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Revision 1 as of 2007-05-03 00:00:48
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Editor: redondos
Comment:
Revision 13 as of 2013-01-03 21:27:17
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Editor: ormaaj
Comment: Function is broken. It doesn't really do what you want anyway (compare against patterns)
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[[Anchor(faq66)]]
== I want to check if [[ $var == foo || $var == bar || $var = more ]] without repeating $var n times. ==
<<Anchor(faq66)>>
== I want to check if [[ $var == foo || $var == bar || $var == more ]] without repeating $var n times. ==
The portable solution uses `case`:
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   case $var in    # Bourne
case "$var" in
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In Bash and ksh, [[glob|Extended globs]] can also do this within a `[[` command:
{{{
   # bash/ksh
   ${BASH_VERSION+shopt -s extglob}
   if [[ $var == @(foo|bar|more) ]]; then
      ...
   fi
}}}

Alternatively, you may loop over a list of patterns, checking each individually.
{{{
    # bash/ksh/mksh/zsh (w/ emulate ksh)

    # usage: pmatch string pattern [ pattern ... ]
    function pmatch {
        ${1+typeset x=}"${1-false}" &&
        while shift; do
            [[ $x == $1 ]] && return
        done 2>/dev/null
        return 1
    }

    var='foo bar'
    if pmatch "$var" foo bar baz foo\* blarg; then
        : ...
    fi
}}}

For logical conjunction (return true if `$var` matches all patterns), ksh93 can use the `&` pattern delimiter.

{{{
    # ksh93 only
    [[ $var == @(foo&bar&more) ]] && ...
}}}

For shells that support only the ksh88 subset (extglob patterns), you may [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DeMorgan%27s_Law | DeMorganify]] the logic using the negation sub-pattern operator.

{{{
    # bash/ksh88/etc...
    ${BASH_VERSION+shopt -s extglob}
    [[ $var == !(!(foo)|!(bar)|!(more)) ]] && ...
}}}

But this is quite unclear and not much shorter than just writing out separate expressions for each pattern.
----
CategoryShell

I want to check if [[ $var == foo || $var == bar || $var == more ]] without repeating $var n times.

The portable solution uses case:

   # Bourne
   case "$var" in
      foo|bar|more) ... ;;
   esac

In Bash and ksh, Extended globs can also do this within a [[ command:

   # bash/ksh
   ${BASH_VERSION+shopt -s extglob}
   if [[ $var == @(foo|bar|more) ]]; then
      ...
   fi

Alternatively, you may loop over a list of patterns, checking each individually.

    # bash/ksh/mksh/zsh (w/ emulate ksh)

    # usage: pmatch string pattern [ pattern ... ]
    function pmatch {
        ${1+typeset x=}"${1-false}" &&
        while shift; do
            [[ $x == $1 ]] && return
        done 2>/dev/null
        return 1
    }

    var='foo bar'
    if pmatch "$var" foo bar baz foo\* blarg; then
        : ...
    fi

For logical conjunction (return true if $var matches all patterns), ksh93 can use the & pattern delimiter.

    # ksh93 only
    [[ $var == @(foo&bar&more) ]] && ...

For shells that support only the ksh88 subset (extglob patterns), you may DeMorganify the logic using the negation sub-pattern operator.

    # bash/ksh88/etc...
    ${BASH_VERSION+shopt -s extglob}
    [[ $var == !(!(foo)|!(bar)|!(more)) ]] && ...

But this is quite unclear and not much shorter than just writing out separate expressions for each pattern.


CategoryShell

BashFAQ/066 (last edited 2022-11-23 19:29:49 by GreyCat)