Differences between revisions 2 and 3
Revision 2 as of 2008-05-08 07:54:33
Size: 3277
Editor: Lhunath
Comment: add a note about lists in strings, add a function to search for elements.
Revision 3 as of 2008-05-08 07:56:00
Size: 3400
Editor: Lhunath
Comment:
Deletions are marked like this. Additions are marked like this.
Line 15: Line 15:
{{{
isIn() {
    pattern=$1
    shift

for element
    do
        [[ $element = $pattern ]] && return 0
    done

return 1
}

if isIn "jacob" "${names[@]}"
then
echo "Jacob is on the list."
fi
}}}
   {{{
   
isIn() {
       pattern=$1
       shift
   
   
for element
       do
    [[ $element = $pattern ]] && return 0
       done
        return 1
   }
   
   
if isIn "jacob" "${names[@]}"
   then
   
echo "Jacob is on the list."
   fi
   }}}
Line 35: Line 35:
{{{
indexOf() {
    pattern=$1
    shift

list=("$@")
    for index in "${!list[@]}"
    do
[[ ${list[index]} = $pattern ]] && {
            echo $index
            return
        }
    done

echo -1
    return 1
}

if index=$(indexOf "jacob" "${names[@]}")
then
echo "Jacob is the ${index}th on the list."
fi
}}}
   {{{
   
indexOf() {
       pattern=$1
       shift
   
   
list=("$@")
    for index in "${!list[@]}"
       do
   
[[ ${list[index]} = $pattern ]] && {
               echo $index
               return
           }
       done
   
   
echo -1
       return 1
   }
   
   
if index=$(indexOf "jacob" "${names[@]}")
   then
   
echo "Jacob is the ${index}th on the list."
   fi
   }}}

Anchor(faq46)

I want to check to see whether a word is in a list (or an element is a member of a set).

First of all, let's get the terminoligy straight. Bash has no notion of 'lists' or 'sets' or any such. Bash has strings and arrays. Strings are a 'list' of characters, arrays are a 'list' of strings.

NOTE: A string can not possibly contain a list of other strings because there is no way to reliably tell where each of those other strings end and the next other string starts.

The only proper way to do this is to loop over all elements in your array and check them for the element you are looking for. Say what we are looking for is in bar and our list is in the array foo:

  •    for element in "${foo[@]}"; do
          [[ $element = $bar ]] && echo "Found $bar."
       done

If you need to perform this several times in your script, you might want to extract the logic into a function:

  •    isIn() {
           pattern=$1
           shift
       
           for element
           do
               [[ $element = $pattern ]] && return 0
           done
       
           return 1
       }
       
       if isIn "jacob" "${names[@]}"
       then 
           echo "Jacob is on the list."
       fi

Or, if you want your function to return the index at which the element was found:

  •    indexOf() {
           pattern=$1
           shift
       
           list=("$@")
           for index in "${!list[@]}"
           do
               [[ ${list[index]} = $pattern ]] && {
                   echo $index
                   return
               }
           done
       
           echo -1
           return 1
       }
       
       if index=$(indexOf "jacob" "${names[@]}")
       then
           echo "Jacob is the ${index}th on the list."
       fi

If your 'list' is contained in a string, and for some half-witted reason you choose not to heed warning to the note above, you can use the following code to search through 'words' in a string; where a word is defined by any substring that is delimited by whitespace (or more specifically, the characters currently in IFS):

  •    for element in $foo; do
          [[ $element = $bar ]] && echo "Found $bar."
       done

Here's a shorter way of doing it:

  •    if [[ " $foo " = *" $bar "* ]]; then
          echo "Found $bar."
       fi

And, if for some reason you don't know the syntax of for well enough, here's how to check your script's parameters for an element. For example, '-v':

  •    for element; do
          [[ $element = '-v' ]] && echo "Switching to verbose mode."
       done

GNU's grep has a \b feature which allegedly matches the edges of words. Using that, one may attempt to replicate the shorter approach used above, but it is fraught with peril:

  •    # Is 'foo' one of the positional parameters? 
       egrep '\bfoo\b' <<<"$@" >/dev/null && echo yes
       # This is where it fails: is '-v' one of the positional parameters?
       egrep '\b-v\b' <<<"$@" >/dev/null && echo yes
       # Unfortunately, \b sees "v" as a separate word.
       # Nobody knows what the hell it's doing with the "-".
    
       # Is "someword" in the array 'array'?
       egrep '\bsomeword\b' <<<"${array[@]}"
       # Obviously, you can't use this if someword is '-v'!

Since this "feature" of GNU grep is both non-portable and poorly defined, we recommend not using it. It is simply mentioned here for the sake of completion.

BashFAQ/046 (last edited 2023-04-29 04:33:04 by ormaaj)