I'm trying to collect string values in a bash sc开发者_如何学编程ript. What's the simplest way that I can append string values to a list or array structure such that I can echo them out at the end?
$ arr=(1 2 3)
$ arr+=(4)
$ echo ${arr[@]}
1 2 3 4
Since Bash uses sparse arrays, you shouldn't use the element count ${#arr}
as an index. You can however, get an array of indices like this:
$ indices=(${!arr[@]})
foo=(a b c)
foo=("${foo[@]}" d)
for i in "${foo[@]}"; do echo "$i" ; done
To add to what Ignacio has suggested in another answer:
foo=(a b c)
foo=("${foo[@]}" d) # push element 'd'
foo[${#foo[*]}]="e" # push element 'e'
for i in "${foo[@]}"; do echo "$i" ; done
$ for i in "string1" "string2" "string3"
> do
> array+=($i)
> done
$ echo ${array[@]}
string1 string2 string3
The rather obscure syntax for appending to the end of an array in Bash is illustrated by the following example:
myarr[${#myarr[*]}]="$newitem"
Though the question is answered and is pretty old, I'd like to share a namespace-solution as it works significantly faster than any other ways except for ennukiller's answer (on my 100k lines tests it won ~12 secs against my ~14 secs, whereas list-append solution would take a few minutes).
You can use the following trick:
# WORKS FASTER THAN THESE LAME LISTS! ! !
size=0;while IFS= read -r line; do
echo $line
((++size))
eval "SWAMP_$size='$line'"
done
Or you can do the following:
#!/bin/bash
size=0
namespace="SWAMP"
ArrayAppend() {
namespace="$1"
# suppose array size is global
new_value="$2"
eval "${namespace}_$size='$2'"
eval "echo \$${namespace}_$size"
((++size))
}
ArrayAppend "$namespace" "$RANDOM"
ArrayAppend "$namespace" "$RANDOM"
ArrayAppend "$namespace" "$RANDOM"
ArrayAppend "$namespace" "$RANDOM"
ArrayAppend "$namespace" "$RANDOM"
As long as the interpreter is in tag list, here's a link for object oriented bash.
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