix some bugs. ksh has always supported [[. rm'd example. =~ shouldn't be shunned due to bash 3's bad implementation. rm'd (again). =~ (and [[) will quite likely be POSIX at some point.
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Deletions are marked like this. | Additions are marked like this. |
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if [[ $foo = *[^0-9]* ]]; then | if [[ $foo != *[!0-9]* ]]; then echo "'$foo' is strictly numeric" else |
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else echo "'$foo' is strictly numeric" |
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# ksh, POSIX case "$foo" in *[!0-9]*) echo "'$foo' has a non-digit somewhere in it" ;; *) echo "'$foo' is strictly numeric" ;; esac |
# POSIX case $var in *[!0-9]*|'') printf '%s has a non-digit somewhere in it\' "$var" ;; *) printf '%s is strictly numeric\n' "$var" esac >&2 |
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# Bash -- extended globs must be enabled. | # Bash -- extended globs must be enabled explicitly in versions prior to 4.1. |
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# Bash | # Bash / ksh |
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[[ $foo = *[0-9]* && $foo = ?([+-])*([0-9])?(.*([0-9])) ]] && echo "foo is a floating-point number" |
if [[ $foo = *[0-9]* && $foo = ?([+-])*([0-9])?(.*([0-9])) ]]; then echo 'foo is a floating-point number' fi |
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The leading test of {{{$foo}}} is to ensure that it contains at least one digit. The extended glob, by itself, would match the empty string, or a lone {{{+}}} or {{{-}}}, which may not be desirable behavior. | Optionally, `case..esac` may have been used in shells with extended pattern matching. The leading test of {{{$foo}}} is to ensure that it contains at least one digit. The extended glob, by itself, would match the empty string, or a lone {{{+}}} or {{{-}}}, which may not be desirable behavior. |
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Korn shell has extended globs enabled by default, but lacks `[[`, so we must use `case` to do the glob-matching: | |
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{{{ # Korn case $foo in *[0-9]*) case $foo in ?([+-])*([0-9])?(.*([0-9]))) echo "foo is a number";; esac;; esac }}} Note that this uses the same extended glob as the Bash example before it; the third closing parenthesis at the end of it is actually part of the case syntax. If your definition of "a valid number" is even more complex, or if you need a solution that works in legacy Bourne shells, you might prefer to use an external tool's [[RegularExpression|regular expression]] syntax. Here is a portable version, using {{{egrep}}}: |
If your definition of "a valid number" is even more complex, or if you need a solution that works in legacy Bourne shells, you might prefer to use an external tool's [[RegularExpression|regular expression]] syntax. Here is a portable version (explained in detail [[http://www.wplug.org/wiki/Meeting-20100612#EXERCISE_TWO|here]]), using {{{egrep}}}: |
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if test "$foo" && echo "$foo" | egrep '^[-+]?[0-9]*(\.[0-9]*)?$' >/dev/null then echo "'$foo' might be a number" |
if echo "$foo" | grep -qE '^[-+]?([0-9]+\.?|[0-9]*\.[0-9]+)$'; then echo "'$foo' is a number" |
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echo "'$foo' might not be a number" | echo "'$foo' is not a number" |
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(Like the extended globs, this [[RegularExpression|extended regular expression]] will match a lone {{{+}}} or {{{-}}}. The initial {{{test}}} command only requires a non-empty string. Closing the last "bug" is left as an exercise for the reader, mostly because GreyCat is too damned lazy to learn {{{expr(1)}}}.) Bash version 3 and above have regular expression support in the [[ command. Due to bugs and changes in the implementation of the `=~` feature throughout bash 3.x, we '''do not recommend''' using it, but people do it anyway, so we have to maintain this example (''and keep restoring this warning, too, when people delete it''): |
Bash version 3 and above have regular expression support in the [[ command. |
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# Put the RE in a var for backward compatibility with versions <3.2 regexp='^[-+]?[0-9]*(\.[0-9]*)?$' if [[ $foo = *[0-9]* && $foo =~ $var ]]; then |
# The regexp must be stored in a var and expanded for backward compatibility with versions < 3.2 regexp='^[-+]?[0-9]*(\.[0-9]*)?$' if [[ $foo = *[0-9]* && $foo =~ $regexp ]]; then |
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=== Using the parsing done by [ and printf === | === Using the parsing done by [ and printf (or "using eq") === {{{ # fails with ksh if [ "$foo" -eq "$foo" ] 2>/dev/null; then echo "$foo is an integer" fi }}} `[` parses the variable and interprets it as an integer because of the `-eq`. If the parsing succeeds the test is trivially true; if it fails `[` prints an error message that `2>/dev/null` hides and sets a status different from 0. However this method fails if the shell is ksh, because ksh evaluates the variable as an arithmetic expression. You can use a similar trick with `printf`, but this won't work in all shells either: |
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# fails with ksh if [ "$foo" -eq "$foo" ] 2>/dev/null;then echo "$foo is an integer" fi }}} `[` parses the variable and interprets it as in integer because of the `-eq`. If the parsing succeds the test is trivially true; if it fails `[` prints an error message that `2>/dev/null` hides and sets a status different from 0. However this method fails if the shell is ksh, because ksh evaluates the variable as an arithmetic expression. You can use a similar trick with `printf`: {{{ # POSIX if printf "%f" "$foo" >/dev/null 2>&1; then |
# BASH if printf %f "$foo" >/dev/null 2>&1; then |
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=== Using the integer type === If you just want to guarantee ahead of time that a variable contains an integer, without actually checking, you can give the variable the "integer" attribute. {{{ # Bash declare -i foo foo=-10+1; echo "$foo" # prints -9 foo="hello"; echo "$foo" # the value of the variable "hello" is evaluated; if unset, foo is 0 foo="Some random string" # results in an error. }}} Any value assigned to a variable with the integer attribute set is evaluated as an [[ArithmeticExpression|arithmetic expression]] just like inside `$(( ))`. Bash will raise an error if you try to assign an invalid arithmetic expression. In Bash and ksh93, if a variable which has been declared integer is used in a `read` command, the user's input is treated as an [[ArithmeticExpression|arithmetic expression]], as with assignment. In particular, if the user types an identifier, the variable will be set to the value of the variable with that name, and `read` will give no other indication of a problem. {{{ # Bash (and ksh93, if you replace declare with typeset) $ declare -i foo $ read foo hello $ echo $foo # prints 0; 'hello' is unset, so is treated as 0 for arithmetic purposes $ hello=5 $ read foo # user types hello again hello $ echo $foo # prints 5, the value of 'hello' as an arithmetic expression }}} Pretty useless if you want to read only integers. In the older Korn shell (ksh88), if a variable is declared integer and used in a `read` command, and the user types an invalid integer, the shell complains, the read command returns an error status, and the value of the variable is unchanged. {{{ # ksh88 $ typeset -i foo $ foo=42 $ read foo hello ksh: hello: bad number $ echo $? 1 $ echo $foo 42 }}} |
How can I tell whether a variable contains a valid number?
First, you have to define what you mean by "number". The most common case when people ask this seems to be "a non-negative integer, with no leading + sign". Or in other words, a string of all digits. Other times, people want to validate a floating-point input, with optional sign and optional decimal point.
Hand parsing
If you're validating a simple "string of digits", you can do it with a glob:
# Bash if [[ $foo != *[!0-9]* ]]; then echo "'$foo' is strictly numeric" else echo "'$foo' has a non-digit somewhere in it" fi
The same thing can be done in Korn and POSIX shells as well, using case:
# POSIX case $var in *[!0-9]*|'') printf '%s has a non-digit somewhere in it\' "$var" ;; *) printf '%s is strictly numeric\n' "$var" esac >&2
If you need to allow a leading negative sign, or if want a valid floating-point number or something else more complex, then there are a few possible ways. Standard globs aren't expressive enough to do this, but we can use extended globs:
# Bash -- extended globs must be enabled explicitly in versions prior to 4.1. # Check whether the variable is all digits. shopt -s extglob [[ $var == +([0-9]) ]]
A more complex case:
# Bash / ksh shopt -s extglob if [[ $foo = *[0-9]* && $foo = ?([+-])*([0-9])?(.*([0-9])) ]]; then echo 'foo is a floating-point number' fi
Optionally, case..esac may have been used in shells with extended pattern matching. The leading test of $foo is to ensure that it contains at least one digit. The extended glob, by itself, would match the empty string, or a lone + or -, which may not be desirable behavior.
If your definition of "a valid number" is even more complex, or if you need a solution that works in legacy Bourne shells, you might prefer to use an external tool's regular expression syntax. Here is a portable version (explained in detail here), using egrep:
# Bourne if echo "$foo" | grep -qE '^[-+]?([0-9]+\.?|[0-9]*\.[0-9]+)$'; then echo "'$foo' is a number" else echo "'$foo' is not a number" fi
Bash version 3 and above have regular expression support in the [[ command.
# Bash # The regexp must be stored in a var and expanded for backward compatibility with versions < 3.2 regexp='^[-+]?[0-9]*(\.[0-9]*)?$' if [[ $foo = *[0-9]* && $foo =~ $regexp ]]; then echo "'$foo' looks rather like a number" else echo "'$foo' doesn't look particularly numeric to me" fi
Using the parsing done by [ and printf (or "using eq")
# fails with ksh if [ "$foo" -eq "$foo" ] 2>/dev/null; then echo "$foo is an integer" fi
[ parses the variable and interprets it as an integer because of the -eq. If the parsing succeeds the test is trivially true; if it fails [ prints an error message that 2>/dev/null hides and sets a status different from 0. However this method fails if the shell is ksh, because ksh evaluates the variable as an arithmetic expression.
You can use a similar trick with printf, but this won't work in all shells either:
# BASH if printf %f "$foo" >/dev/null 2>&1; then echo "$foo is a float" fi
You can use %d to parse an integer. Take care that the parsing might be (is supposed to be?) locale-dependent.