start page | rating of books | rating of authors | reviews | copyrights

UNIX Power Tools

UNIX Power ToolsSearch this book
Previous: 45.16 Standard Input to a for Loop Chapter 45
Shell Programming for the Initiated
Next: 45.18 Using basename and dirname
 

45.17 Making a for Loop with Multiple Variables

The normal Bourne shell for loop (44.16) lets you take a list of items, store the items one by one in a shell variable, and loop through a set of commands once for each item:

for file in prog1 prog2 prog3
do
   ...process $file
done

I wanted a for loop that stores several different shell variables and makes one pass through the loop for each set of variables (instead of one pass for each item, as a regular for loop does). This loop does the job:



set 

for bunch in "ellie file16" "donna file23" "steve file34"
do
   # PUT FIRST WORD (USER) IN $1, SECOND (FILE) IN $2...
   set $bunch
   mail $1 < $2
done

If you have any command-line arguments and still need them, store them in another variable before you do that. Or, you can make the loop this way:

for bunch in "u=ellie f=file16 s='your files'" \
    "u=donna f=file23 s='a memo'" "u=steve f=file34 s=report"
do
   # SET $u (USER), $f (FILENAME), $s (SUBJECT):
   eval $bunch
   mail -s "$s" $u < $f
done

This script uses the shell's eval (8.10) command to re-scan the contents of the bunch variable and store it in separate variables. Notice the single quotes like s='your files'; this groups the words for eval. The shell removes those single quotes before it stores the value into the s variable.

- JP


Previous: 45.16 Standard Input to a for Loop UNIX Power ToolsNext: 45.18 Using basename and dirname
45.16 Standard Input to a for Loop Book Index45.18 Using basename and dirname

The UNIX CD Bookshelf NavigationThe UNIX CD BookshelfUNIX Power ToolsUNIX in a NutshellLearning the vi Editorsed & awkLearning the Korn ShellLearning the UNIX Operating System