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Bash arrays are a lot like Bash Associative Arrays, but with numbers as keys.
Here's a quick reference.
$ declare -a MYARR # Create an array $ MYARR[3]=foo # Put a value into an array $ echo ${MYARR[3]} # Get a value out of an array foo $ echo MYARR[3] # WRONG MYARR[0] $ echo $MYARR[3]] # WRONG [3]
$ declare -a MYARR # Explicitly declare $ MYARR[3]=foo # Or this line implicitly makes it an array $ MYARR[4]=bar # Can add values one by one
$ declare -a MYARR=(a b c) # Initialise all at once $ echo ${MYARR[0]} a $ echo ${MYARR[1]} b $ echo ${MYARR[2]} c
$ declare -a MYARR # Or declare separately $ MYARR=(a b c) # Then initialise $ echo ${MYARR[0]} a $ echo ${MYARR[1]} b $ echo ${MYARR[2]} c
$ declare -a MYARR=(a b c) $ MYARR=("${MYARR[@]}" d) # Add an element $ echo ${MYARR[@]} a b c d $ declare -a MYARR2=(e f g) $ MYARR=("${MYARR[@]}" "${MYARR2[@]}") # Concatenate arrays $ echo ${MYARR[@]} a b c d e f g
$ declare -a MYARR $ MYARR[3]=foo $ echo ${MYARR[0]} # Unassigned values are empty $ echo ${MYARR[4]} # Unassigned values are empty $ MYARR[seven]=bar # A text index is treated as 0 $ echo ${MYARR[0]} bar $ echo ${MYARR[seven]} # A text index is treated as 0 bar
$ K=3 $ MYARR[$K]=baz # Variables containing numbers work like numbers $ echo ${MYARR[$K]} baz $ echo ${MYARR[3]} # Obviously the value is accessible via the actual index baz $ K=foo $ MYARR[$K]=bash # Variables containing text are treated as 0 $ echo ${MYARR[0]} bash
$ declare -a MYARR=(a b c) $ echo ${#MYARR[@]} # Length of an array 3 $ echo $#MYARR[@] # WRONG 0MYARR[@] $ echo ${#MYARR} # WRONG 1
$ MYARR[7]=x $ echo ${#MYARR[@]} # Only existing indices count in the length 4
$ declare -a MYARR=(a bb ccc) $ echo ${#MYARR[0]} # Length of an individual element 1 $ echo ${#MYARR[1]} 2 $ echo ${#MYARR[2]} 3
$ declare -a MYARR=("a 1" b c) $ # Loop through array values $ for V in "${MYARR[@]}"; do echo $V; done a 1 b c $ for V in ${MYARR[@]}; do echo $V; done #WRONG a 1 b c
$ echo "${!MYARR[@]}" # Print all indices - quoted, but quotes removed by echo 0 1 2 $ echo "${MYARR[@]}" # Print all values - quoted, but quotes removed by echo a 1 b c
$ declare -a MYARR $ MYARR[3]=x $ echo ${MYARR[3]} x $ unset MYARR $ declare -a MYARR $ echo ${MYARR[3]}
$ MYARR[2]=foo $ echo ${MYARR[2]} foo $ unset ${MYARR[2]} # WRONG $ echo ${MYARR[2]} foo $ unset MYARR[2] # To delete from an array, use "unset" with similar syntax to assigning $ echo ${MYARR[2]} $ MYARR[3]=quux $ echo ${MYARR[3]} quux $ K=3 $ unset MYARR[$K] # Can unset using a variable for the key too $ echo ${MYARR[3]}
$ declare -a MYARR=(a b c d e f) $ MYARR=("${MYARR[@]:0:3}" "${MYARR[@]:4}") # Remove element 3, leaving no gap $ echo ${MYARR[@]}
$ declare -a MYARR=(a b c d e f g) $ echo ${MYARR[@]:2:3} # Extract a sub-array c d e
$ declare -a MYARR=(a b c d e f g) $ echo ${MYARR[@]/d/FOO} # Replace elements that match a b c FOO e f g
$ unset MYARR $ function createmap() { MYARR[5]=bar; } # Implicit creation puts it in the global scope $ echo ${MYARR[5]} $ createmap $ echo ${MYARR[5]} bar
$ unset MYARR $ function createmaplocal() { declare -a MYARR; MYARR[3]=bar; } # Explicit creation puts it in the local scope $ echo ${MYARR[3]} $ createmaplocal $ echo ${MYARR[3]}
Superuser: Test if element is in array in Bash
Originally posted at 2013-09-18 12:45:21+00:00. Automatically generated from the original post : apologies for the errors introduced.