How to read first n elements from array - arrays

sum=0
read n
read -a array
for i in "${array[#]}"
do
sum=$(( $sum + $i ))
done
echo $sum
I am new in scripting. Here I want to know what can I use to add condition so that reading array will be limited to n times.
Ex:
3
1 2 3 4
here it should add only 1 2 3 and it should not take 4.

I prefer the bash C for loop, it doesn't require conditionals to escape the loop and looks neater.
#! /bin/bash
sum=0
read n
read -a array
for ((x=0; x<n; x++))
do
sum=$(( sum + array[x] ))
done
echo "$sum"

You can avoid the loop altogether and use parameter substitution for slicing the array like this:
$ cat script.bash
sum=0
read -p "Enter n: " n
read -p "Enter space separated array elements: " -a array
echo "${array[#]:0:$n}" | sed 's/\s/+/g' | bc
$ ./script.bash
Enter n: 3
Enter space separated array elements: 1 2 3 4
6
$
echo "${array[#]:0:$n}" | sed 's/\s/+/g' | bc this statement dynamically slices the array and substitutes space \s with + to form the addition expression which is then piped to bc (calculator)

sum=0
i=0
read n
read -a array
while [[ $i -lt $n ]]
do
sum=$(( $sum + ${array[$i]}))
let i++
done
echo $sum
I tried this and it worked. In btw thanks everyone

sum=0
read n
j=0
read -a array
for i in "${array[#]}"
do
if [[ $j -ge $n ]];then
break
else
sum=$(( $sum + $i ))
(( j = j + 1 ))
fi
done
echo $sum

#!/bin/bash
param=$1
sum=0
for i in {0..$param}
do
let " sum = $sum + ${array[$i]} "
done
echo "RESULT: $sum"
and execute
./scipt.sh n

Related

how to using Dynamic Value in bash script [duplicate]

I'm wondering how to declare a 2D array in bash and then initialize to 0.
In C it looks like this:
int a[4][5] = {0};
And how do I assign a value to an element? As in C:
a[2][3] = 3;
You can simulate them for example with hashes, but need care about the leading zeroes and many other things. The next demonstration works, but it is far from optimal solution.
#!/bin/bash
declare -A matrix
num_rows=4
num_columns=5
for ((i=1;i<=num_rows;i++)) do
for ((j=1;j<=num_columns;j++)) do
matrix[$i,$j]=$RANDOM
done
done
f1="%$((${#num_rows}+1))s"
f2=" %9s"
printf "$f1" ''
for ((i=1;i<=num_rows;i++)) do
printf "$f2" $i
done
echo
for ((j=1;j<=num_columns;j++)) do
printf "$f1" $j
for ((i=1;i<=num_rows;i++)) do
printf "$f2" ${matrix[$i,$j]}
done
echo
done
the above example creates a 4x5 matrix with random numbers and print it transposed, with the example result
1 2 3 4
1 18006 31193 16110 23297
2 26229 19869 1140 19837
3 8192 2181 25512 2318
4 3269 25516 18701 7977
5 31775 17358 4468 30345
The principle is: Creating one associative array where the index is an string like 3,4. The benefits:
it's possible to use for any-dimension arrays ;) like: 30,40,2 for 3 dimensional.
the syntax is close to "C" like arrays ${matrix[2,3]}
Bash doesn't have multi-dimensional array. But you can simulate a somewhat similar effect with associative arrays. The following is an example of associative array pretending to be used as multi-dimensional array:
declare -A arr
arr[0,0]=0
arr[0,1]=1
arr[1,0]=2
arr[1,1]=3
echo "${arr[0,0]} ${arr[0,1]}" # will print 0 1
If you don't declare the array as associative (with -A), the above won't work. For example, if you omit the declare -A arr line, the echo will print 2 3 instead of 0 1, because 0,0, 1,0 and such will be taken as arithmetic expression and evaluated to 0 (the value to the right of the comma operator).
Bash does not support multidimensional arrays.
You can simulate it though by using indirect expansion:
#!/bin/bash
declare -a a0=(1 2 3 4)
declare -a a1=(5 6 7 8)
var="a1[1]"
echo ${!var} # outputs 6
Assignments are also possible with this method:
let $var=55
echo ${a1[1]} # outputs 55
Edit 1: To read such an array from a file, with each row on a line, and values delimited by space, use this:
idx=0
while read -a a$idx; do
let idx++;
done </tmp/some_file
Edit 2: To declare and initialize a0..a3[0..4] to 0, you could run:
for i in {0..3}; do
eval "declare -a a$i=( $(for j in {0..4}; do echo 0; done) )"
done
Another approach is you can represent each row as a string, i.e. mapping the 2D array into an 1D array. Then, all you need to do is unpack and repack the row's string whenever you make an edit:
# Init a 4x5 matrix
a=("00 01 02 03 04" "10 11 12 13 14" "20 21 22 23 24" "30 31 32 33 34")
aset() {
row=$1
col=$2
value=$3
IFS=' ' read -r -a rowdata <<< "${a[$row]}"
rowdata[$col]=$value
a[$row]="${rowdata[#]}"
}
aget() {
row=$1
col=$2
IFS=' ' read -r -a rowdata <<< "${a[$row]}"
echo ${rowdata[$col]}
}
aprint() {
for rowdata in "${a[#]}"; do
echo $rowdata
done
}
echo "Matrix before change"
aprint
# Outputs: a[2][3] == 23
echo "a[2][3] == $( aget 2 3 )"
echo "a[2][3] = 9999"
aset 2 3 9999
# Show result
echo "Matrix after change"
aprint
Outputs:
Matrix before change
00 01 02 03 04
10 11 12 13 14
20 21 22 23 24
30 31 32 33 34
a[2][3] == 23
a[2][3] = 9999
Matrix after change
00 01 02 03 04
10 11 12 13 14
20 21 22 9999 24
30 31 32 33 34
You can also approach this in a much less smarter fashion
q=()
q+=( 1-2 )
q+=( a-b )
for set in ${q[#]};
do
echo ${set%%-*}
echo ${set##*-}
done
of course a 22 line solution or indirection is probably the better way to go and why not sprinkle eval every where to .
2D array can be achieved in bash by declaring 1D array and then elements can be accessed using (r * col_size) + c). Below logic delcares 1D array (str_2d_arr) and prints as 2D array.
col_size=3
str_2d_arr=()
str_2d_arr+=('abc' '200' 'xyz')
str_2d_arr+=('def' '300' 'ccc')
str_2d_arr+=('aaa' '400' 'ddd')
echo "Print 2D array"
col_count=0
for elem in ${str_2d_arr[#]}; do
if [ ${col_count} -eq ${col_size} ]; then
echo ""
col_count=0
fi
echo -e "$elem \c"
((col_count++))
done
echo ""
Output is
Print 2D array
abc 200 xyz
def 300 ccc
aaa 400 ddd
Below logic is very useful to get each row from the above declared 1D array str_2d_arr.
# Get nth row and update to 2nd arg
get_row_n()
{
row=$1
local -n a=$2
start_idx=$((row * col_size))
for ((i = 0; i < ${col_size}; i++)); do
idx=$((start_idx + i))
a+=(${str_2d_arr[${idx}]})
done
}
arr=()
get_row_n 0 arr
echo "Row 0"
for e in ${arr[#]}; do
echo -e "$e \c"
done
echo ""
Output is
Row 0
abc 200 xyz
A way to simulate arrays in bash (it can be adapted for any number of dimensions of an array):
#!/bin/bash
## The following functions implement vectors (arrays) operations in bash:
## Definition of a vector <v>:
## v_0 - variable that stores the number of elements of the vector
## v_1..v_n, where n=v_0 - variables that store the values of the vector elements
VectorAddElementNext () {
# Vector Add Element Next
# Adds the string contained in variable $2 in the next element position (vector length + 1) in vector $1
local elem_value
local vector_length
local elem_name
eval elem_value=\"\$$2\"
eval vector_length=\$$1\_0
if [ -z "$vector_length" ]; then
vector_length=$((0))
fi
vector_length=$(( vector_length + 1 ))
elem_name=$1_$vector_length
eval $elem_name=\"\$elem_value\"
eval $1_0=$vector_length
}
VectorAddElementDVNext () {
# Vector Add Element Direct Value Next
# Adds the string $2 in the next element position (vector length + 1) in vector $1
local elem_value
local vector_length
local elem_name
eval elem_value="$2"
eval vector_length=\$$1\_0
if [ -z "$vector_length" ]; then
vector_length=$((0))
fi
vector_length=$(( vector_length + 1 ))
elem_name=$1_$vector_length
eval $elem_name=\"\$elem_value\"
eval $1_0=$vector_length
}
VectorAddElement () {
# Vector Add Element
# Adds the string contained in the variable $3 in the position contained in $2 (variable or direct value) in the vector $1
local elem_value
local elem_position
local vector_length
local elem_name
eval elem_value=\"\$$3\"
elem_position=$(($2))
eval vector_length=\$$1\_0
if [ -z "$vector_length" ]; then
vector_length=$((0))
fi
if [ $elem_position -ge $vector_length ]; then
vector_length=$elem_position
fi
elem_name=$1_$elem_position
eval $elem_name=\"\$elem_value\"
if [ ! $elem_position -eq 0 ]; then
eval $1_0=$vector_length
fi
}
VectorAddElementDV () {
# Vector Add Element
# Adds the string $3 in the position $2 (variable or direct value) in the vector $1
local elem_value
local elem_position
local vector_length
local elem_name
eval elem_value="$3"
elem_position=$(($2))
eval vector_length=\$$1\_0
if [ -z "$vector_length" ]; then
vector_length=$((0))
fi
if [ $elem_position -ge $vector_length ]; then
vector_length=$elem_position
fi
elem_name=$1_$elem_position
eval $elem_name=\"\$elem_value\"
if [ ! $elem_position -eq 0 ]; then
eval $1_0=$vector_length
fi
}
VectorPrint () {
# Vector Print
# Prints all the elements names and values of the vector $1 on sepparate lines
local vector_length
vector_length=$(($1_0))
if [ "$vector_length" = "0" ]; then
echo "Vector \"$1\" is empty!"
else
echo "Vector \"$1\":"
for ((i=1; i<=$vector_length; i++)); do
eval echo \"[$i]: \\\"\$$1\_$i\\\"\"
###OR: eval printf \'\%s\\\n\' \"[\$i]: \\\"\$$1\_$i\\\"\"
done
fi
}
VectorDestroy () {
# Vector Destroy
# Empties all the elements values of the vector $1
local vector_length
vector_length=$(($1_0))
if [ ! "$vector_length" = "0" ]; then
for ((i=1; i<=$vector_length; i++)); do
unset $1_$i
done
unset $1_0
fi
}
##################
### MAIN START ###
##################
## Setting vector 'params' with all the parameters received by the script:
for ((i=1; i<=$#; i++)); do
eval param="\${$i}"
VectorAddElementNext params param
done
# Printing the vector 'params':
VectorPrint params
read temp
## Setting vector 'params2' with the elements of the vector 'params' in reversed order:
if [ -n "$params_0" ]; then
for ((i=1; i<=$params_0; i++)); do
count=$((params_0-i+1))
VectorAddElement params2 count params_$i
done
fi
# Printing the vector 'params2':
VectorPrint params2
read temp
## Getting the values of 'params2'`s elements and printing them:
if [ -n "$params2_0" ]; then
echo "Printing the elements of the vector 'params2':"
for ((i=1; i<=$params2_0; i++)); do
eval current_elem_value=\"\$params2\_$i\"
echo "params2_$i=\"$current_elem_value\""
done
else
echo "Vector 'params2' is empty!"
fi
read temp
## Creating a two dimensional array ('a'):
for ((i=1; i<=10; i++)); do
VectorAddElement a 0 i
for ((j=1; j<=8; j++)); do
value=$(( 8 * ( i - 1 ) + j ))
VectorAddElementDV a_$i $j $value
done
done
## Manually printing the two dimensional array ('a'):
echo "Printing the two-dimensional array 'a':"
if [ -n "$a_0" ]; then
for ((i=1; i<=$a_0; i++)); do
eval current_vector_lenght=\$a\_$i\_0
if [ -n "$current_vector_lenght" ]; then
for ((j=1; j<=$current_vector_lenght; j++)); do
eval value=\"\$a\_$i\_$j\"
printf "$value "
done
fi
printf "\n"
done
fi
################
### MAIN END ###
################
If each row of the matrix is the same size, then you can simply use a linear array and multiplication.
That is,
a=()
for (( i=0; i<4; ++i )); do
for (( j=0; j<5; ++j )); do
a[i*5+j]=0
done
done
Then your a[2][3] = 3 becomes
a[2*5+3] = 3
This approach might be worth turning into a set of functions, but since you can't pass arrays to or return arrays from functions, you would have to use pass-by-name and sometimes eval. So I tend to file multidimensional arrays under "things bash is simply Not Meant To Do".
One can simply define two functions to write ($4 is the assigned value) and read a matrix with arbitrary name ($1) and indexes ($2 and $3) exploiting eval and indirect referencing.
#!/bin/bash
matrix_write () {
eval $1"_"$2"_"$3=$4
# aux=$1"_"$2"_"$3 # Alternative way
# let $aux=$4 # ---
}
matrix_read () {
aux=$1"_"$2"_"$3
echo ${!aux}
}
for ((i=1;i<10;i=i+1)); do
for ((j=1;j<10;j=j+1)); do
matrix_write a $i $j $[$i*10+$j]
done
done
for ((i=1;i<10;i=i+1)); do
for ((j=1;j<10;j=j+1)); do
echo "a_"$i"_"$j"="$(matrix_read a $i $j)
done
done
Mark Reed suggested a very good solution for 2D arrays (matrix)! They always can be converted in a 1D array (vector). Although Bash doesn't have a native support for 2D arrays, it's not that hard to create a simple ADT around the mentioned principle.
Here is a barebone example with no argument checks, etc, just to keep the solution clear: the array's size is set as two first elements in the instance (documentation for the Bash module that implements a matrix ADT, https://github.com/vorakl/bash-libs/blob/master/src.docs/content/pages/matrix.rst )
#!/bin/bash
matrix_init() {
# matrix_init instance x y data ...
declare -n self=$1
declare -i width=$2 height=$3
shift 3;
self=(${width} ${height} "$#")
}
matrix_get() {
# matrix_get instance x y
declare -n self=$1
declare -i x=$2 y=$3
declare -i width=${self[0]} height=${self[1]}
echo "${self[2+y*width+x]}"
}
matrix_set() {
# matrix_set instance x y data
declare -n self=$1
declare -i x=$2 y=$3
declare data="$4"
declare -i width=${self[0]} height=${self[1]}
self[2+y*width+x]="${data}"
}
matrix_destroy() {
# matrix_destroy instance
declare -n self=$1
unset self
}
# my_matrix[3][2]=( (one, two, three), ("1 1" "2 2" "3 3") )
matrix_init my_matrix \
3 2 \
one two three \
"1 1" "2 2" "3 3"
# print my_matrix[2][0]
matrix_get my_matrix 2 0
# print my_matrix[1][1]
matrix_get my_matrix 1 1
# my_matrix[1][1]="4 4 4"
matrix_set my_matrix 1 1 "4 4 4"
# print my_matrix[1][1]
matrix_get my_matrix 1 1
# remove my_matrix
matrix_destroy my_matrix
For simulating a 2-dimensional array, I first load the first n-elements (the elements of the first column)
local pano_array=()
i=0
for line in $(grep "filename" "$file")
do
url=$(extract_url_from_xml $line)
pano_array[i]="$url"
i=$((i+1))
done
To add the second column, I define the size of the first column and calculate the values in an offset variable
array_len="${#pano_array[#]}"
i=0
while [[ $i -lt $array_len ]]
do
url="${pano_array[$i]}"
offset=$(($array_len+i))
found_file=$(get_file $url)
pano_array[$offset]=$found_file
i=$((i+1))
done
The below code will definitely work provided if you are working on a Mac you have bash version 4. Not only can you declare 0 but this is more of a universal approach to dynamically accepting values.
2D Array
declare -A arr
echo "Enter the row"
read r
echo "Enter the column"
read c
i=0
j=0
echo "Enter the elements"
while [ $i -lt $r ]
do
j=0
while [ $j -lt $c ]
do
echo $i $j
read m
arr[${i},${j}]=$m
j=`expr $j + 1`
done
i=`expr $i + 1`
done
i=0
j=0
while [ $i -lt $r ]
do
j=0
while [ $j -lt $c ]
do
echo -n ${arr[${i},${j}]} " "
j=`expr $j + 1`
done
echo ""
i=`expr $i + 1`
done

Split two numbers in two arrays

I need to split 2 numbers in the form(they are from a text file):
Num1:Num2
Num3:Num4
And store num1 into array X and number 2 in array Y num 3 in array X and num4 in array Y.
With bash:
mapfile -t X < <(cut -d : -f 1 file) # read only first column
mapfile -t Y < <(cut -d : -f 2 file) # read only second column
declare -p X Y
Output:
declare -a X='([0]="num1" [1]="num3")'
declare -a Y='([0]="num2" [1]="num4")'
Disadvantage: The file is read twice.
You could perform the following steps:
Create destination arrays empty
Read file line by line, with a classic while read ... < file loop
Split each line on :, again using read
Append values to arrays
For example:
arr_x=()
arr_y=()
while IFS= read line || [ -n "$line" ]; do
IFS=: read x y <<< "$line"
arr_x+=("$x")
arr_y+=("$y")
done < data.txt
echo "content of arr_x:"
for v in "${arr_x[#]}"; do
echo "$v"
done
echo "content of arr_y:"
for v in "${arr_y[#]}"; do
echo "$v"
done
Here is a quick bash solution:
c=0
while IFS=: read a b ;do
x[$c]="$a"
y[$c]="$b"
c=$((c+1))
done < input.txt
We send the input.txt to a while loop, using Input Field Separator : and read the first number of each line as $a and second number as $b. Then we add them to the array as you specified. We use a counter $c to iterate the location in the arrays.
Using =~ operator to store the pair of numbers to array $BASH_REMATCH:
$ cat file
123:456
789:012
$ while read -r line
do
[[ $line =~ ([^:]*):(.*) ]] && echo ${BASH_REMATCH[1]} ${BASH_REMATCH[2]}
# do something else with numbers as they will be replaced on the next iteration
done < file

declare in array and print the values randomly from array in bash script

Here is my bash script code
declare -a types=("m4.xlarge" "m5.12xlarge" "m5d.12xlarge" "m4.large" "m4.16xlarge" "t2.2xlarge" "c4.large" "c5.xlarge" "r4.2xlarge" "x1e.4xlarge" "h1.16xlarge" "i3.16xlarge" );
echo "array declared"
for i in {1..100}
do
for (( i=1; i<${arraylength}+1; i++ ))
do
#index=$( jot -r 1 0 $((${#expressions[#]} - 1)) )
randominstancetype=$[$RANDOM % ${#types[#]}];
#randominstancetype=$( shuf -i0-1 -n1 $((${#types[#]} )) );
#randominstancepvtiptype=$[$RANDOM % ${#pvtip[#]}];
#randominstancepubiptype=$[$RANDOM % ${#pubip[#]}];
done
done
I am trying to declare array and then print the elements inside the array randomly for around 100 times. Currently the name of the elements are not getting displayed instead it displays as 3 5 8 etc.. Anyhelp will be appreciated.
$[...] is the old and deprecated version of $((...)). So what you are doing is just simple arithmetic expansion that expands back to the random index.
To access an element of the array with the generated index, use:
echo "${types[$RANDOM%${#types[#]}]}"
Try this snippet:
#!/bin/bash
declare -a types=("m4.xlarge" "m5.12xlarge" "m5d.12xlarge" "m4.large" "m4.16xlarge" "t2.2xlarge" "c4.large" "c5.xlarge" "r4.2xlarge" "x1e.4xlarge" "h1.16xlarge" "i3.16xlarge" )
echo "array declared"
max_random=32767
type_count=${#types[#]}
factor=$(( max_random / type_count ))
for i in {1..1000}
do
random_index=$(( $RANDOM / $factor ))
random_instance_type=${types[$random_index]}
echo $random_instance_type
done
This will print a randomized order of your array types.
for j in {1..100}; do
for i in $(shuf -i 0-$((${#types[*]}-1))); do
printf "%s " "${types[i]}";
done;
printf "\n";
done
If you would allow repetitions, then you can do
for j in {1..100}; do
for i in $(shuf -n ${#types[*]} -r -i 0-$((${#types[*]}-1))); do
printf "%s " "${types[i]}";
done;
printf "\n";
done
The commands make use of shuf and its options :
-n, --head-count=COUNT: output at most COUNT lines
-i, --input-range=LO-HI: treat each number LO through HI as an input line
-r, --repeat: output lines can be repeated
source man shuf

How to Construct an Array of Arrays in Bash [duplicate]

I'm wondering how to declare a 2D array in bash and then initialize to 0.
In C it looks like this:
int a[4][5] = {0};
And how do I assign a value to an element? As in C:
a[2][3] = 3;
You can simulate them for example with hashes, but need care about the leading zeroes and many other things. The next demonstration works, but it is far from optimal solution.
#!/bin/bash
declare -A matrix
num_rows=4
num_columns=5
for ((i=1;i<=num_rows;i++)) do
for ((j=1;j<=num_columns;j++)) do
matrix[$i,$j]=$RANDOM
done
done
f1="%$((${#num_rows}+1))s"
f2=" %9s"
printf "$f1" ''
for ((i=1;i<=num_rows;i++)) do
printf "$f2" $i
done
echo
for ((j=1;j<=num_columns;j++)) do
printf "$f1" $j
for ((i=1;i<=num_rows;i++)) do
printf "$f2" ${matrix[$i,$j]}
done
echo
done
the above example creates a 4x5 matrix with random numbers and print it transposed, with the example result
1 2 3 4
1 18006 31193 16110 23297
2 26229 19869 1140 19837
3 8192 2181 25512 2318
4 3269 25516 18701 7977
5 31775 17358 4468 30345
The principle is: Creating one associative array where the index is an string like 3,4. The benefits:
it's possible to use for any-dimension arrays ;) like: 30,40,2 for 3 dimensional.
the syntax is close to "C" like arrays ${matrix[2,3]}
Bash doesn't have multi-dimensional array. But you can simulate a somewhat similar effect with associative arrays. The following is an example of associative array pretending to be used as multi-dimensional array:
declare -A arr
arr[0,0]=0
arr[0,1]=1
arr[1,0]=2
arr[1,1]=3
echo "${arr[0,0]} ${arr[0,1]}" # will print 0 1
If you don't declare the array as associative (with -A), the above won't work. For example, if you omit the declare -A arr line, the echo will print 2 3 instead of 0 1, because 0,0, 1,0 and such will be taken as arithmetic expression and evaluated to 0 (the value to the right of the comma operator).
Bash does not support multidimensional arrays.
You can simulate it though by using indirect expansion:
#!/bin/bash
declare -a a0=(1 2 3 4)
declare -a a1=(5 6 7 8)
var="a1[1]"
echo ${!var} # outputs 6
Assignments are also possible with this method:
let $var=55
echo ${a1[1]} # outputs 55
Edit 1: To read such an array from a file, with each row on a line, and values delimited by space, use this:
idx=0
while read -a a$idx; do
let idx++;
done </tmp/some_file
Edit 2: To declare and initialize a0..a3[0..4] to 0, you could run:
for i in {0..3}; do
eval "declare -a a$i=( $(for j in {0..4}; do echo 0; done) )"
done
Another approach is you can represent each row as a string, i.e. mapping the 2D array into an 1D array. Then, all you need to do is unpack and repack the row's string whenever you make an edit:
# Init a 4x5 matrix
a=("00 01 02 03 04" "10 11 12 13 14" "20 21 22 23 24" "30 31 32 33 34")
aset() {
row=$1
col=$2
value=$3
IFS=' ' read -r -a rowdata <<< "${a[$row]}"
rowdata[$col]=$value
a[$row]="${rowdata[#]}"
}
aget() {
row=$1
col=$2
IFS=' ' read -r -a rowdata <<< "${a[$row]}"
echo ${rowdata[$col]}
}
aprint() {
for rowdata in "${a[#]}"; do
echo $rowdata
done
}
echo "Matrix before change"
aprint
# Outputs: a[2][3] == 23
echo "a[2][3] == $( aget 2 3 )"
echo "a[2][3] = 9999"
aset 2 3 9999
# Show result
echo "Matrix after change"
aprint
Outputs:
Matrix before change
00 01 02 03 04
10 11 12 13 14
20 21 22 23 24
30 31 32 33 34
a[2][3] == 23
a[2][3] = 9999
Matrix after change
00 01 02 03 04
10 11 12 13 14
20 21 22 9999 24
30 31 32 33 34
You can also approach this in a much less smarter fashion
q=()
q+=( 1-2 )
q+=( a-b )
for set in ${q[#]};
do
echo ${set%%-*}
echo ${set##*-}
done
of course a 22 line solution or indirection is probably the better way to go and why not sprinkle eval every where to .
2D array can be achieved in bash by declaring 1D array and then elements can be accessed using (r * col_size) + c). Below logic delcares 1D array (str_2d_arr) and prints as 2D array.
col_size=3
str_2d_arr=()
str_2d_arr+=('abc' '200' 'xyz')
str_2d_arr+=('def' '300' 'ccc')
str_2d_arr+=('aaa' '400' 'ddd')
echo "Print 2D array"
col_count=0
for elem in ${str_2d_arr[#]}; do
if [ ${col_count} -eq ${col_size} ]; then
echo ""
col_count=0
fi
echo -e "$elem \c"
((col_count++))
done
echo ""
Output is
Print 2D array
abc 200 xyz
def 300 ccc
aaa 400 ddd
Below logic is very useful to get each row from the above declared 1D array str_2d_arr.
# Get nth row and update to 2nd arg
get_row_n()
{
row=$1
local -n a=$2
start_idx=$((row * col_size))
for ((i = 0; i < ${col_size}; i++)); do
idx=$((start_idx + i))
a+=(${str_2d_arr[${idx}]})
done
}
arr=()
get_row_n 0 arr
echo "Row 0"
for e in ${arr[#]}; do
echo -e "$e \c"
done
echo ""
Output is
Row 0
abc 200 xyz
A way to simulate arrays in bash (it can be adapted for any number of dimensions of an array):
#!/bin/bash
## The following functions implement vectors (arrays) operations in bash:
## Definition of a vector <v>:
## v_0 - variable that stores the number of elements of the vector
## v_1..v_n, where n=v_0 - variables that store the values of the vector elements
VectorAddElementNext () {
# Vector Add Element Next
# Adds the string contained in variable $2 in the next element position (vector length + 1) in vector $1
local elem_value
local vector_length
local elem_name
eval elem_value=\"\$$2\"
eval vector_length=\$$1\_0
if [ -z "$vector_length" ]; then
vector_length=$((0))
fi
vector_length=$(( vector_length + 1 ))
elem_name=$1_$vector_length
eval $elem_name=\"\$elem_value\"
eval $1_0=$vector_length
}
VectorAddElementDVNext () {
# Vector Add Element Direct Value Next
# Adds the string $2 in the next element position (vector length + 1) in vector $1
local elem_value
local vector_length
local elem_name
eval elem_value="$2"
eval vector_length=\$$1\_0
if [ -z "$vector_length" ]; then
vector_length=$((0))
fi
vector_length=$(( vector_length + 1 ))
elem_name=$1_$vector_length
eval $elem_name=\"\$elem_value\"
eval $1_0=$vector_length
}
VectorAddElement () {
# Vector Add Element
# Adds the string contained in the variable $3 in the position contained in $2 (variable or direct value) in the vector $1
local elem_value
local elem_position
local vector_length
local elem_name
eval elem_value=\"\$$3\"
elem_position=$(($2))
eval vector_length=\$$1\_0
if [ -z "$vector_length" ]; then
vector_length=$((0))
fi
if [ $elem_position -ge $vector_length ]; then
vector_length=$elem_position
fi
elem_name=$1_$elem_position
eval $elem_name=\"\$elem_value\"
if [ ! $elem_position -eq 0 ]; then
eval $1_0=$vector_length
fi
}
VectorAddElementDV () {
# Vector Add Element
# Adds the string $3 in the position $2 (variable or direct value) in the vector $1
local elem_value
local elem_position
local vector_length
local elem_name
eval elem_value="$3"
elem_position=$(($2))
eval vector_length=\$$1\_0
if [ -z "$vector_length" ]; then
vector_length=$((0))
fi
if [ $elem_position -ge $vector_length ]; then
vector_length=$elem_position
fi
elem_name=$1_$elem_position
eval $elem_name=\"\$elem_value\"
if [ ! $elem_position -eq 0 ]; then
eval $1_0=$vector_length
fi
}
VectorPrint () {
# Vector Print
# Prints all the elements names and values of the vector $1 on sepparate lines
local vector_length
vector_length=$(($1_0))
if [ "$vector_length" = "0" ]; then
echo "Vector \"$1\" is empty!"
else
echo "Vector \"$1\":"
for ((i=1; i<=$vector_length; i++)); do
eval echo \"[$i]: \\\"\$$1\_$i\\\"\"
###OR: eval printf \'\%s\\\n\' \"[\$i]: \\\"\$$1\_$i\\\"\"
done
fi
}
VectorDestroy () {
# Vector Destroy
# Empties all the elements values of the vector $1
local vector_length
vector_length=$(($1_0))
if [ ! "$vector_length" = "0" ]; then
for ((i=1; i<=$vector_length; i++)); do
unset $1_$i
done
unset $1_0
fi
}
##################
### MAIN START ###
##################
## Setting vector 'params' with all the parameters received by the script:
for ((i=1; i<=$#; i++)); do
eval param="\${$i}"
VectorAddElementNext params param
done
# Printing the vector 'params':
VectorPrint params
read temp
## Setting vector 'params2' with the elements of the vector 'params' in reversed order:
if [ -n "$params_0" ]; then
for ((i=1; i<=$params_0; i++)); do
count=$((params_0-i+1))
VectorAddElement params2 count params_$i
done
fi
# Printing the vector 'params2':
VectorPrint params2
read temp
## Getting the values of 'params2'`s elements and printing them:
if [ -n "$params2_0" ]; then
echo "Printing the elements of the vector 'params2':"
for ((i=1; i<=$params2_0; i++)); do
eval current_elem_value=\"\$params2\_$i\"
echo "params2_$i=\"$current_elem_value\""
done
else
echo "Vector 'params2' is empty!"
fi
read temp
## Creating a two dimensional array ('a'):
for ((i=1; i<=10; i++)); do
VectorAddElement a 0 i
for ((j=1; j<=8; j++)); do
value=$(( 8 * ( i - 1 ) + j ))
VectorAddElementDV a_$i $j $value
done
done
## Manually printing the two dimensional array ('a'):
echo "Printing the two-dimensional array 'a':"
if [ -n "$a_0" ]; then
for ((i=1; i<=$a_0; i++)); do
eval current_vector_lenght=\$a\_$i\_0
if [ -n "$current_vector_lenght" ]; then
for ((j=1; j<=$current_vector_lenght; j++)); do
eval value=\"\$a\_$i\_$j\"
printf "$value "
done
fi
printf "\n"
done
fi
################
### MAIN END ###
################
If each row of the matrix is the same size, then you can simply use a linear array and multiplication.
That is,
a=()
for (( i=0; i<4; ++i )); do
for (( j=0; j<5; ++j )); do
a[i*5+j]=0
done
done
Then your a[2][3] = 3 becomes
a[2*5+3] = 3
This approach might be worth turning into a set of functions, but since you can't pass arrays to or return arrays from functions, you would have to use pass-by-name and sometimes eval. So I tend to file multidimensional arrays under "things bash is simply Not Meant To Do".
One can simply define two functions to write ($4 is the assigned value) and read a matrix with arbitrary name ($1) and indexes ($2 and $3) exploiting eval and indirect referencing.
#!/bin/bash
matrix_write () {
eval $1"_"$2"_"$3=$4
# aux=$1"_"$2"_"$3 # Alternative way
# let $aux=$4 # ---
}
matrix_read () {
aux=$1"_"$2"_"$3
echo ${!aux}
}
for ((i=1;i<10;i=i+1)); do
for ((j=1;j<10;j=j+1)); do
matrix_write a $i $j $[$i*10+$j]
done
done
for ((i=1;i<10;i=i+1)); do
for ((j=1;j<10;j=j+1)); do
echo "a_"$i"_"$j"="$(matrix_read a $i $j)
done
done
Mark Reed suggested a very good solution for 2D arrays (matrix)! They always can be converted in a 1D array (vector). Although Bash doesn't have a native support for 2D arrays, it's not that hard to create a simple ADT around the mentioned principle.
Here is a barebone example with no argument checks, etc, just to keep the solution clear: the array's size is set as two first elements in the instance (documentation for the Bash module that implements a matrix ADT, https://github.com/vorakl/bash-libs/blob/master/src.docs/content/pages/matrix.rst )
#!/bin/bash
matrix_init() {
# matrix_init instance x y data ...
declare -n self=$1
declare -i width=$2 height=$3
shift 3;
self=(${width} ${height} "$#")
}
matrix_get() {
# matrix_get instance x y
declare -n self=$1
declare -i x=$2 y=$3
declare -i width=${self[0]} height=${self[1]}
echo "${self[2+y*width+x]}"
}
matrix_set() {
# matrix_set instance x y data
declare -n self=$1
declare -i x=$2 y=$3
declare data="$4"
declare -i width=${self[0]} height=${self[1]}
self[2+y*width+x]="${data}"
}
matrix_destroy() {
# matrix_destroy instance
declare -n self=$1
unset self
}
# my_matrix[3][2]=( (one, two, three), ("1 1" "2 2" "3 3") )
matrix_init my_matrix \
3 2 \
one two three \
"1 1" "2 2" "3 3"
# print my_matrix[2][0]
matrix_get my_matrix 2 0
# print my_matrix[1][1]
matrix_get my_matrix 1 1
# my_matrix[1][1]="4 4 4"
matrix_set my_matrix 1 1 "4 4 4"
# print my_matrix[1][1]
matrix_get my_matrix 1 1
# remove my_matrix
matrix_destroy my_matrix
For simulating a 2-dimensional array, I first load the first n-elements (the elements of the first column)
local pano_array=()
i=0
for line in $(grep "filename" "$file")
do
url=$(extract_url_from_xml $line)
pano_array[i]="$url"
i=$((i+1))
done
To add the second column, I define the size of the first column and calculate the values in an offset variable
array_len="${#pano_array[#]}"
i=0
while [[ $i -lt $array_len ]]
do
url="${pano_array[$i]}"
offset=$(($array_len+i))
found_file=$(get_file $url)
pano_array[$offset]=$found_file
i=$((i+1))
done
The below code will definitely work provided if you are working on a Mac you have bash version 4. Not only can you declare 0 but this is more of a universal approach to dynamically accepting values.
2D Array
declare -A arr
echo "Enter the row"
read r
echo "Enter the column"
read c
i=0
j=0
echo "Enter the elements"
while [ $i -lt $r ]
do
j=0
while [ $j -lt $c ]
do
echo $i $j
read m
arr[${i},${j}]=$m
j=`expr $j + 1`
done
i=`expr $i + 1`
done
i=0
j=0
while [ $i -lt $r ]
do
j=0
while [ $j -lt $c ]
do
echo -n ${arr[${i},${j}]} " "
j=`expr $j + 1`
done
echo ""
i=`expr $i + 1`
done

read N elements from an array and delete them

I am storing a file list in an array . What I'd like to do is loop through a process that will read N elements of an array and delete all the elements it just read. The Exception is the last iteration , when you come to the last iteration of the loop - whatever remains in the array - just split that out .
th=$1
ar=('f1' 'f2' 'f3' 'f4' 'f5' 'f6')
for ((i=1; i<=$th; i++)); do
<stuff>
if [ "$i" -eq "$th" ]
then
# if its the last iteration of the loop.Whatever remains in the array - spit that out
echo " `echo ${ar[*]}`" >> somefile
# it its anything short of the last iteration.Read N elements of the array at a time
# and then delete them
else
echo " `echo ${ar[*]:0:$N}` " >> somefile
for ((x=0; x<=$N; x++)) ; do
unset ar[$x]
done
fi
The results are very erratic. Even when I use this approach and test if separately
for ((x=0; x<=$N; x++)) ; do
unset ar[$x]
done
It will delete the WHOLE array EXCEPT the $Nth element
I am new to arrays in shell. Any help is gladly appreciated
Try the following:
#! /bin/bash
th=3
N=2
ar=('f1 f' 'f2' 'f3' 'f4 x' 'f5' 'f6' 'f7')
for ((i=0; i<$th; i++)); do
if (( $i == $(($th - 1)) )) ; then
echo "${ar[*]}"
else
echo "${ar[*]:0:$N}"
ar=( "${ar[#]:$N}" )
fi
done
Output:
f1 f f2
f3 f4 x
f5 f6 f7
Note:
Arrays in bash are zero based.
Indices are not adjusted after unset ar[$x], therefore it would be easier to reconstruct the array as ar=( "${ar[#]:$N}" ) to force new indices to start at zero..
Update:
Or you could avoid the reconstruction of the array using:
#! /bin/bash
th=3
N=2
ar=('f1 f' 'f2' 'f3' 'f4 x' 'f5' 'f6' 'f7')
for ((i=0; i<$th; i++)); do
if (( $i == $(($th - 1)) )) ; then
echo "${ar[*]:$(($i * $N))}"
else
echo "${ar[*]:$(($i * $N)):$N}"
fi
done

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