Related
Is there a way to do something like this
int a = (b == 5) ? c : d;
using Bash?
ternary operator ? : is just short form of if/else
case "$b" in
5) a=$c ;;
*) a=$d ;;
esac
Or
[[ $b = 5 ]] && a="$c" || a="$d"
Code:
a=$([ "$b" == 5 ] && echo "$c" || echo "$d")
If the condition is merely checking if a variable is set, there's even a shorter form:
a=${VAR:-20}
will assign to a the value of VAR if VAR is set, otherwise it will assign it the default value 20 -- this can also be a result of an expression.
This approach is technically called "Parameter Expansion".
if [[ $b -eq 5 ]]; then a="$c"; else a="$d"; fi
The cond && op1 || op2 expression suggested in other answers has an inherent bug: if op1 has a nonzero exit status, op2 silently becomes the result; the error will also not be caught in -e mode. So, that expression is only safe to use if op1 can never fail (e.g., :, true if a builtin, or variable assignment without any operations that can fail (like division and OS calls)).
Note the "" quotes. They will prevent translation of all whitespace into single spaces.
Double square brackets as opposed to single ones prevent incorrect operation if $b is equal to a test operator (e.g. "-z"; a workaround with [ is [ "x$b" == "xyes" ] and it only works for string comparison); they also lift the requirement for quoting.
(( a = b==5 ? c : d )) # string + numeric
[ $b == 5 ] && { a=$c; true; } || a=$d
This will avoid executing the part after || by accident when the code between && and || fails.
We can use following three ways in Shell Scripting for ternary operator :
[ $numVar == numVal ] && resVar="Yop" || resVar="Nop"
Or
resVar=$([ $numVar == numVal ] && echo "Yop" || echo "Nop")
Or
(( numVar == numVal ? (resVar=1) : (resVar=0) ))
Update: Extending the answer for string computations with below ready-to-run example. This is making use of second format mentioned above.
$ strVar='abc';resVar=$([[ $strVar == 'abc' ]] && echo "Yop" || echo "Nop");echo $resVar
Yop
$ strVar='aaa';resVar=$([[ $strVar == 'abc' ]] && echo "Yop" || echo "Nop");echo $resVar
Nop
The let command supports most of the basic operators one would need:
let a=b==5?c:d;
Naturally, this works only for assigning variables; it cannot execute other commands.
Here is another option where you only have to specify the variable you're assigning once, and it doesn't matter whether what your assigning is a string or a number:
VARIABLE=`[ test ] && echo VALUE_A || echo VALUE_B`
Just a thought. :)
There's also a very similar but simpler syntax for ternary conditionals in bash:
a=$(( b == 5 ? 123 : 321 ))
The following seems to work for my use cases:
Examples
$ tern 1 YES NO
YES
$ tern 0 YES NO
NO
$ tern 52 YES NO
YES
$ tern 52 YES NO 52
NO
and can be used in a script like so:
RESULT=$(tern 1 YES NO)
echo "The result is $RESULT"
tern
#!/usr/bin/env bash
function show_help()
{
ME=$(basename "$0")
IT=$(cat <<EOF
Returns a ternary result
usage: BOOLEAN VALUE_IF_TRUE VALUE_IF_FALSE
e.g.
# YES
$ME 1 YES NO
# NO
$ME 0 YES NO
# NO
$ME "" YES NO
# YES
$ME "STRING THAT ISNT BLANK OR 0" YES NO
# INFO contains NO
INFO=\$($ME 0 YES NO)
EOF
)
echo "$IT"
echo
exit
}
if [ "$1" = "help" ] || [ "$1" = '?' ] || [ "$1" = "--help" ] || [ "$1" = "h" ]; then
show_help
fi
if [ -z "$3" ]
then
show_help
fi
# Set a default value for what is "false" -> 0
FALSE_VALUE=${4:-0}
function main
{
if [ "$1" == "$FALSE_VALUE" ] || [ "$1" = '' ]; then
echo $3
exit;
fi;
echo $2
}
main "$1" "$2" "$3"
Here's a general solution, that
works with string tests as well
feels rather like an expression
avoids any subtle side effects when the condition fails
Test with numerical comparison
a=$(if [ "$b" -eq 5 ]; then echo "$c"; else echo "$d"; fi)
Test with String comparison
a=$(if [ "$b" = "5" ]; then echo "$c"; else echo "$d"; fi)
(ping -c1 localhost&>/dev/null) && { echo "true"; } || { echo "false"; }
You can use this if you want similar syntax
a=$(( $((b==5)) ? c : d ))
Some people have already presented some nice alternatives. I wanted to get the syntax as close as possible, so I wrote a function named ?.
This allows for the syntax:
[[ $x -eq 1 ]]; ? ./script1 : ./script2
# or
? '[[ $x -eq 1 ]]' ./script1 : ./script2
In both cases, the : is optional. All arguments that have spaces, the values must be quoted since it runs them with eval.
If the <then> or <else> clauses aren't commands, the function echos the proper value.
./script; ? Success! : "Failure :("
The function
?() {
local lastRet=$?
if [[ $1 == --help || $1 == -? ]]; then
echo $'\e[37;1mUsage:\e[0m
? [<condition>] <then> [:] <else>
If \e[37;1m<then>\e[0m and/or \e[37;1m<else>\e[0m are not valid commands, then their values are
printed to stdOut, otherwise they are executed. If \e[37;1m<condition>\e[0m is not
specified, evaluates the return code ($?) of the previous statement.
\e[37;1mExamples:\e[0m
myVar=$(? "[[ $x -eq 1 ]] foo bar)
\e[32;2m# myVar is set to "foo" if x is 1, else it is set to "bar"\e[0m
? "[[ $x = *foo* ]] "cat hello.txt" : "cat goodbye.txt"
\e[32;2m# runs cat on "hello.txt" if x contains the word "foo", else runs cat on
# "goodbye.txt"\e[0m
? "[[ $x -eq 1 ]] "./script1" "./script2"; ? "Succeeded!" "Failed :("
\e[32;2m# If x = 1, runs script1, else script2. If the run script succeeds, prints
# "Succeeded!", else prints "failed".\e[0m'
return
elif ! [[ $# -eq 2 || $# -eq 3 || $# -eq 4 && $3 == ':' ]]; then
1>&2 echo $'\e[37;1m?\e[0m requires 2 to 4 arguments
\e[37;1mUsage\e[0m: ? [<condition>] <then> [:] <else>
Run \e[37;1m? --help\e[0m for more details'
return 1
fi
local cmd
if [[ $# -eq 2 || $# -eq 3 && $2 == ':' ]]; then
cmd="[[ $lastRet -eq 0 ]]"
else
cmd="$1"
shift
fi
if [[ $2 == ':' ]]; then
eval "set -- '$1' '$3'"
fi
local result=$(eval "$cmd" && echo "$1" || echo "$2")
if command -v ${result[0]} &> /dev/null; then
eval "${result[#]}"
else
echo "${result[#]}"
fi
}
Obviously if you want the script to be shorter, you can remove the help text.
EDIT: I was unaware that ? acts as a placeholder character in a file name. Rather than matching any number of characters like *, it matches exactly one character. So, if you have a one-character file in your working directory, bash will try to run the filename as a command. I'm not sure how to get around this. I thought using command "?" ...args might work but, no dice.
Simplest ternary
brew list | grep -q bat && echo 'yes' || echo 'no'
This example will determine if you used homebrew to install bat or not yet
If true you will see "yes"
If false you will see "no"
I added the -q to suppress the grepped string output here, so you only see "yes" or "no"
Really the pattern you seek is this
doSomethingAndCheckTruth && echo 'yes' || echo 'no'
Tested with bash and zsh
Here are some options:
1- Use if then else in one line, it is possible.
if [[ "$2" == "raiz" ]] || [[ "$2" == '.' ]]; then pasta=''; else pasta="$2"; fi
2- Write a function like this:
# Once upon a time, there was an 'iif' function in MS VB ...
function iif(){
# Echoes $2 if 1,banana,true,etc and $3 if false,null,0,''
case $1 in ''|false|FALSE|null|NULL|0) echo $3;;*) echo $2;;esac
}
use inside script like this
result=`iif "$expr" 'yes' 'no'`
# or even interpolating:
result=`iif "$expr" "positive" "negative, because $1 is not true"`
3- Inspired in the case answer, a more flexible and one line use is:
case "$expr" in ''|false|FALSE|null|NULL|0) echo "no...$expr";;*) echo "yep $expr";;esac
# Expression can be something like:
expr=`expr "$var1" '>' "$var2"`
This is much like Vladimir's fine answer. If your "ternary" is a case of "if true, string, if false, empty", then you can simply do:
$ c="it was five"
$ b=3
$ a="$([[ $b -eq 5 ]] && echo "$c")"
$ echo $a
$ b=5
$ a="$([[ $b -eq 5 ]] && echo "$c")"
$ echo $a
it was five
A string-oriented alternative, that uses an array:
spec=(IGNORE REPLACE)
for p in {13..15}; do
echo "$p: ${spec[p==14]}";
done
which outputs:
13: IGNORE
14: REPLACE
15: IGNORE
to answer to : int a = (b == 5) ? c : d;
just write:
b=5
c=1
d=2
let a="(b==5)?c:d"
echo $a # 1
b=6;
c=1;
d=2;
let a="(b==5)?c:d"
echo $a # 2
remember that " expression " is equivalent to $(( expression ))
Two more answers
Here's some ways of thinking about this
bash integer variables
In addition to, dutCh, Vladimir and ghostdog74's corrects answers and because this question is regarding integer and tagged bash:
Is there a way to do something like this
int a = (b == 5) ? c : d;
There is a nice and proper way to work with integers under bash:
declare -i b=' RANDOM % 3 + 4 ' c=100 d=50 a=' b == 5 ? c : d '; echo $b '-->' $a
The output line from this command should by one of:
4 --> 50
5 --> 100
6 --> 50
Of course, declaring integer type of variable is to be done once:
declare -i a b c d
c=100 d=50 b=RANDOM%3+4
a=' b == 5 ? c : d '
echo $a $b
100 5
b=12 a=b==5?c:d
echo $a $b
50 12
Digression: Using a string as a math function:
mathString=' b == 5 ? c : d '
b=5 a=$mathString
echo $a $b
100 5
b=1 a=$mathString
echo $a $b
50 1
Based on parameter expansion and indirection
Following answers from Brad Parks and druid62, here is a way not limited to integer:
c=50 d=100 ar=([5]=c)
read -p 'Enter B: ' b
e=${ar[b]:-d};echo ${!e}
If b==5, then ar[b] is c and indirection do c is 50.
Else ar[any value other than 5] is empty, so parameter expansion will default to d, where indirection give 100.
Same demo using an array instead of an integer
ternArrayDemo(){
local -a c=(foo bar) d=(foo bar baz) e=(empty) ar=([5]=c [2]=d)
local b=${ar[$1]:-e}
b+=[#] # For array indirection
printf ' - %s\n' "${!b}"
}
Then
ternArrayDemo 0
- empty
ternArrayDemo 2
- foo
- bar
- baz
ternArrayDemo 4
- empty
ternArrayDemo 5
- foo
- bar
ternArrayDemo 6
- empty
Or using associative arrays
ternAssocArrayDemo(){
local -a c=(foo bar) d=(foo bar baz) e=(empty)
local -A ar=([foo]=c[#] [bar]=d[#] [baz]=d[-1])
local b=${ar[$1]:-e[#]}
printf ' - %s\n' "${!b}"
}
Then
ternAssocArrayDemo hello
- empty
ternAssocArrayDemo foo
- foo
- bar
ternAssocArrayDemo bar
- foo
- bar
- baz
ternAssocArrayDemo baz
- baz
The top answer [[ $b = 5 ]] && a="$c" || a="$d" should only be used if you are certain there will be no error after the &&, otherwise it will incorrectly excute the part after the ||.
To solve that problem I wrote a ternary function that behaves as it should and it even uses the ? and : operators:
Edit - new solution
Here is my new solution that does not use $IFS nor ev(a/i)l.
function executeCmds()
{
declare s s1 s2 i j k
declare -A cmdParts
declare pIFS=$IFS
IFS=$'\n'
declare results=($(echo "$1" | grep -oP '{ .*? }'))
IFS=$pIFS
s="$1"
for ((i=0; i < ${#results[#]}; i++)); do
s="${s/${results[$i]}/'\0'}"
results[$i]="${results[$i]:2:${#results[$i]}-3}"
results[$i]=$(echo ${results[$i]%%";"*})
done
s="$s&&"
let cmdParts[t]=0
while :; do
i=${cmdParts[t]}
let cmdParts[$i,t]=0
s1="${s%%"&&"*}||"
while :; do
j=${cmdParts[$i,t]}
let cmdParts[$i,$j,t]=0
s2="${s1%%"||"*};"
while :; do
cmdParts[$i,$j,${cmdParts[$i,$j,t]}]=$(echo ${s2%%";"*})
s2=${s2#*";"}
let cmdParts[$i,$j,t]++
[[ $s2 ]] && continue
break
done
s1=${s1#*"||"}
let cmdParts[$i,t]++
[[ $s1 ]] && continue
break
done
let cmdParts[t]++
s=${s#*"&&"}
[[ $s ]] && continue
break
done
declare lastError=0
declare skipNext=false
for ((i=0; i < ${cmdParts[t]}; i++ )) ; do
let j=0
while :; do
let k=0
while :; do
if $skipNext; then
skipNext=false
else
if [[ "${cmdParts[$i,$j,$k]}" == "\0" ]]; then
executeCmds "${results[0]}" && lastError=0 || lastError=1
results=("${results[#]:1}")
elif [[ "${cmdParts[$i,$j,$k]:0:1}" == "!" || "${cmdParts[$i,$j,$k]:0:1}" == "-" ]]; then
[ ${cmdParts[$i,$j,$k]} ] && lastError=0 || lastError=1
else
${cmdParts[$i,$j,$k]}
lastError=$?
fi
if (( k+1 < cmdParts[$i,$j,t] )); then
skipNext=false
elif (( j+1 < cmdParts[$i,t] )); then
(( lastError==0 )) && skipNext=true || skipNext=false
elif (( i+1 < cmdParts[t] )); then
(( lastError==0 )) && skipNext=false || skipNext=true
fi
fi
let k++
[[ $k<${cmdParts[$i,$j,t]} ]] || break
done
let j++
[[ $j<${cmdParts[$i,t]} ]] || break
done
done
return $lastError
}
function t()
{
declare commands="$#"
find="$(echo ?)"
replace='?'
commands="${commands/$find/$replace}"
readarray -d '?' -t statement <<< "$commands"
condition=${statement[0]}
readarray -d ':' -t statement <<< "${statement[1]}"
success="${statement[0]}"
failure="${statement[1]}"
executeCmds "$condition" || { executeCmds "$failure"; return; }
executeCmds "$success"
}
executeCmds separates each command individually, apart from the ones that should be skipped due to the && and || operators. It uses [] whenever a command starts with ! or a flag.
There are two ways to pass commands to it:
Pass the individual commands unquoted but be sure to quote ;, &&, and || operators.
t ls / ? ls qqq '||' echo aaa : echo bbb '&&' ls qq
Pass all the commands quoted:
t 'ls /a ? ls qqq || echo aaa : echo bbb && ls qq'
NB I found no way to pass in && and || operators as parameters unquoted, as they are illegal characters for function names and aliases, and I found no way to override bash operators.
Old solution - uses ev(a/i)l
function t()
{
pIFS=$IFS
IFS="?"
read condition success <<< "$#"
IFS=":"
read success failure <<< "$success"
IFS=$pIFS
eval "$condition" || { eval "$failure" ; return; }
eval "$success"
}
t ls / ? ls qqq '||' echo aaa : echo bbb '&&' ls qq
t 'ls /a ? ls qqq || echo aaa : echo bbb && ls qq'
What about such approach:
# any your function
function check () {
echo 'checking...';
# Change the following to 'true' to emulate a successful execution.
# Note: You can replace check function with any function you wish.
# Be aware in linux false and true are funcitons themselves. see 'help false' for instance.
false;
}
# double check pattern
check && echo 'update' \
|| check || echo 'create';
See how conditional statements works in the RxJs (i.e. filter pipe).
Yes, it is code duplication but more functional approach from my point of view.
I am trying to call an external bash script in an if condition in my main script.
The code of the external script IsArchive:
#!/bin/bash
STR="$1"
if [[ "$STR" == *".zip"* ]] || [[ "$STR" == *".iso"* ]] || [[ "$STR" == *".tar.gxz"* ]] || [[ "$STR" == *".tar.gx"* ]] || [[ "$STR" == *".tar.bz2"* ]] || \
[[ "$STR" == *".tar.gz"* ]] || [[ "$STR" == *".tar.xz"* ]] || [[ "$STR" == *".tgz"* ]] || [[ "$STR" == *".tbz2"* ]]
then
return 0
else
return 1
fi
and I try calling it in my main script as:
elif [[ $Option = "2" ]]
then
if IsArchive "$SourcePath";
then
less -1Ras "$SourcePath" | tee "$OutputFilePath"
#if file is not an archive
else
ls -1Rasl "$SourcePath" | tee "$OutputFilePath"
fi
when I execute the main script I receive the Error: ./script: line 61: IsArchive: command not found
You just need to make sure that the script is in your PATH. Either that, or reference it with either a full path or a relative path. Perhaps you just need to write:
if ./IsArchive "$SourcePath"; then ...
But there are several issues with IsArchive. You cannot return except from a function, so you probably want to use exit 0 and exit 1 instead of return. You probably don't want to consider a name like foo.zipadeedoodah to be an archive, but *".zip"* will match that, so you should probably remove the trailing *. It would be simpler to write it with a case statement:
#!/bin/bash
case "$1" in
*.zip|*.iso|*.tar.gxz|*.tar.gx|*.tar.bz2| \
*.tar.gz|*.tar.xz|*.tgz|*.tbz2) exit 0;;
*) exit 1;;
esac
Well i need to compare all the strings as arguments of this shell script and say if all of them are equals or not so i try this
#!/bin/bash
#Ejercicio_4
if [ $# -ne 6 ]
then
echo Número de argumentos incorrecto
else
if [ $1 == $2 == $3 == $4 == $5 == $6 ]
then
echo Son iguales
else
echo No todas las palabras son iguales
fi
fi
also i try thinks like $# == $1 but this didnt work :(
As long as you're using bash, and comparing text strings, the [[..]] test is safer and more flexible. You can use && and || inside them for and/or operators. So this would work :
#!/bin/bash
#Ejercicio_4
if [ $# -ne 6 ]
then
echo Número de argumentos incorrecto
else
if [[ "$1" == "$2" && "$1" == "$3" && "$1" == "$4" && "$1" == "$5" && "$1" == "$6" ]]
then
echo Son iguales
else
echo No todas las palabras son iguales
fi
fi
Note also that "==" is not actually valid syntax in the old "[" test, although bash accepts it. You should properly only use the single-character "=" in single-bracket tests.
If you're comparing integers, however, you should use ((..)) instead.
But I strongly suggest you not follow this method, since when the number of arguments increase you will have to include a lot more conditions in the if statement which could get cumbersome. So prefer a loop and check the first arg with all others and see if they're equal, like given below :
#!/usr/bin/env bash
if [ $# -ne 6 ]
then
echo "Number of arguments are lesser than required number 6"
else
number_of_elements=$#
arguments=("$#")
first=("$1")
for (( i=1; i<number_of_elements; i++ )); do
if [[ "$first" != ${arguments[i]} ]];then
break
fi
done
if [[ $i -eq $number_of_elements ]];then
echo "All the argument strings are equal"
else
echo "Not equal"
fi
fi
The operator for string equality usually is =. And such chains aren't possible either. Check your man test.
Normally you'd use -a for "and" and check for each argument individually.
...
if [ $1 = $2 -a $1 = $3 -a $1 = $4 -a $1 = $5 -a $1 = $6 ]; then
...
I have been beating my head up about this.
I wanted to loop over a multiline string character by character in bash but was loosing all newlines. First thing I did when i didn't find any obvious error was to run shellcheck on it, it seemed fine with the program.
script.sh:
#!/usr/bin/env bash
transform_single() {
if [[ $# -ne 1 ]]; then
echo 'Error: illegal number of args' 1>&2
fi
equation=''
delim0=0
delim="$1"
while IFS= read -rn1 c; do
if [[ $delim0 -eq 0 ]] && [[ "$c" == "$delim" ]]; then
delim0=1
equation=''
elif [[ $delim0 -ne 0 ]] && [[ "$c" == "$delim" ]]; then
delim0=0
echo -n "$equation" | texmath
elif [[ $delim0 -ne 0 ]]; then
equation="$equation$c"
else
echo -n "$c"
fi
done
}
transform_single '$'
input.txt:
<newlines>
<newlines>
# Hello world!
<newlines>
This is a test string.
<newlines>
invocation:
bash script.sh < input.txt
output:
# Hello world!This is a test string.
excepted output:
The same as in the input file.
Working script
#!/bin/bash
transform_single() {
if (($# != 1)); then echo 'Error: illegal number of args' 1>&2; fi
equation=''
delim0=0
delim="$1"
while IFS= read -r -d $'\0' -n 1 c; do
if ((delim0 == 0)) && [[ "$c" == "$delim" ]]; then
delim0=1
equation=''
elif ((delim0 != 0)) && [[ "$c" == "$delim" ]]; then
delim0=0
echo -n "$equation" | texmath
elif ((delim0 != 0)); then
equation="$equation$c"
else
echo -n "$c"
fi
done
}
transform_single '$'
The issue is that you must set a delimiter to read, a null character, to preserve line feed.
Is there a way to do something like this
int a = (b == 5) ? c : d;
using Bash?
ternary operator ? : is just short form of if/else
case "$b" in
5) a=$c ;;
*) a=$d ;;
esac
Or
[[ $b = 5 ]] && a="$c" || a="$d"
Code:
a=$([ "$b" == 5 ] && echo "$c" || echo "$d")
If the condition is merely checking if a variable is set, there's even a shorter form:
a=${VAR:-20}
will assign to a the value of VAR if VAR is set, otherwise it will assign it the default value 20 -- this can also be a result of an expression.
This approach is technically called "Parameter Expansion".
if [[ $b -eq 5 ]]; then a="$c"; else a="$d"; fi
The cond && op1 || op2 expression suggested in other answers has an inherent bug: if op1 has a nonzero exit status, op2 silently becomes the result; the error will also not be caught in -e mode. So, that expression is only safe to use if op1 can never fail (e.g., :, true if a builtin, or variable assignment without any operations that can fail (like division and OS calls)).
Note the "" quotes. They will prevent translation of all whitespace into single spaces.
Double square brackets as opposed to single ones prevent incorrect operation if $b is equal to a test operator (e.g. "-z"; a workaround with [ is [ "x$b" == "xyes" ] and it only works for string comparison); they also lift the requirement for quoting.
(( a = b==5 ? c : d )) # string + numeric
[ $b == 5 ] && { a=$c; true; } || a=$d
This will avoid executing the part after || by accident when the code between && and || fails.
We can use following three ways in Shell Scripting for ternary operator :
[ $numVar == numVal ] && resVar="Yop" || resVar="Nop"
Or
resVar=$([ $numVar == numVal ] && echo "Yop" || echo "Nop")
Or
(( numVar == numVal ? (resVar=1) : (resVar=0) ))
Update: Extending the answer for string computations with below ready-to-run example. This is making use of second format mentioned above.
$ strVar='abc';resVar=$([[ $strVar == 'abc' ]] && echo "Yop" || echo "Nop");echo $resVar
Yop
$ strVar='aaa';resVar=$([[ $strVar == 'abc' ]] && echo "Yop" || echo "Nop");echo $resVar
Nop
The let command supports most of the basic operators one would need:
let a=b==5?c:d;
Naturally, this works only for assigning variables; it cannot execute other commands.
Here is another option where you only have to specify the variable you're assigning once, and it doesn't matter whether what your assigning is a string or a number:
VARIABLE=`[ test ] && echo VALUE_A || echo VALUE_B`
Just a thought. :)
There's also a very similar but simpler syntax for ternary conditionals in bash:
a=$(( b == 5 ? 123 : 321 ))
The following seems to work for my use cases:
Examples
$ tern 1 YES NO
YES
$ tern 0 YES NO
NO
$ tern 52 YES NO
YES
$ tern 52 YES NO 52
NO
and can be used in a script like so:
RESULT=$(tern 1 YES NO)
echo "The result is $RESULT"
tern
#!/usr/bin/env bash
function show_help()
{
ME=$(basename "$0")
IT=$(cat <<EOF
Returns a ternary result
usage: BOOLEAN VALUE_IF_TRUE VALUE_IF_FALSE
e.g.
# YES
$ME 1 YES NO
# NO
$ME 0 YES NO
# NO
$ME "" YES NO
# YES
$ME "STRING THAT ISNT BLANK OR 0" YES NO
# INFO contains NO
INFO=\$($ME 0 YES NO)
EOF
)
echo "$IT"
echo
exit
}
if [ "$1" = "help" ] || [ "$1" = '?' ] || [ "$1" = "--help" ] || [ "$1" = "h" ]; then
show_help
fi
if [ -z "$3" ]
then
show_help
fi
# Set a default value for what is "false" -> 0
FALSE_VALUE=${4:-0}
function main
{
if [ "$1" == "$FALSE_VALUE" ] || [ "$1" = '' ]; then
echo $3
exit;
fi;
echo $2
}
main "$1" "$2" "$3"
Here's a general solution, that
works with string tests as well
feels rather like an expression
avoids any subtle side effects when the condition fails
Test with numerical comparison
a=$(if [ "$b" -eq 5 ]; then echo "$c"; else echo "$d"; fi)
Test with String comparison
a=$(if [ "$b" = "5" ]; then echo "$c"; else echo "$d"; fi)
(ping -c1 localhost&>/dev/null) && { echo "true"; } || { echo "false"; }
You can use this if you want similar syntax
a=$(( $((b==5)) ? c : d ))
Some people have already presented some nice alternatives. I wanted to get the syntax as close as possible, so I wrote a function named ?.
This allows for the syntax:
[[ $x -eq 1 ]]; ? ./script1 : ./script2
# or
? '[[ $x -eq 1 ]]' ./script1 : ./script2
In both cases, the : is optional. All arguments that have spaces, the values must be quoted since it runs them with eval.
If the <then> or <else> clauses aren't commands, the function echos the proper value.
./script; ? Success! : "Failure :("
The function
?() {
local lastRet=$?
if [[ $1 == --help || $1 == -? ]]; then
echo $'\e[37;1mUsage:\e[0m
? [<condition>] <then> [:] <else>
If \e[37;1m<then>\e[0m and/or \e[37;1m<else>\e[0m are not valid commands, then their values are
printed to stdOut, otherwise they are executed. If \e[37;1m<condition>\e[0m is not
specified, evaluates the return code ($?) of the previous statement.
\e[37;1mExamples:\e[0m
myVar=$(? "[[ $x -eq 1 ]] foo bar)
\e[32;2m# myVar is set to "foo" if x is 1, else it is set to "bar"\e[0m
? "[[ $x = *foo* ]] "cat hello.txt" : "cat goodbye.txt"
\e[32;2m# runs cat on "hello.txt" if x contains the word "foo", else runs cat on
# "goodbye.txt"\e[0m
? "[[ $x -eq 1 ]] "./script1" "./script2"; ? "Succeeded!" "Failed :("
\e[32;2m# If x = 1, runs script1, else script2. If the run script succeeds, prints
# "Succeeded!", else prints "failed".\e[0m'
return
elif ! [[ $# -eq 2 || $# -eq 3 || $# -eq 4 && $3 == ':' ]]; then
1>&2 echo $'\e[37;1m?\e[0m requires 2 to 4 arguments
\e[37;1mUsage\e[0m: ? [<condition>] <then> [:] <else>
Run \e[37;1m? --help\e[0m for more details'
return 1
fi
local cmd
if [[ $# -eq 2 || $# -eq 3 && $2 == ':' ]]; then
cmd="[[ $lastRet -eq 0 ]]"
else
cmd="$1"
shift
fi
if [[ $2 == ':' ]]; then
eval "set -- '$1' '$3'"
fi
local result=$(eval "$cmd" && echo "$1" || echo "$2")
if command -v ${result[0]} &> /dev/null; then
eval "${result[#]}"
else
echo "${result[#]}"
fi
}
Obviously if you want the script to be shorter, you can remove the help text.
EDIT: I was unaware that ? acts as a placeholder character in a file name. Rather than matching any number of characters like *, it matches exactly one character. So, if you have a one-character file in your working directory, bash will try to run the filename as a command. I'm not sure how to get around this. I thought using command "?" ...args might work but, no dice.
Simplest ternary
brew list | grep -q bat && echo 'yes' || echo 'no'
This example will determine if you used homebrew to install bat or not yet
If true you will see "yes"
If false you will see "no"
I added the -q to suppress the grepped string output here, so you only see "yes" or "no"
Really the pattern you seek is this
doSomethingAndCheckTruth && echo 'yes' || echo 'no'
Tested with bash and zsh
Here are some options:
1- Use if then else in one line, it is possible.
if [[ "$2" == "raiz" ]] || [[ "$2" == '.' ]]; then pasta=''; else pasta="$2"; fi
2- Write a function like this:
# Once upon a time, there was an 'iif' function in MS VB ...
function iif(){
# Echoes $2 if 1,banana,true,etc and $3 if false,null,0,''
case $1 in ''|false|FALSE|null|NULL|0) echo $3;;*) echo $2;;esac
}
use inside script like this
result=`iif "$expr" 'yes' 'no'`
# or even interpolating:
result=`iif "$expr" "positive" "negative, because $1 is not true"`
3- Inspired in the case answer, a more flexible and one line use is:
case "$expr" in ''|false|FALSE|null|NULL|0) echo "no...$expr";;*) echo "yep $expr";;esac
# Expression can be something like:
expr=`expr "$var1" '>' "$var2"`
This is much like Vladimir's fine answer. If your "ternary" is a case of "if true, string, if false, empty", then you can simply do:
$ c="it was five"
$ b=3
$ a="$([[ $b -eq 5 ]] && echo "$c")"
$ echo $a
$ b=5
$ a="$([[ $b -eq 5 ]] && echo "$c")"
$ echo $a
it was five
A string-oriented alternative, that uses an array:
spec=(IGNORE REPLACE)
for p in {13..15}; do
echo "$p: ${spec[p==14]}";
done
which outputs:
13: IGNORE
14: REPLACE
15: IGNORE
to answer to : int a = (b == 5) ? c : d;
just write:
b=5
c=1
d=2
let a="(b==5)?c:d"
echo $a # 1
b=6;
c=1;
d=2;
let a="(b==5)?c:d"
echo $a # 2
remember that " expression " is equivalent to $(( expression ))
Two more answers
Here's some ways of thinking about this
bash integer variables
In addition to, dutCh, Vladimir and ghostdog74's corrects answers and because this question is regarding integer and tagged bash:
Is there a way to do something like this
int a = (b == 5) ? c : d;
There is a nice and proper way to work with integers under bash:
declare -i b=' RANDOM % 3 + 4 ' c=100 d=50 a=' b == 5 ? c : d '; echo $b '-->' $a
The output line from this command should by one of:
4 --> 50
5 --> 100
6 --> 50
Of course, declaring integer type of variable is to be done once:
declare -i a b c d
c=100 d=50 b=RANDOM%3+4
a=' b == 5 ? c : d '
echo $a $b
100 5
b=12 a=b==5?c:d
echo $a $b
50 12
Digression: Using a string as a math function:
mathString=' b == 5 ? c : d '
b=5 a=$mathString
echo $a $b
100 5
b=1 a=$mathString
echo $a $b
50 1
Based on parameter expansion and indirection
Following answers from Brad Parks and druid62, here is a way not limited to integer:
c=50 d=100 ar=([5]=c)
read -p 'Enter B: ' b
e=${ar[b]:-d};echo ${!e}
If b==5, then ar[b] is c and indirection do c is 50.
Else ar[any value other than 5] is empty, so parameter expansion will default to d, where indirection give 100.
Same demo using an array instead of an integer
ternArrayDemo(){
local -a c=(foo bar) d=(foo bar baz) e=(empty) ar=([5]=c [2]=d)
local b=${ar[$1]:-e}
b+=[#] # For array indirection
printf ' - %s\n' "${!b}"
}
Then
ternArrayDemo 0
- empty
ternArrayDemo 2
- foo
- bar
- baz
ternArrayDemo 4
- empty
ternArrayDemo 5
- foo
- bar
ternArrayDemo 6
- empty
Or using associative arrays
ternAssocArrayDemo(){
local -a c=(foo bar) d=(foo bar baz) e=(empty)
local -A ar=([foo]=c[#] [bar]=d[#] [baz]=d[-1])
local b=${ar[$1]:-e[#]}
printf ' - %s\n' "${!b}"
}
Then
ternAssocArrayDemo hello
- empty
ternAssocArrayDemo foo
- foo
- bar
ternAssocArrayDemo bar
- foo
- bar
- baz
ternAssocArrayDemo baz
- baz
The top answer [[ $b = 5 ]] && a="$c" || a="$d" should only be used if you are certain there will be no error after the &&, otherwise it will incorrectly excute the part after the ||.
To solve that problem I wrote a ternary function that behaves as it should and it even uses the ? and : operators:
Edit - new solution
Here is my new solution that does not use $IFS nor ev(a/i)l.
function executeCmds()
{
declare s s1 s2 i j k
declare -A cmdParts
declare pIFS=$IFS
IFS=$'\n'
declare results=($(echo "$1" | grep -oP '{ .*? }'))
IFS=$pIFS
s="$1"
for ((i=0; i < ${#results[#]}; i++)); do
s="${s/${results[$i]}/'\0'}"
results[$i]="${results[$i]:2:${#results[$i]}-3}"
results[$i]=$(echo ${results[$i]%%";"*})
done
s="$s&&"
let cmdParts[t]=0
while :; do
i=${cmdParts[t]}
let cmdParts[$i,t]=0
s1="${s%%"&&"*}||"
while :; do
j=${cmdParts[$i,t]}
let cmdParts[$i,$j,t]=0
s2="${s1%%"||"*};"
while :; do
cmdParts[$i,$j,${cmdParts[$i,$j,t]}]=$(echo ${s2%%";"*})
s2=${s2#*";"}
let cmdParts[$i,$j,t]++
[[ $s2 ]] && continue
break
done
s1=${s1#*"||"}
let cmdParts[$i,t]++
[[ $s1 ]] && continue
break
done
let cmdParts[t]++
s=${s#*"&&"}
[[ $s ]] && continue
break
done
declare lastError=0
declare skipNext=false
for ((i=0; i < ${cmdParts[t]}; i++ )) ; do
let j=0
while :; do
let k=0
while :; do
if $skipNext; then
skipNext=false
else
if [[ "${cmdParts[$i,$j,$k]}" == "\0" ]]; then
executeCmds "${results[0]}" && lastError=0 || lastError=1
results=("${results[#]:1}")
elif [[ "${cmdParts[$i,$j,$k]:0:1}" == "!" || "${cmdParts[$i,$j,$k]:0:1}" == "-" ]]; then
[ ${cmdParts[$i,$j,$k]} ] && lastError=0 || lastError=1
else
${cmdParts[$i,$j,$k]}
lastError=$?
fi
if (( k+1 < cmdParts[$i,$j,t] )); then
skipNext=false
elif (( j+1 < cmdParts[$i,t] )); then
(( lastError==0 )) && skipNext=true || skipNext=false
elif (( i+1 < cmdParts[t] )); then
(( lastError==0 )) && skipNext=false || skipNext=true
fi
fi
let k++
[[ $k<${cmdParts[$i,$j,t]} ]] || break
done
let j++
[[ $j<${cmdParts[$i,t]} ]] || break
done
done
return $lastError
}
function t()
{
declare commands="$#"
find="$(echo ?)"
replace='?'
commands="${commands/$find/$replace}"
readarray -d '?' -t statement <<< "$commands"
condition=${statement[0]}
readarray -d ':' -t statement <<< "${statement[1]}"
success="${statement[0]}"
failure="${statement[1]}"
executeCmds "$condition" || { executeCmds "$failure"; return; }
executeCmds "$success"
}
executeCmds separates each command individually, apart from the ones that should be skipped due to the && and || operators. It uses [] whenever a command starts with ! or a flag.
There are two ways to pass commands to it:
Pass the individual commands unquoted but be sure to quote ;, &&, and || operators.
t ls / ? ls qqq '||' echo aaa : echo bbb '&&' ls qq
Pass all the commands quoted:
t 'ls /a ? ls qqq || echo aaa : echo bbb && ls qq'
NB I found no way to pass in && and || operators as parameters unquoted, as they are illegal characters for function names and aliases, and I found no way to override bash operators.
Old solution - uses ev(a/i)l
function t()
{
pIFS=$IFS
IFS="?"
read condition success <<< "$#"
IFS=":"
read success failure <<< "$success"
IFS=$pIFS
eval "$condition" || { eval "$failure" ; return; }
eval "$success"
}
t ls / ? ls qqq '||' echo aaa : echo bbb '&&' ls qq
t 'ls /a ? ls qqq || echo aaa : echo bbb && ls qq'
What about such approach:
# any your function
function check () {
echo 'checking...';
# Change the following to 'true' to emulate a successful execution.
# Note: You can replace check function with any function you wish.
# Be aware in linux false and true are funcitons themselves. see 'help false' for instance.
false;
}
# double check pattern
check && echo 'update' \
|| check || echo 'create';
See how conditional statements works in the RxJs (i.e. filter pipe).
Yes, it is code duplication but more functional approach from my point of view.