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I just can't figure out how do I make sure an argument passed to my script is a number or not.
All I want to do is something like this:
test *isnumber* $1 && VAR=$1 || echo "need a number"
Any help?
One approach is to use a regular expression, like so:
re='^[0-9]+$'
if ! [[ $yournumber =~ $re ]] ; then
echo "error: Not a number" >&2; exit 1
fi
If the value is not necessarily an integer, consider amending the regex appropriately; for instance:
^[0-9]+([.][0-9]+)?$
...or, to handle numbers with a sign:
^[+-]?[0-9]+([.][0-9]+)?$
Without bashisms (works even in the System V sh),
case $string in
''|*[!0-9]*) echo bad ;;
*) echo good ;;
esac
This rejects empty strings and strings containing non-digits, accepting everything else.
Negative or floating-point numbers need some additional work. An idea is to exclude - / . in the first "bad" pattern and add more "bad" patterns containing the inappropriate uses of them (?*-* / *.*.*)
The following solution can also be used in basic shells such as Bourne without the need for regular expressions. Basically any numeric value evaluation operations using non-numbers will result in an error which will be implicitly considered as false in shell:
"$var" -eq "$var"
as in:
#!/bin/bash
var=a
if [ -n "$var" ] && [ "$var" -eq "$var" ] 2>/dev/null; then
echo number
else
echo not a number
fi
You can can also test for $? the return code of the operation which is more explicit:
[ -n "$var" ] && [ "$var" -eq "$var" ] 2>/dev/null
if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then
echo $var is not number
fi
Redirection of standard error is there to hide the "integer expression expected" message that bash prints out in case we do not have a number.
CAVEATS (thanks to the comments below):
Numbers with decimal points are not identified as valid "numbers"
Using [[ ]] instead of [ ] will always evaluate to true
Most non-Bash shells will always evaluate this expression as true
The behavior in Bash is undocumented and may therefore change without warning
If the value includes spaces after the number (e.g. "1 a") produces error, like bash: [[: 1 a: syntax error in expression (error token is "a")
If the value is the same as var-name (e.g. i="i"), produces error, like bash: [[: i: expression recursion level exceeded (error token is "i")
Nobody suggested bash's extended pattern matching:
[[ $1 == ?(-)+([0-9]) ]] && echo "$1 is an integer"
or using a POSIX character class:
[[ $1 == ?(-)+([[:digit:]]) ]] && echo "$1 is an integer"
This tests if a number is a non-negative integer. It is shell independent (i.e. without bashisms) and uses only shell built-ins:
[ ! -z "${num##*[!0-9]*}" ] && echo "is a number" || echo "is not a number";
A previous version of this answer proposed:
[ -z "${num##[0-9]*}" ] && echo "is a number" || echo "is not a number";
but this is INCORRECT since it accepts any string starting with a digit, as jilles suggested.
Some performance and compatibility hints
There are some strongly different methods regarding different kinds of tests.
I reviewed most relevant methods and built this comparison.
Unsigned Integer is_uint()
These functions implement code to assess whether an expression is an unsigned integer, i.e. consists entirely of digits.
Using parameter expansion
(This was my approach before all this!)
isuint_Parm() { [ "$1" ] && [ -z "${1//[0-9]}" ] ;}
Using fork to grep
isuint_Grep() { grep -qE '^[0-9]+$' <<<"$1"; }
I test this method only once because it's very slow. This is just there to show what not to do.
Using bash integer capabilities
isuint_Bash() { (( 10#$1 >= 0 )) 2>/dev/null ;}
or better:
isuint_Bash() { set -- ${1//[+-]/.};(( 10#$1 >= 0 )) 2>/dev/null ;}
Using case
isuint_Case() { case $1 in ''|*[!0-9]*) return 1;;esac;}
Using bash's regex
isuint_Regx() { [[ $1 =~ ^[0-9]+$ ]] ;}
Signed integer is_int()
These functions implement code to assess whether an expression is a signed integer, i.e. as above but permitting an optional sign before the number.
Using parameter expansion
isint_Parm() { local chk=${1#[+-]}; [ "$chk" ] && [ -z "${chk//[0-9]}" ] ;}
Using bash integer capabilities
isint_Bash() { set -- "${1//[!+-]}" ${1#${1//[!+-]}};
(( ( 0 ${1:-+} 10#$2 ) ? 1:1 )) 2>/dev/null ;}
Using case
isint_Case() { case ${1#[-+]} in ''|*[!0-9]*) return 1;;esac;}
Using bash's regex
isint_Regx() { [[ $1 =~ ^[+-]?[0-9]+$ ]] ;}
Number (unsigned float) is_num()
These functions implement code to assess whether an expression is a floating-point number, i.e. as above but permitting an optional decimal point and additional digits after it. This does not attempt to cover numeric expressions in scientific notation (e.g. 1.0234E-12).
Using parameter expansion
isnum_Parm() { local ck=${1#[+-]};ck=${ck/.};[ "$ck" ]&&[ -z "${ck//[0-9]}" ];}
Using bash's regex
isnum_Regx() { [[ $1 =~ ^[+-]?([0-9]+([.][0-9]*)?|\.[0-9]+)$ ]] ;}
Using case
isnum_Case() { case ${1#[-+]} in ''|.|*[!0-9.]*|*.*.*) return 1;; esac ;}
Tests of concepts
(You could copy/paste this test code after previous declared functions.)
testcases=(
0 1 42 -3 +42 +3. .9 3.14 +3.141 -31.4 '' . 3-3 3.1.4 3a a3 blah 'Good day!'
);printf '%-12s %4s %4s %4s %4s %4s %4s %4s %4s %4s %4s %4s %4s\n' Value\\Func \
U{Prm,Grp,Bsh,Cse,Rgx} I{Prm,Bsh,Cse,Rgx} N{Prm,Cse,Rgx};\
for var in "${testcases[#]}";do
outstr='';
for func in isuint_{Parm,Grep,Bash,Case,Regx} isint_{Parm,Bash,Case,Regx} \
isnum_{Parm,Case,Regx};do
if $func "$var"; then
outstr+=' ##'
else
outstr+=' --'
fi
done
printf '%-11s %s\n' "$var" "$outstr"
done
Should output:
Value\Func UPrm UGrp UBsh UCse URgx IPrm IBsh ICse IRgx NPrm NCse NRgx
0 ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ##
1 ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ##
42 ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ##
-3 -- -- -- -- -- ## ## ## ## ## ## ##
+42 -- -- -- -- -- ## ## ## ## ## ## ##
+3. -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- ## ## ##
.9 -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- ## ## ##
3.14 -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- ## ## ##
+3.141 -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- ## ## ##
-31.4 -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- ## ## ##
-- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
. -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
3-3 -- -- -- -- -- -- ## -- -- -- -- --
3.1.4 -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
3a -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
a3 -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
blah -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
Good day! -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
I hope! (Note: uint_bash seem not perfect!)
Performance comparison
Then I've built this test function:
testFunc() {
local tests=1000 start=${EPOCHREALTIME//.}
for ((;tests--;)) ;do
"$1" "$3"
done
printf -v "$2" %u $((${EPOCHREALTIME//.}-start))
}
percent(){ local p=00$((${1}00000/$2));printf -v "$3" %.2f%% ${p::-3}.${p: -3};}
sortedTests() {
local func NaNTime NumTime ftyp="$1" nTest="$2" tTest="$3" min i pct line
local -a order=()
shift 3
for func ;do
testFunc "${ftyp}_$func" NaNTime "$tTest"
testFunc "${ftyp}_$func" NumTime "$nTest"
order[NaNTime+NumTime]=${ftyp}_$func\ $NumTime\ $NaNTime
done
printf '%-12s %11s %11s %14s\n' Function Number NaN Total
min="${!order[*]}" min=${min%% *}
for i in "${!order[#]}";do
read -ra line <<<"${order[i]}"
percent "$i" "$min" pct
printf '%-12s %9d\U00B5s %9d\U00B5s %12d\U00B5s %9s\n' \
"${line[#]}" "$i" "$pct"
done
}
I could run in this way:
sortedTests isuint "This is not a number." 31415926535897932384 \
Case Grep Parm Bash Regx ;\
sortedTests isint "This is not a number." 31415926535897932384 \
Case Parm Bash Regx ;\
sortedTests isnum "This string is clearly not a number..." \
3.141592653589793238462643383279502884 Case Parm Regx
On my host, this shows somthing like:
Function Number NaN Total
isuint_Case 6499µs 6566µs 13065µs 100.00%
isuint_Parm 26687µs 31600µs 58287µs 446.13%
isuint_Regx 36511µs 40181µs 76692µs 587.00%
isuint_Bash 43819µs 40311µs 84130µs 643.93%
isuint_Grep 1298265µs 1224112µs 2522377µs 19306.37%
Function Number NaN Total
isint_Case 22687µs 21914µs 44601µs 100.00%
isint_Parm 35765µs 34428µs 70193µs 157.38%
isint_Regx 36949µs 42319µs 79268µs 177.73%
isint_Bash 55368µs 65095µs 120463µs 270.09%
Function Number NaN Total
isnum_Case 23313µs 23446µs 46759µs 100.00%
isnum_Parm 35677µs 42169µs 77846µs 166.48%
isnum_Regx 51864µs 69502µs 121366µs 259.56%
You could download full isnum comparission script here or full isnum comparission script as text here., (with UTF8 and LATIN handling).
Conclusion
case way is clearly the quickest! About 3x quicker than regex and 2x quicker than using parameter expansion.
forks (to grep or any binaries) are to be avoided when not needed.
case method has become my favored choice:
is_uint() { case $1 in '' | *[!0-9]* ) return 1;; esac ;}
is_int() { case ${1#[-+]} in '' | *[!0-9]* ) return 1;; esac ;}
is_unum() { case $1 in '' | . | *[!0-9.]* | *.*.* ) return 1;; esac ;}
is_num() { case ${1#[-+]} in '' | . | *[!0-9.]* | *.*.* ) return 1;; esac ;}
About compatibility
For this, I wrote a little test script based on previous tests, with:
for shell in bash dash 'busybox sh' ksh zsh "$#";do
printf "%-12s " "${shell%% *}"
$shell < <(testScript) 2>&1 | xargs
done
This shows:
bash Success
dash Success
busybox Success
ksh Success
zsh Success
As I know other bash based solution like regex and bash's integer won't work in many other shells and forks are resource expensive, I would prefer the case way
(just before parameter expansion which is mostly compatible too).
I'm surprised at the solutions directly parsing number formats in shell.
shell is not well suited to this, being a DSL for controlling files and processes.
There are ample number parsers a little lower down, for example:
isdecimal() {
# filter octal/hex/ord()
num=$(printf '%s' "$1" | sed "s/^0*\([1-9]\)/\1/; s/'/^/")
test "$num" && printf '%f' "$num" >/dev/null 2>&1
}
Change '%f' to whatever particular format you require.
I was looking at the answers and...
realized that nobody thought about FLOAT numbers (with dot)!
Using grep is great too.
-E means extended regexp
-q means quiet (doesn't echo)
-qE is the combination of both.
To test directly in the command line:
$ echo "32" | grep -E ^\-?[0-9]?\.?[0-9]+$
# answer is: 32
$ echo "3a2" | grep -E ^\-?[0-9]?\.?[0-9]+$
# answer is empty (false)
$ echo ".5" | grep -E ^\-?[0-9]?\.?[0-9]+$
# answer .5
$ echo "3.2" | grep -E ^\-?[0-9]?\.?[0-9]+$
# answer is 3.2
Using in a bash script:
check=`echo "$1" | grep -E ^\-?[0-9]*\.?[0-9]+$`
if [ "$check" != '' ]; then
# it IS numeric
echo "Yeap!"
else
# it is NOT numeric.
echo "nooop"
fi
To match JUST integers, use this:
# change check line to:
check=`echo "$1" | grep -E ^\-?[0-9]+$`
Just a follow up to #mary. But because I don't have enough rep, couldn't post this as a comment to that post. Anyways, here is what I used:
isnum() { awk -v a="$1" 'BEGIN {print (a == a + 0)}'; }
The function will return "1" if the argument is a number, otherwise will return "0". This works for integers as well as floats. Usage is something like:
n=-2.05e+07
res=`isnum "$n"`
if [ "$res" == "1" ]; then
echo "$n is a number"
else
echo "$n is not a number"
fi
test -z "${i//[0-9]}" && echo digits || echo no no no
${i//[0-9]} replaces any digit in the value of $i with an empty string, see man -P 'less +/parameter\/' bash. -z checks if resulting string has zero length.
if you also want to exclude the case when $i is empty, you could use one of these constructions:
test -n "$i" && test -z "${i//[0-9]}" && echo digits || echo not a number
[[ -n "$i" && -z "${i//[0-9]}" ]] && echo digits || echo not a number
For my problem, I only needed to ensure that a user doesn't accidentally enter some text thus I tried to keep it simple and readable
isNumber() {
(( $1 )) 2>/dev/null
}
According to the man page this pretty much does what I want
If the value of the expression is non-zero, the return status is 0
To prevent nasty error messages for strings that "might be numbers" I ignore the error output
$ (( 2s ))
bash: ((: 2s: value too great for base (error token is "2s")
This can be achieved by using grep to see if the variable in question matches an extended regular expression.
Test integer 1120:
yournumber=1120
if echo "$yournumber" | grep -qE '^[0-9]+$'; then
echo "Valid number."
else
echo "Error: not a number."
fi
Output: Valid number.
Test non-integer 1120a:
yournumber=1120a
if echo "$yournumber" | grep -qE '^[0-9]+$'; then
echo "Valid number."
else
echo "Error: not a number."
fi
Output: Error: not a number.
Explanation
The grep, the -E switch allows us to use extended regular expression '^[0-9]+$'. This regular expression means the variable should only [] contain the numbers 0-9 zero through nine from the ^ beginning to the $ end of the variable and should have at least + one character.
The grep, the -q quiet switch turns off any output whether or not it finds anything.
if checks the exit status of grep. Exit status 0 means success and anything greater means an error. The grep command has an exit status of 0 if it finds a match and 1 when it doesn't;
So putting it all together, in the if test, we echo the variable $yournumber and | pipe it to grep which with the -q switch silently matches the -E extended regular expression '^[0-9]+$' expression. The exit status of grep will be 0 if grep successfully found a match and 1 if it didn't. If succeeded to match, we echo "Valid number.". If it failed to match, we echo "Error: not a number.".
For Floats or Doubles
We can just change the regular expression from '^[0-9]+$' to '^[0-9]*\.?[0-9]+$' for floats or doubles.
Test float 1120.01:
yournumber=1120.01
if echo "$yournumber" | grep -qE '^[0-9]*\.?[0-9]+$'; then
echo "Valid number."
else
echo "Error: not a number."
fi
Output: Valid number.
Test float 11.20.01:
yournumber=11.20.01
if echo "$yournumber" | grep -qE '^[0-9]*\.?[0-9]+$'; then
echo "Valid number."
else
echo "Error: not a number."
fi
Output: Error: not a number.
For Negatives
To allow negative integers, just change the regular expression from '^[0-9]+$' to '^\-?[0-9]+$'.
To allow negative floats or doubles, just change the regular expression from '^[0-9]*\.?[0-9]+$' to '^\-?[0-9]*\.?[0-9]+$'.
Old question, but I just wanted to tack on my solution. This one doesn't require any strange shell tricks, or rely on something that hasn't been around forever.
if [ -n "$(printf '%s\n' "$var" | sed 's/[0-9]//g')" ]; then
echo 'is not numeric'
else
echo 'is numeric'
fi
Basically it just removes all digits from the input, and if you're left with a non-zero-length string then it wasn't a number.
I would try this:
printf "%g" "$var" &> /dev/null
if [[ $? == 0 ]] ; then
echo "$var is a number."
else
echo "$var is not a number."
fi
Note: this recognizes nan and inf as number.
Can't comment yet so I'll add my own answer, which is an extension to glenn jackman's answer using bash pattern matching.
My original need was to identify numbers and distinguish integers and floats. The function definitions deducted to:
function isInteger() {
[[ ${1} == ?(-)+([0-9]) ]]
}
function isFloat() {
[[ ${1} == ?(-)#(+([0-9]).*([0-9])|*([0-9]).+([0-9]))?(E?(-|+)+([0-9])) ]]
}
I used unit testing (with shUnit2) to validate my patterns worked as intended:
oneTimeSetUp() {
int_values="0 123 -0 -123"
float_values="0.0 0. .0 -0.0 -0. -.0 \
123.456 123. .456 -123.456 -123. -.456
123.456E08 123.E08 .456E08 -123.456E08 -123.E08 -.456E08 \
123.456E+08 123.E+08 .456E+08 -123.456E+08 -123.E+08 -.456E+08 \
123.456E-08 123.E-08 .456E-08 -123.456E-08 -123.E-08 -.456E-08"
}
testIsIntegerIsFloat() {
local value
for value in ${int_values}
do
assertTrue "${value} should be tested as integer" "isInteger ${value}"
assertFalse "${value} should not be tested as float" "isFloat ${value}"
done
for value in ${float_values}
do
assertTrue "${value} should be tested as float" "isFloat ${value}"
assertFalse "${value} should not be tested as integer" "isInteger ${value}"
done
}
Notes: The isFloat pattern can be modified to be more tolerant about decimal point (#(.,)) and the E symbol (#(Ee)). My unit tests test only values that are either integer or float, but not any invalid input.
[[ $1 =~ ^-?[0-9]+$ ]] && echo "number"
Don't forget - to include negative numbers!
A clear answer has already been given by #charles Dufy and others.
A pure bash solution would be using the following :
string="-12,345"
if [[ "$string" =~ ^-?[0-9]+[.,]?[0-9]*$ ]]
then
echo $string is a number
else
echo $string is not a number
fi
Although for real numbers it is not mandatory to have a number before the radix point.
To provide a more thorough support of floating numbers and scientific notation (many programs in C/Fortran or else will export float this way), a useful addition to this line would be the following :
string="1.2345E-67"
if [[ "$string" =~ ^-?[0-9]*[.,]?[0-9]*[eE]?-?[0-9]+$ ]]
then
echo $string is a number
else
echo $string is not a number
fi
Thus leading to a way to differentiate types of number, if you are looking for any specific type :
string="-12,345"
if [[ "$string" =~ ^-?[0-9]+$ ]]
then
echo $string is an integer
elif [[ "$string" =~ ^-?[0-9]*[.,]?[0-9]*$ ]]
then
echo $string is a float
elif [[ "$string" =~ ^-?[0-9]*[.,]?[0-9]*[eE]-?[0-9]+$ ]]
then
echo $string is a scientific number
else
echo $string is not a number
fi
Note: We could list the syntactical requirements for decimal and scientific notation, one being to allow comma as radix point, as well as ".". We would then assert that there must be only one such radix point. There can be two +/- signs in an [Ee] float. I have learned a few more rules from Aulu's work, and tested against bad strings such as '' '-' '-E-1' '0-0'. Here are my regex/substring/expr tools that seem to be holding up:
parse_num() {
local r=`expr "$1" : '.*\([.,]\)' 2>/dev/null | tr -d '\n'`
nat='^[+-]?[0-9]+[.,]?$' \
dot="${1%[.,]*}${r}${1##*[.,]}" \
float='^[\+\-]?([.,0-9]+[Ee]?[-+]?|)[0-9]+$'
[[ "$1" == $dot ]] && [[ "$1" =~ $float ]] || [[ "$1" =~ $nat ]]
} # usage: parse_num -123.456
I use expr. It returns a non-zero if you try to add a zero to a non-numeric value:
if expr -- "$number" + 0 > /dev/null 2>&1
then
echo "$number is a number"
else
echo "$number isn't a number"
fi
It might be possible to use bc if you need non-integers, but I don't believe bc has quite the same behavior. Adding zero to a non-number gets you zero and it returns a value of zero too. Maybe you can combine bc and expr. Use bc to add zero to $number. If the answer is 0, then try expr to verify that $number isn't zero.
One simple way is to check whether it contains non-digit characters. You replace all digit characters with nothing and check for length. If there's length it's not a number.
if [[ ! -n ${input//[0-9]/} ]]; then
echo "Input Is A Number"
fi
http://tldp.org/LDP/Bash-Beginners-Guide/html/sect_04_03.html
You can also use bash's character classes.
if [[ $VAR = *[[:digit:]]* ]]; then
echo "$VAR is numeric"
else
echo "$VAR is not numeric"
fi
Numerics will include space, the decimal point, and "e" or "E" for floating point.
But, if you specify a C-style hex number, i.e. "0xffff" or "0XFFFF", [[:digit:]] returns true. A bit of a trap here, bash allows you do to something like "0xAZ00" and still count it as a digit (isn't this from some weird quirk of GCC compilers that let you use 0x notation for bases other than 16???)
You might want to test for "0x" or "0X" before testing if it's a numeric if your input is completely untrusted, unless you want to accept hex numbers. That would be accomplished by:
if [[ ${VARIABLE:1:2} = "0x" ]] || [[ ${VARIABLE:1:2} = "0X" ]]; then echo "$VAR is not numeric"; fi
As i had to tamper with this lately and like karttu's appoach with the unit test the most. I revised the code and added some other solutions too, try it out yourself to see the results:
#!/bin/bash
# N={0,1,2,3,...} by syntaxerror
function isNaturalNumber()
{
[[ ${1} =~ ^[0-9]+$ ]]
}
# Z={...,-2,-1,0,1,2,...} by karttu
function isInteger()
{
[[ ${1} == ?(-)+([0-9]) ]]
}
# Q={...,-½,-¼,0.0,¼,½,...} by karttu
function isFloat()
{
[[ ${1} == ?(-)#(+([0-9]).*([0-9])|*([0-9]).+([0-9]))?(E?(-|+)+([0-9])) ]]
}
# R={...,-1,-½,-¼,0.E+n,¼,½,1,...}
function isNumber()
{
isNaturalNumber $1 || isInteger $1 || isFloat $1
}
bools=("TRUE" "FALSE")
int_values="0 123 -0 -123"
float_values="0.0 0. .0 -0.0 -0. -.0 \
123.456 123. .456 -123.456 -123. -.456 \
123.456E08 123.E08 .456E08 -123.456E08 -123.E08 -.456E08 \
123.456E+08 123.E+08 .456E+08 -123.456E+08 -123.E+08 -.456E+08 \
123.456E-08 123.E-08 .456E-08 -123.456E-08 -123.E-08 -.456E-08"
false_values="blah meh mooh blah5 67mooh a123bc"
for value in ${int_values} ${float_values} ${false_values}
do
printf " %5s=%-30s" $(isNaturalNumber $value) ${bools[$?]} $(printf "isNaturalNumber(%s)" $value)
printf "%5s=%-24s" $(isInteger $value) ${bools[$?]} $(printf "isInteger(%s)" $value)
printf "%5s=%-24s" $(isFloat $value) ${bools[$?]} $(printf "isFloat(%s)" $value)
printf "%5s=%-24s\n" $(isNumber $value) ${bools[$?]} $(printf "isNumber(%s)" $value)
done
So isNumber() includes dashes, commas and exponential notation and therefore returns TRUE on integers & floats where on the other hand isFloat() returns FALSE on integer values and isInteger() likewise returns FALSE on floats. For your convenience all as one liners:
isNaturalNumber() { [[ ${1} =~ ^[0-9]+$ ]]; }
isInteger() { [[ ${1} == ?(-)+([0-9]) ]]; }
isFloat() { [[ ${1} == ?(-)#(+([0-9]).*([0-9])|*([0-9]).+([0-9]))?(E?(-|+)+([0-9])) ]]; }
isNumber() { isNaturalNumber $1 || isInteger $1 || isFloat $1; }
I use printf as other answers mentioned, if you supply the format string "%f" or "%i" printf will do the checking for you. Easier than reinventing the checks, the syntax is simple and short and printf is ubiquitous. So its a decent choice in my opinion - you can also use the following idea to check for a range of things, its not only useful for checking numbers.
declare -r CHECK_FLOAT="%f"
declare -r CHECK_INTEGER="%i"
## <arg 1> Number - Number to check
## <arg 2> String - Number type to check
## <arg 3> String - Error message
function check_number() {
local NUMBER="${1}"
local NUMBER_TYPE="${2}"
local ERROR_MESG="${3}"
local -i PASS=1
local -i FAIL=0
case "${NUMBER_TYPE}" in
"${CHECK_FLOAT}")
if ((! $(printf "${CHECK_FLOAT}" "${NUMBER}" &>/dev/random;echo $?))); then
echo "${PASS}"
else
echo "${ERROR_MESG}" 1>&2
echo "${FAIL}"
fi
;;
"${CHECK_INTEGER}")
if ((! $(printf "${CHECK_INTEGER}" "${NUMBER}" &>/dev/random;echo $?))); then
echo "${PASS}"
else
echo "${ERROR_MESG}" 1>&2
echo "${FAIL}"
fi
;;
*)
echo "Invalid number type format: ${NUMBER_TYPE} to check_number()." 1>&2
echo "${FAIL}"
;;
esac
}
>$ var=45
>$ (($(check_number $var "${CHECK_INTEGER}" "Error: Found $var - An integer is required."))) && { echo "$var+5" | bc; }
I like Alberto Zaccagni's answer.
if [ "$var" -eq "$var" ] 2>/dev/null; then
Important prerequisites:
- no subshells spawned
- no RE parsers invoked
- most shell applications don't use real numbers
But if $var is complex (e.g. an associative array access), and if the number will be a non-negative integer (most use-cases), then this is perhaps more efficient?
if [ "$var" -ge 0 ] 2> /dev/null; then ..
To catch negative numbers:
if [[ $1 == ?(-)+([0-9.]) ]]
then
echo number
else
echo not a number
fi
You could use "let" too like this :
[ ~]$ var=1
[ ~]$ let $var && echo "It's a number" || echo "It's not a number"
It\'s a number
[ ~]$ var=01
[ ~]$ let $var && echo "It's a number" || echo "It's not a number"
It\'s a number
[ ~]$ var=toto
[ ~]$ let $var && echo "It's a number" || echo "It's not a number"
It\'s not a number
[ ~]$
But I prefer use the "=~" Bash 3+ operator like some answers in this thread.
Almost as you want in syntax. Just need a function isnumber:
#!/usr/bin/bash
isnumber(){
num=$1
if [ -z "${num##*[!0-9]*}" ];
then return 1
else
return 0
fi
}
$(isnumber $1) && VAR=$1 || echo "need a number";
echo "VAR is $VAR"
test:
$ ./isnumtest 10
VAR is 10
$ ./isnumtest abc10
need a number
VAR is
printf '%b' "-123\nABC" | tr '[:space:]' '_' | grep -q '^-\?[[:digit:]]\+$' && echo "Integer." || echo "NOT integer."
Remove the -\? in grep matching pattern if you don't accept negative integer.
Did the same thing here with a regular expression that test the entire part and decimals part, separated with a dot.
re="^[0-9]*[.]{0,1}[0-9]*$"
if [[ $1 =~ $re ]]
then
echo "is numeric"
else
echo "Naahh, not numeric"
fi
Easy-to-understand and compatible solution, with test command :
test $myVariable -eq 0 2>/dev/null
if [ $? -le 1 ]; then echo 'ok'; else echo 'KO'; fi
If myVariable = 0, the return code is 0
If myVariable > 0, the return code is 1
If myVariable is not an integer, the return code is 2
I use the following (for integers):
## ##### constants
##
## __TRUE - true (0)
## __FALSE - false (1)
##
typeset -r __TRUE=0
typeset -r __FALSE=1
## --------------------------------------
## isNumber
## check if a value is an integer
## usage: isNumber testValue
## returns: ${__TRUE} - testValue is a number else not
##
function isNumber {
typeset TESTVAR="$(echo "$1" | sed 's/[0-9]*//g' )"
[ "${TESTVAR}"x = ""x ] && return ${__TRUE} || return ${__FALSE}
}
isNumber $1
if [ $? -eq ${__TRUE} ] ; then
print "is a number"
fi
Is there a way to do something like this
int a = (b == 5) ? c : d;
using Bash?
ternary operator ? : is just short form of if/else
case "$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 just can't figure out how do I make sure an argument passed to my script is a number or not.
All I want to do is something like this:
test *isnumber* $1 && VAR=$1 || echo "need a number"
Any help?
One approach is to use a regular expression, like so:
re='^[0-9]+$'
if ! [[ $yournumber =~ $re ]] ; then
echo "error: Not a number" >&2; exit 1
fi
If the value is not necessarily an integer, consider amending the regex appropriately; for instance:
^[0-9]+([.][0-9]+)?$
...or, to handle numbers with a sign:
^[+-]?[0-9]+([.][0-9]+)?$
Without bashisms (works even in the System V sh),
case $string in
''|*[!0-9]*) echo bad ;;
*) echo good ;;
esac
This rejects empty strings and strings containing non-digits, accepting everything else.
Negative or floating-point numbers need some additional work. An idea is to exclude - / . in the first "bad" pattern and add more "bad" patterns containing the inappropriate uses of them (?*-* / *.*.*)
The following solution can also be used in basic shells such as Bourne without the need for regular expressions. Basically any numeric value evaluation operations using non-numbers will result in an error which will be implicitly considered as false in shell:
"$var" -eq "$var"
as in:
#!/bin/bash
var=a
if [ -n "$var" ] && [ "$var" -eq "$var" ] 2>/dev/null; then
echo number
else
echo not a number
fi
You can can also test for $? the return code of the operation which is more explicit:
[ -n "$var" ] && [ "$var" -eq "$var" ] 2>/dev/null
if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then
echo $var is not number
fi
Redirection of standard error is there to hide the "integer expression expected" message that bash prints out in case we do not have a number.
CAVEATS (thanks to the comments below):
Numbers with decimal points are not identified as valid "numbers"
Using [[ ]] instead of [ ] will always evaluate to true
Most non-Bash shells will always evaluate this expression as true
The behavior in Bash is undocumented and may therefore change without warning
If the value includes spaces after the number (e.g. "1 a") produces error, like bash: [[: 1 a: syntax error in expression (error token is "a")
If the value is the same as var-name (e.g. i="i"), produces error, like bash: [[: i: expression recursion level exceeded (error token is "i")
Nobody suggested bash's extended pattern matching:
[[ $1 == ?(-)+([0-9]) ]] && echo "$1 is an integer"
or using a POSIX character class:
[[ $1 == ?(-)+([[:digit:]]) ]] && echo "$1 is an integer"
This tests if a number is a non-negative integer. It is shell independent (i.e. without bashisms) and uses only shell built-ins:
[ ! -z "${num##*[!0-9]*}" ] && echo "is a number" || echo "is not a number";
A previous version of this answer proposed:
[ -z "${num##[0-9]*}" ] && echo "is a number" || echo "is not a number";
but this is INCORRECT since it accepts any string starting with a digit, as jilles suggested.
Some performance and compatibility hints
There are some strongly different methods regarding different kinds of tests.
I reviewed most relevant methods and built this comparison.
Unsigned Integer is_uint()
These functions implement code to assess whether an expression is an unsigned integer, i.e. consists entirely of digits.
Using parameter expansion
(This was my approach before all this!)
isuint_Parm() { [ "$1" ] && [ -z "${1//[0-9]}" ] ;}
Using fork to grep
isuint_Grep() { grep -qE '^[0-9]+$' <<<"$1"; }
I test this method only once because it's very slow. This is just there to show what not to do.
Using bash integer capabilities
isuint_Bash() { (( 10#$1 >= 0 )) 2>/dev/null ;}
or better:
isuint_Bash() { set -- ${1//[+-]/.};(( 10#$1 >= 0 )) 2>/dev/null ;}
Using case
isuint_Case() { case $1 in ''|*[!0-9]*) return 1;;esac;}
Using bash's regex
isuint_Regx() { [[ $1 =~ ^[0-9]+$ ]] ;}
Signed integer is_int()
These functions implement code to assess whether an expression is a signed integer, i.e. as above but permitting an optional sign before the number.
Using parameter expansion
isint_Parm() { local chk=${1#[+-]}; [ "$chk" ] && [ -z "${chk//[0-9]}" ] ;}
Using bash integer capabilities
isint_Bash() { set -- "${1//[!+-]}" ${1#${1//[!+-]}};
(( ( 0 ${1:-+} 10#$2 ) ? 1:1 )) 2>/dev/null ;}
Using case
isint_Case() { case ${1#[-+]} in ''|*[!0-9]*) return 1;;esac;}
Using bash's regex
isint_Regx() { [[ $1 =~ ^[+-]?[0-9]+$ ]] ;}
Number (unsigned float) is_num()
These functions implement code to assess whether an expression is a floating-point number, i.e. as above but permitting an optional decimal point and additional digits after it. This does not attempt to cover numeric expressions in scientific notation (e.g. 1.0234E-12).
Using parameter expansion
isnum_Parm() { local ck=${1#[+-]};ck=${ck/.};[ "$ck" ]&&[ -z "${ck//[0-9]}" ];}
Using bash's regex
isnum_Regx() { [[ $1 =~ ^[+-]?([0-9]+([.][0-9]*)?|\.[0-9]+)$ ]] ;}
Using case
isnum_Case() { case ${1#[-+]} in ''|.|*[!0-9.]*|*.*.*) return 1;; esac ;}
Tests of concepts
(You could copy/paste this test code after previous declared functions.)
testcases=(
0 1 42 -3 +42 +3. .9 3.14 +3.141 -31.4 '' . 3-3 3.1.4 3a a3 blah 'Good day!'
);printf '%-12s %4s %4s %4s %4s %4s %4s %4s %4s %4s %4s %4s %4s\n' Value\\Func \
U{Prm,Grp,Bsh,Cse,Rgx} I{Prm,Bsh,Cse,Rgx} N{Prm,Cse,Rgx};\
for var in "${testcases[#]}";do
outstr='';
for func in isuint_{Parm,Grep,Bash,Case,Regx} isint_{Parm,Bash,Case,Regx} \
isnum_{Parm,Case,Regx};do
if $func "$var"; then
outstr+=' ##'
else
outstr+=' --'
fi
done
printf '%-11s %s\n' "$var" "$outstr"
done
Should output:
Value\Func UPrm UGrp UBsh UCse URgx IPrm IBsh ICse IRgx NPrm NCse NRgx
0 ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ##
1 ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ##
42 ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ##
-3 -- -- -- -- -- ## ## ## ## ## ## ##
+42 -- -- -- -- -- ## ## ## ## ## ## ##
+3. -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- ## ## ##
.9 -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- ## ## ##
3.14 -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- ## ## ##
+3.141 -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- ## ## ##
-31.4 -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- ## ## ##
-- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
. -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
3-3 -- -- -- -- -- -- ## -- -- -- -- --
3.1.4 -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
3a -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
a3 -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
blah -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
Good day! -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
I hope! (Note: uint_bash seem not perfect!)
Performance comparison
Then I've built this test function:
testFunc() {
local tests=1000 start=${EPOCHREALTIME//.}
for ((;tests--;)) ;do
"$1" "$3"
done
printf -v "$2" %u $((${EPOCHREALTIME//.}-start))
}
percent(){ local p=00$((${1}00000/$2));printf -v "$3" %.2f%% ${p::-3}.${p: -3};}
sortedTests() {
local func NaNTime NumTime ftyp="$1" nTest="$2" tTest="$3" min i pct line
local -a order=()
shift 3
for func ;do
testFunc "${ftyp}_$func" NaNTime "$tTest"
testFunc "${ftyp}_$func" NumTime "$nTest"
order[NaNTime+NumTime]=${ftyp}_$func\ $NumTime\ $NaNTime
done
printf '%-12s %11s %11s %14s\n' Function Number NaN Total
min="${!order[*]}" min=${min%% *}
for i in "${!order[#]}";do
read -ra line <<<"${order[i]}"
percent "$i" "$min" pct
printf '%-12s %9d\U00B5s %9d\U00B5s %12d\U00B5s %9s\n' \
"${line[#]}" "$i" "$pct"
done
}
I could run in this way:
sortedTests isuint "This is not a number." 31415926535897932384 \
Case Grep Parm Bash Regx ;\
sortedTests isint "This is not a number." 31415926535897932384 \
Case Parm Bash Regx ;\
sortedTests isnum "This string is clearly not a number..." \
3.141592653589793238462643383279502884 Case Parm Regx
On my host, this shows somthing like:
Function Number NaN Total
isuint_Case 6499µs 6566µs 13065µs 100.00%
isuint_Parm 26687µs 31600µs 58287µs 446.13%
isuint_Regx 36511µs 40181µs 76692µs 587.00%
isuint_Bash 43819µs 40311µs 84130µs 643.93%
isuint_Grep 1298265µs 1224112µs 2522377µs 19306.37%
Function Number NaN Total
isint_Case 22687µs 21914µs 44601µs 100.00%
isint_Parm 35765µs 34428µs 70193µs 157.38%
isint_Regx 36949µs 42319µs 79268µs 177.73%
isint_Bash 55368µs 65095µs 120463µs 270.09%
Function Number NaN Total
isnum_Case 23313µs 23446µs 46759µs 100.00%
isnum_Parm 35677µs 42169µs 77846µs 166.48%
isnum_Regx 51864µs 69502µs 121366µs 259.56%
You could download full isnum comparission script here or full isnum comparission script as text here., (with UTF8 and LATIN handling).
Conclusion
case way is clearly the quickest! About 3x quicker than regex and 2x quicker than using parameter expansion.
forks (to grep or any binaries) are to be avoided when not needed.
case method has become my favored choice:
is_uint() { case $1 in '' | *[!0-9]* ) return 1;; esac ;}
is_int() { case ${1#[-+]} in '' | *[!0-9]* ) return 1;; esac ;}
is_unum() { case $1 in '' | . | *[!0-9.]* | *.*.* ) return 1;; esac ;}
is_num() { case ${1#[-+]} in '' | . | *[!0-9.]* | *.*.* ) return 1;; esac ;}
About compatibility
For this, I wrote a little test script based on previous tests, with:
for shell in bash dash 'busybox sh' ksh zsh "$#";do
printf "%-12s " "${shell%% *}"
$shell < <(testScript) 2>&1 | xargs
done
This shows:
bash Success
dash Success
busybox Success
ksh Success
zsh Success
As I know other bash based solution like regex and bash's integer won't work in many other shells and forks are resource expensive, I would prefer the case way
(just before parameter expansion which is mostly compatible too).
I'm surprised at the solutions directly parsing number formats in shell.
shell is not well suited to this, being a DSL for controlling files and processes.
There are ample number parsers a little lower down, for example:
isdecimal() {
# filter octal/hex/ord()
num=$(printf '%s' "$1" | sed "s/^0*\([1-9]\)/\1/; s/'/^/")
test "$num" && printf '%f' "$num" >/dev/null 2>&1
}
Change '%f' to whatever particular format you require.
I was looking at the answers and...
realized that nobody thought about FLOAT numbers (with dot)!
Using grep is great too.
-E means extended regexp
-q means quiet (doesn't echo)
-qE is the combination of both.
To test directly in the command line:
$ echo "32" | grep -E ^\-?[0-9]?\.?[0-9]+$
# answer is: 32
$ echo "3a2" | grep -E ^\-?[0-9]?\.?[0-9]+$
# answer is empty (false)
$ echo ".5" | grep -E ^\-?[0-9]?\.?[0-9]+$
# answer .5
$ echo "3.2" | grep -E ^\-?[0-9]?\.?[0-9]+$
# answer is 3.2
Using in a bash script:
check=`echo "$1" | grep -E ^\-?[0-9]*\.?[0-9]+$`
if [ "$check" != '' ]; then
# it IS numeric
echo "Yeap!"
else
# it is NOT numeric.
echo "nooop"
fi
To match JUST integers, use this:
# change check line to:
check=`echo "$1" | grep -E ^\-?[0-9]+$`
Just a follow up to #mary. But because I don't have enough rep, couldn't post this as a comment to that post. Anyways, here is what I used:
isnum() { awk -v a="$1" 'BEGIN {print (a == a + 0)}'; }
The function will return "1" if the argument is a number, otherwise will return "0". This works for integers as well as floats. Usage is something like:
n=-2.05e+07
res=`isnum "$n"`
if [ "$res" == "1" ]; then
echo "$n is a number"
else
echo "$n is not a number"
fi
test -z "${i//[0-9]}" && echo digits || echo no no no
${i//[0-9]} replaces any digit in the value of $i with an empty string, see man -P 'less +/parameter\/' bash. -z checks if resulting string has zero length.
if you also want to exclude the case when $i is empty, you could use one of these constructions:
test -n "$i" && test -z "${i//[0-9]}" && echo digits || echo not a number
[[ -n "$i" && -z "${i//[0-9]}" ]] && echo digits || echo not a number
For my problem, I only needed to ensure that a user doesn't accidentally enter some text thus I tried to keep it simple and readable
isNumber() {
(( $1 )) 2>/dev/null
}
According to the man page this pretty much does what I want
If the value of the expression is non-zero, the return status is 0
To prevent nasty error messages for strings that "might be numbers" I ignore the error output
$ (( 2s ))
bash: ((: 2s: value too great for base (error token is "2s")
This can be achieved by using grep to see if the variable in question matches an extended regular expression.
Test integer 1120:
yournumber=1120
if echo "$yournumber" | grep -qE '^[0-9]+$'; then
echo "Valid number."
else
echo "Error: not a number."
fi
Output: Valid number.
Test non-integer 1120a:
yournumber=1120a
if echo "$yournumber" | grep -qE '^[0-9]+$'; then
echo "Valid number."
else
echo "Error: not a number."
fi
Output: Error: not a number.
Explanation
The grep, the -E switch allows us to use extended regular expression '^[0-9]+$'. This regular expression means the variable should only [] contain the numbers 0-9 zero through nine from the ^ beginning to the $ end of the variable and should have at least + one character.
The grep, the -q quiet switch turns off any output whether or not it finds anything.
if checks the exit status of grep. Exit status 0 means success and anything greater means an error. The grep command has an exit status of 0 if it finds a match and 1 when it doesn't;
So putting it all together, in the if test, we echo the variable $yournumber and | pipe it to grep which with the -q switch silently matches the -E extended regular expression '^[0-9]+$' expression. The exit status of grep will be 0 if grep successfully found a match and 1 if it didn't. If succeeded to match, we echo "Valid number.". If it failed to match, we echo "Error: not a number.".
For Floats or Doubles
We can just change the regular expression from '^[0-9]+$' to '^[0-9]*\.?[0-9]+$' for floats or doubles.
Test float 1120.01:
yournumber=1120.01
if echo "$yournumber" | grep -qE '^[0-9]*\.?[0-9]+$'; then
echo "Valid number."
else
echo "Error: not a number."
fi
Output: Valid number.
Test float 11.20.01:
yournumber=11.20.01
if echo "$yournumber" | grep -qE '^[0-9]*\.?[0-9]+$'; then
echo "Valid number."
else
echo "Error: not a number."
fi
Output: Error: not a number.
For Negatives
To allow negative integers, just change the regular expression from '^[0-9]+$' to '^\-?[0-9]+$'.
To allow negative floats or doubles, just change the regular expression from '^[0-9]*\.?[0-9]+$' to '^\-?[0-9]*\.?[0-9]+$'.
Old question, but I just wanted to tack on my solution. This one doesn't require any strange shell tricks, or rely on something that hasn't been around forever.
if [ -n "$(printf '%s\n' "$var" | sed 's/[0-9]//g')" ]; then
echo 'is not numeric'
else
echo 'is numeric'
fi
Basically it just removes all digits from the input, and if you're left with a non-zero-length string then it wasn't a number.
I would try this:
printf "%g" "$var" &> /dev/null
if [[ $? == 0 ]] ; then
echo "$var is a number."
else
echo "$var is not a number."
fi
Note: this recognizes nan and inf as number.
Can't comment yet so I'll add my own answer, which is an extension to glenn jackman's answer using bash pattern matching.
My original need was to identify numbers and distinguish integers and floats. The function definitions deducted to:
function isInteger() {
[[ ${1} == ?(-)+([0-9]) ]]
}
function isFloat() {
[[ ${1} == ?(-)#(+([0-9]).*([0-9])|*([0-9]).+([0-9]))?(E?(-|+)+([0-9])) ]]
}
I used unit testing (with shUnit2) to validate my patterns worked as intended:
oneTimeSetUp() {
int_values="0 123 -0 -123"
float_values="0.0 0. .0 -0.0 -0. -.0 \
123.456 123. .456 -123.456 -123. -.456
123.456E08 123.E08 .456E08 -123.456E08 -123.E08 -.456E08 \
123.456E+08 123.E+08 .456E+08 -123.456E+08 -123.E+08 -.456E+08 \
123.456E-08 123.E-08 .456E-08 -123.456E-08 -123.E-08 -.456E-08"
}
testIsIntegerIsFloat() {
local value
for value in ${int_values}
do
assertTrue "${value} should be tested as integer" "isInteger ${value}"
assertFalse "${value} should not be tested as float" "isFloat ${value}"
done
for value in ${float_values}
do
assertTrue "${value} should be tested as float" "isFloat ${value}"
assertFalse "${value} should not be tested as integer" "isInteger ${value}"
done
}
Notes: The isFloat pattern can be modified to be more tolerant about decimal point (#(.,)) and the E symbol (#(Ee)). My unit tests test only values that are either integer or float, but not any invalid input.
[[ $1 =~ ^-?[0-9]+$ ]] && echo "number"
Don't forget - to include negative numbers!
A clear answer has already been given by #charles Dufy and others.
A pure bash solution would be using the following :
string="-12,345"
if [[ "$string" =~ ^-?[0-9]+[.,]?[0-9]*$ ]]
then
echo $string is a number
else
echo $string is not a number
fi
Although for real numbers it is not mandatory to have a number before the radix point.
To provide a more thorough support of floating numbers and scientific notation (many programs in C/Fortran or else will export float this way), a useful addition to this line would be the following :
string="1.2345E-67"
if [[ "$string" =~ ^-?[0-9]*[.,]?[0-9]*[eE]?-?[0-9]+$ ]]
then
echo $string is a number
else
echo $string is not a number
fi
Thus leading to a way to differentiate types of number, if you are looking for any specific type :
string="-12,345"
if [[ "$string" =~ ^-?[0-9]+$ ]]
then
echo $string is an integer
elif [[ "$string" =~ ^-?[0-9]*[.,]?[0-9]*$ ]]
then
echo $string is a float
elif [[ "$string" =~ ^-?[0-9]*[.,]?[0-9]*[eE]-?[0-9]+$ ]]
then
echo $string is a scientific number
else
echo $string is not a number
fi
Note: We could list the syntactical requirements for decimal and scientific notation, one being to allow comma as radix point, as well as ".". We would then assert that there must be only one such radix point. There can be two +/- signs in an [Ee] float. I have learned a few more rules from Aulu's work, and tested against bad strings such as '' '-' '-E-1' '0-0'. Here are my regex/substring/expr tools that seem to be holding up:
parse_num() {
local r=`expr "$1" : '.*\([.,]\)' 2>/dev/null | tr -d '\n'`
nat='^[+-]?[0-9]+[.,]?$' \
dot="${1%[.,]*}${r}${1##*[.,]}" \
float='^[\+\-]?([.,0-9]+[Ee]?[-+]?|)[0-9]+$'
[[ "$1" == $dot ]] && [[ "$1" =~ $float ]] || [[ "$1" =~ $nat ]]
} # usage: parse_num -123.456
I use expr. It returns a non-zero if you try to add a zero to a non-numeric value:
if expr -- "$number" + 0 > /dev/null 2>&1
then
echo "$number is a number"
else
echo "$number isn't a number"
fi
It might be possible to use bc if you need non-integers, but I don't believe bc has quite the same behavior. Adding zero to a non-number gets you zero and it returns a value of zero too. Maybe you can combine bc and expr. Use bc to add zero to $number. If the answer is 0, then try expr to verify that $number isn't zero.
One simple way is to check whether it contains non-digit characters. You replace all digit characters with nothing and check for length. If there's length it's not a number.
if [[ ! -n ${input//[0-9]/} ]]; then
echo "Input Is A Number"
fi
http://tldp.org/LDP/Bash-Beginners-Guide/html/sect_04_03.html
You can also use bash's character classes.
if [[ $VAR = *[[:digit:]]* ]]; then
echo "$VAR is numeric"
else
echo "$VAR is not numeric"
fi
Numerics will include space, the decimal point, and "e" or "E" for floating point.
But, if you specify a C-style hex number, i.e. "0xffff" or "0XFFFF", [[:digit:]] returns true. A bit of a trap here, bash allows you do to something like "0xAZ00" and still count it as a digit (isn't this from some weird quirk of GCC compilers that let you use 0x notation for bases other than 16???)
You might want to test for "0x" or "0X" before testing if it's a numeric if your input is completely untrusted, unless you want to accept hex numbers. That would be accomplished by:
if [[ ${VARIABLE:1:2} = "0x" ]] || [[ ${VARIABLE:1:2} = "0X" ]]; then echo "$VAR is not numeric"; fi
As i had to tamper with this lately and like karttu's appoach with the unit test the most. I revised the code and added some other solutions too, try it out yourself to see the results:
#!/bin/bash
# N={0,1,2,3,...} by syntaxerror
function isNaturalNumber()
{
[[ ${1} =~ ^[0-9]+$ ]]
}
# Z={...,-2,-1,0,1,2,...} by karttu
function isInteger()
{
[[ ${1} == ?(-)+([0-9]) ]]
}
# Q={...,-½,-¼,0.0,¼,½,...} by karttu
function isFloat()
{
[[ ${1} == ?(-)#(+([0-9]).*([0-9])|*([0-9]).+([0-9]))?(E?(-|+)+([0-9])) ]]
}
# R={...,-1,-½,-¼,0.E+n,¼,½,1,...}
function isNumber()
{
isNaturalNumber $1 || isInteger $1 || isFloat $1
}
bools=("TRUE" "FALSE")
int_values="0 123 -0 -123"
float_values="0.0 0. .0 -0.0 -0. -.0 \
123.456 123. .456 -123.456 -123. -.456 \
123.456E08 123.E08 .456E08 -123.456E08 -123.E08 -.456E08 \
123.456E+08 123.E+08 .456E+08 -123.456E+08 -123.E+08 -.456E+08 \
123.456E-08 123.E-08 .456E-08 -123.456E-08 -123.E-08 -.456E-08"
false_values="blah meh mooh blah5 67mooh a123bc"
for value in ${int_values} ${float_values} ${false_values}
do
printf " %5s=%-30s" $(isNaturalNumber $value) ${bools[$?]} $(printf "isNaturalNumber(%s)" $value)
printf "%5s=%-24s" $(isInteger $value) ${bools[$?]} $(printf "isInteger(%s)" $value)
printf "%5s=%-24s" $(isFloat $value) ${bools[$?]} $(printf "isFloat(%s)" $value)
printf "%5s=%-24s\n" $(isNumber $value) ${bools[$?]} $(printf "isNumber(%s)" $value)
done
So isNumber() includes dashes, commas and exponential notation and therefore returns TRUE on integers & floats where on the other hand isFloat() returns FALSE on integer values and isInteger() likewise returns FALSE on floats. For your convenience all as one liners:
isNaturalNumber() { [[ ${1} =~ ^[0-9]+$ ]]; }
isInteger() { [[ ${1} == ?(-)+([0-9]) ]]; }
isFloat() { [[ ${1} == ?(-)#(+([0-9]).*([0-9])|*([0-9]).+([0-9]))?(E?(-|+)+([0-9])) ]]; }
isNumber() { isNaturalNumber $1 || isInteger $1 || isFloat $1; }
I use printf as other answers mentioned, if you supply the format string "%f" or "%i" printf will do the checking for you. Easier than reinventing the checks, the syntax is simple and short and printf is ubiquitous. So its a decent choice in my opinion - you can also use the following idea to check for a range of things, its not only useful for checking numbers.
declare -r CHECK_FLOAT="%f"
declare -r CHECK_INTEGER="%i"
## <arg 1> Number - Number to check
## <arg 2> String - Number type to check
## <arg 3> String - Error message
function check_number() {
local NUMBER="${1}"
local NUMBER_TYPE="${2}"
local ERROR_MESG="${3}"
local -i PASS=1
local -i FAIL=0
case "${NUMBER_TYPE}" in
"${CHECK_FLOAT}")
if ((! $(printf "${CHECK_FLOAT}" "${NUMBER}" &>/dev/random;echo $?))); then
echo "${PASS}"
else
echo "${ERROR_MESG}" 1>&2
echo "${FAIL}"
fi
;;
"${CHECK_INTEGER}")
if ((! $(printf "${CHECK_INTEGER}" "${NUMBER}" &>/dev/random;echo $?))); then
echo "${PASS}"
else
echo "${ERROR_MESG}" 1>&2
echo "${FAIL}"
fi
;;
*)
echo "Invalid number type format: ${NUMBER_TYPE} to check_number()." 1>&2
echo "${FAIL}"
;;
esac
}
>$ var=45
>$ (($(check_number $var "${CHECK_INTEGER}" "Error: Found $var - An integer is required."))) && { echo "$var+5" | bc; }
I like Alberto Zaccagni's answer.
if [ "$var" -eq "$var" ] 2>/dev/null; then
Important prerequisites:
- no subshells spawned
- no RE parsers invoked
- most shell applications don't use real numbers
But if $var is complex (e.g. an associative array access), and if the number will be a non-negative integer (most use-cases), then this is perhaps more efficient?
if [ "$var" -ge 0 ] 2> /dev/null; then ..
To catch negative numbers:
if [[ $1 == ?(-)+([0-9.]) ]]
then
echo number
else
echo not a number
fi
You could use "let" too like this :
[ ~]$ var=1
[ ~]$ let $var && echo "It's a number" || echo "It's not a number"
It\'s a number
[ ~]$ var=01
[ ~]$ let $var && echo "It's a number" || echo "It's not a number"
It\'s a number
[ ~]$ var=toto
[ ~]$ let $var && echo "It's a number" || echo "It's not a number"
It\'s not a number
[ ~]$
But I prefer use the "=~" Bash 3+ operator like some answers in this thread.
Almost as you want in syntax. Just need a function isnumber:
#!/usr/bin/bash
isnumber(){
num=$1
if [ -z "${num##*[!0-9]*}" ];
then return 1
else
return 0
fi
}
$(isnumber $1) && VAR=$1 || echo "need a number";
echo "VAR is $VAR"
test:
$ ./isnumtest 10
VAR is 10
$ ./isnumtest abc10
need a number
VAR is
printf '%b' "-123\nABC" | tr '[:space:]' '_' | grep -q '^-\?[[:digit:]]\+$' && echo "Integer." || echo "NOT integer."
Remove the -\? in grep matching pattern if you don't accept negative integer.
Did the same thing here with a regular expression that test the entire part and decimals part, separated with a dot.
re="^[0-9]*[.]{0,1}[0-9]*$"
if [[ $1 =~ $re ]]
then
echo "is numeric"
else
echo "Naahh, not numeric"
fi
Easy-to-understand and compatible solution, with test command :
test $myVariable -eq 0 2>/dev/null
if [ $? -le 1 ]; then echo 'ok'; else echo 'KO'; fi
If myVariable = 0, the return code is 0
If myVariable > 0, the return code is 1
If myVariable is not an integer, the return code is 2
I use the following (for integers):
## ##### constants
##
## __TRUE - true (0)
## __FALSE - false (1)
##
typeset -r __TRUE=0
typeset -r __FALSE=1
## --------------------------------------
## isNumber
## check if a value is an integer
## usage: isNumber testValue
## returns: ${__TRUE} - testValue is a number else not
##
function isNumber {
typeset TESTVAR="$(echo "$1" | sed 's/[0-9]*//g' )"
[ "${TESTVAR}"x = ""x ] && return ${__TRUE} || return ${__FALSE}
}
isNumber $1
if [ $? -eq ${__TRUE} ] ; then
print "is a number"
fi
I just can't figure out how do I make sure an argument passed to my script is a number or not.
All I want to do is something like this:
test *isnumber* $1 && VAR=$1 || echo "need a number"
Any help?
One approach is to use a regular expression, like so:
re='^[0-9]+$'
if ! [[ $yournumber =~ $re ]] ; then
echo "error: Not a number" >&2; exit 1
fi
If the value is not necessarily an integer, consider amending the regex appropriately; for instance:
^[0-9]+([.][0-9]+)?$
...or, to handle numbers with a sign:
^[+-]?[0-9]+([.][0-9]+)?$
Without bashisms (works even in the System V sh),
case $string in
''|*[!0-9]*) echo bad ;;
*) echo good ;;
esac
This rejects empty strings and strings containing non-digits, accepting everything else.
Negative or floating-point numbers need some additional work. An idea is to exclude - / . in the first "bad" pattern and add more "bad" patterns containing the inappropriate uses of them (?*-* / *.*.*)
The following solution can also be used in basic shells such as Bourne without the need for regular expressions. Basically any numeric value evaluation operations using non-numbers will result in an error which will be implicitly considered as false in shell:
"$var" -eq "$var"
as in:
#!/bin/bash
var=a
if [ -n "$var" ] && [ "$var" -eq "$var" ] 2>/dev/null; then
echo number
else
echo not a number
fi
You can can also test for $? the return code of the operation which is more explicit:
[ -n "$var" ] && [ "$var" -eq "$var" ] 2>/dev/null
if [ $? -ne 0 ]; then
echo $var is not number
fi
Redirection of standard error is there to hide the "integer expression expected" message that bash prints out in case we do not have a number.
CAVEATS (thanks to the comments below):
Numbers with decimal points are not identified as valid "numbers"
Using [[ ]] instead of [ ] will always evaluate to true
Most non-Bash shells will always evaluate this expression as true
The behavior in Bash is undocumented and may therefore change without warning
If the value includes spaces after the number (e.g. "1 a") produces error, like bash: [[: 1 a: syntax error in expression (error token is "a")
If the value is the same as var-name (e.g. i="i"), produces error, like bash: [[: i: expression recursion level exceeded (error token is "i")
Nobody suggested bash's extended pattern matching:
[[ $1 == ?(-)+([0-9]) ]] && echo "$1 is an integer"
or using a POSIX character class:
[[ $1 == ?(-)+([[:digit:]]) ]] && echo "$1 is an integer"
This tests if a number is a non-negative integer. It is shell independent (i.e. without bashisms) and uses only shell built-ins:
[ ! -z "${num##*[!0-9]*}" ] && echo "is a number" || echo "is not a number";
A previous version of this answer proposed:
[ -z "${num##[0-9]*}" ] && echo "is a number" || echo "is not a number";
but this is INCORRECT since it accepts any string starting with a digit, as jilles suggested.
Some performance and compatibility hints
There are some strongly different methods regarding different kinds of tests.
I reviewed most relevant methods and built this comparison.
Unsigned Integer is_uint()
These functions implement code to assess whether an expression is an unsigned integer, i.e. consists entirely of digits.
Using parameter expansion
(This was my approach before all this!)
isuint_Parm() { [ "$1" ] && [ -z "${1//[0-9]}" ] ;}
Using fork to grep
isuint_Grep() { grep -qE '^[0-9]+$' <<<"$1"; }
I test this method only once because it's very slow. This is just there to show what not to do.
Using bash integer capabilities
isuint_Bash() { (( 10#$1 >= 0 )) 2>/dev/null ;}
or better:
isuint_Bash() { set -- ${1//[+-]/.};(( 10#$1 >= 0 )) 2>/dev/null ;}
Using case
isuint_Case() { case $1 in ''|*[!0-9]*) return 1;;esac;}
Using bash's regex
isuint_Regx() { [[ $1 =~ ^[0-9]+$ ]] ;}
Signed integer is_int()
These functions implement code to assess whether an expression is a signed integer, i.e. as above but permitting an optional sign before the number.
Using parameter expansion
isint_Parm() { local chk=${1#[+-]}; [ "$chk" ] && [ -z "${chk//[0-9]}" ] ;}
Using bash integer capabilities
isint_Bash() { set -- "${1//[!+-]}" ${1#${1//[!+-]}};
(( ( 0 ${1:-+} 10#$2 ) ? 1:1 )) 2>/dev/null ;}
Using case
isint_Case() { case ${1#[-+]} in ''|*[!0-9]*) return 1;;esac;}
Using bash's regex
isint_Regx() { [[ $1 =~ ^[+-]?[0-9]+$ ]] ;}
Number (unsigned float) is_num()
These functions implement code to assess whether an expression is a floating-point number, i.e. as above but permitting an optional decimal point and additional digits after it. This does not attempt to cover numeric expressions in scientific notation (e.g. 1.0234E-12).
Using parameter expansion
isnum_Parm() { local ck=${1#[+-]};ck=${ck/.};[ "$ck" ]&&[ -z "${ck//[0-9]}" ];}
Using bash's regex
isnum_Regx() { [[ $1 =~ ^[+-]?([0-9]+([.][0-9]*)?|\.[0-9]+)$ ]] ;}
Using case
isnum_Case() { case ${1#[-+]} in ''|.|*[!0-9.]*|*.*.*) return 1;; esac ;}
Tests of concepts
(You could copy/paste this test code after previous declared functions.)
testcases=(
0 1 42 -3 +42 +3. .9 3.14 +3.141 -31.4 '' . 3-3 3.1.4 3a a3 blah 'Good day!'
);printf '%-12s %4s %4s %4s %4s %4s %4s %4s %4s %4s %4s %4s %4s\n' Value\\Func \
U{Prm,Grp,Bsh,Cse,Rgx} I{Prm,Bsh,Cse,Rgx} N{Prm,Cse,Rgx};\
for var in "${testcases[#]}";do
outstr='';
for func in isuint_{Parm,Grep,Bash,Case,Regx} isint_{Parm,Bash,Case,Regx} \
isnum_{Parm,Case,Regx};do
if $func "$var"; then
outstr+=' ##'
else
outstr+=' --'
fi
done
printf '%-11s %s\n' "$var" "$outstr"
done
Should output:
Value\Func UPrm UGrp UBsh UCse URgx IPrm IBsh ICse IRgx NPrm NCse NRgx
0 ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ##
1 ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ##
42 ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ## ##
-3 -- -- -- -- -- ## ## ## ## ## ## ##
+42 -- -- -- -- -- ## ## ## ## ## ## ##
+3. -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- ## ## ##
.9 -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- ## ## ##
3.14 -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- ## ## ##
+3.141 -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- ## ## ##
-31.4 -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- ## ## ##
-- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
. -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
3-3 -- -- -- -- -- -- ## -- -- -- -- --
3.1.4 -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
3a -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
a3 -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
blah -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
Good day! -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- -- --
I hope! (Note: uint_bash seem not perfect!)
Performance comparison
Then I've built this test function:
testFunc() {
local tests=1000 start=${EPOCHREALTIME//.}
for ((;tests--;)) ;do
"$1" "$3"
done
printf -v "$2" %u $((${EPOCHREALTIME//.}-start))
}
percent(){ local p=00$((${1}00000/$2));printf -v "$3" %.2f%% ${p::-3}.${p: -3};}
sortedTests() {
local func NaNTime NumTime ftyp="$1" nTest="$2" tTest="$3" min i pct line
local -a order=()
shift 3
for func ;do
testFunc "${ftyp}_$func" NaNTime "$tTest"
testFunc "${ftyp}_$func" NumTime "$nTest"
order[NaNTime+NumTime]=${ftyp}_$func\ $NumTime\ $NaNTime
done
printf '%-12s %11s %11s %14s\n' Function Number NaN Total
min="${!order[*]}" min=${min%% *}
for i in "${!order[#]}";do
read -ra line <<<"${order[i]}"
percent "$i" "$min" pct
printf '%-12s %9d\U00B5s %9d\U00B5s %12d\U00B5s %9s\n' \
"${line[#]}" "$i" "$pct"
done
}
I could run in this way:
sortedTests isuint "This is not a number." 31415926535897932384 \
Case Grep Parm Bash Regx ;\
sortedTests isint "This is not a number." 31415926535897932384 \
Case Parm Bash Regx ;\
sortedTests isnum "This string is clearly not a number..." \
3.141592653589793238462643383279502884 Case Parm Regx
On my host, this shows somthing like:
Function Number NaN Total
isuint_Case 6499µs 6566µs 13065µs 100.00%
isuint_Parm 26687µs 31600µs 58287µs 446.13%
isuint_Regx 36511µs 40181µs 76692µs 587.00%
isuint_Bash 43819µs 40311µs 84130µs 643.93%
isuint_Grep 1298265µs 1224112µs 2522377µs 19306.37%
Function Number NaN Total
isint_Case 22687µs 21914µs 44601µs 100.00%
isint_Parm 35765µs 34428µs 70193µs 157.38%
isint_Regx 36949µs 42319µs 79268µs 177.73%
isint_Bash 55368µs 65095µs 120463µs 270.09%
Function Number NaN Total
isnum_Case 23313µs 23446µs 46759µs 100.00%
isnum_Parm 35677µs 42169µs 77846µs 166.48%
isnum_Regx 51864µs 69502µs 121366µs 259.56%
You could download full isnum comparission script here or full isnum comparission script as text here., (with UTF8 and LATIN handling).
Conclusion
case way is clearly the quickest! About 3x quicker than regex and 2x quicker than using parameter expansion.
forks (to grep or any binaries) are to be avoided when not needed.
case method has become my favored choice:
is_uint() { case $1 in '' | *[!0-9]* ) return 1;; esac ;}
is_int() { case ${1#[-+]} in '' | *[!0-9]* ) return 1;; esac ;}
is_unum() { case $1 in '' | . | *[!0-9.]* | *.*.* ) return 1;; esac ;}
is_num() { case ${1#[-+]} in '' | . | *[!0-9.]* | *.*.* ) return 1;; esac ;}
About compatibility
For this, I wrote a little test script based on previous tests, with:
for shell in bash dash 'busybox sh' ksh zsh "$#";do
printf "%-12s " "${shell%% *}"
$shell < <(testScript) 2>&1 | xargs
done
This shows:
bash Success
dash Success
busybox Success
ksh Success
zsh Success
As I know other bash based solution like regex and bash's integer won't work in many other shells and forks are resource expensive, I would prefer the case way
(just before parameter expansion which is mostly compatible too).
I'm surprised at the solutions directly parsing number formats in shell.
shell is not well suited to this, being a DSL for controlling files and processes.
There are ample number parsers a little lower down, for example:
isdecimal() {
# filter octal/hex/ord()
num=$(printf '%s' "$1" | sed "s/^0*\([1-9]\)/\1/; s/'/^/")
test "$num" && printf '%f' "$num" >/dev/null 2>&1
}
Change '%f' to whatever particular format you require.
I was looking at the answers and...
realized that nobody thought about FLOAT numbers (with dot)!
Using grep is great too.
-E means extended regexp
-q means quiet (doesn't echo)
-qE is the combination of both.
To test directly in the command line:
$ echo "32" | grep -E ^\-?[0-9]?\.?[0-9]+$
# answer is: 32
$ echo "3a2" | grep -E ^\-?[0-9]?\.?[0-9]+$
# answer is empty (false)
$ echo ".5" | grep -E ^\-?[0-9]?\.?[0-9]+$
# answer .5
$ echo "3.2" | grep -E ^\-?[0-9]?\.?[0-9]+$
# answer is 3.2
Using in a bash script:
check=`echo "$1" | grep -E ^\-?[0-9]*\.?[0-9]+$`
if [ "$check" != '' ]; then
# it IS numeric
echo "Yeap!"
else
# it is NOT numeric.
echo "nooop"
fi
To match JUST integers, use this:
# change check line to:
check=`echo "$1" | grep -E ^\-?[0-9]+$`
Just a follow up to #mary. But because I don't have enough rep, couldn't post this as a comment to that post. Anyways, here is what I used:
isnum() { awk -v a="$1" 'BEGIN {print (a == a + 0)}'; }
The function will return "1" if the argument is a number, otherwise will return "0". This works for integers as well as floats. Usage is something like:
n=-2.05e+07
res=`isnum "$n"`
if [ "$res" == "1" ]; then
echo "$n is a number"
else
echo "$n is not a number"
fi
test -z "${i//[0-9]}" && echo digits || echo no no no
${i//[0-9]} replaces any digit in the value of $i with an empty string, see man -P 'less +/parameter\/' bash. -z checks if resulting string has zero length.
if you also want to exclude the case when $i is empty, you could use one of these constructions:
test -n "$i" && test -z "${i//[0-9]}" && echo digits || echo not a number
[[ -n "$i" && -z "${i//[0-9]}" ]] && echo digits || echo not a number
For my problem, I only needed to ensure that a user doesn't accidentally enter some text thus I tried to keep it simple and readable
isNumber() {
(( $1 )) 2>/dev/null
}
According to the man page this pretty much does what I want
If the value of the expression is non-zero, the return status is 0
To prevent nasty error messages for strings that "might be numbers" I ignore the error output
$ (( 2s ))
bash: ((: 2s: value too great for base (error token is "2s")
This can be achieved by using grep to see if the variable in question matches an extended regular expression.
Test integer 1120:
yournumber=1120
if echo "$yournumber" | grep -qE '^[0-9]+$'; then
echo "Valid number."
else
echo "Error: not a number."
fi
Output: Valid number.
Test non-integer 1120a:
yournumber=1120a
if echo "$yournumber" | grep -qE '^[0-9]+$'; then
echo "Valid number."
else
echo "Error: not a number."
fi
Output: Error: not a number.
Explanation
The grep, the -E switch allows us to use extended regular expression '^[0-9]+$'. This regular expression means the variable should only [] contain the numbers 0-9 zero through nine from the ^ beginning to the $ end of the variable and should have at least + one character.
The grep, the -q quiet switch turns off any output whether or not it finds anything.
if checks the exit status of grep. Exit status 0 means success and anything greater means an error. The grep command has an exit status of 0 if it finds a match and 1 when it doesn't;
So putting it all together, in the if test, we echo the variable $yournumber and | pipe it to grep which with the -q switch silently matches the -E extended regular expression '^[0-9]+$' expression. The exit status of grep will be 0 if grep successfully found a match and 1 if it didn't. If succeeded to match, we echo "Valid number.". If it failed to match, we echo "Error: not a number.".
For Floats or Doubles
We can just change the regular expression from '^[0-9]+$' to '^[0-9]*\.?[0-9]+$' for floats or doubles.
Test float 1120.01:
yournumber=1120.01
if echo "$yournumber" | grep -qE '^[0-9]*\.?[0-9]+$'; then
echo "Valid number."
else
echo "Error: not a number."
fi
Output: Valid number.
Test float 11.20.01:
yournumber=11.20.01
if echo "$yournumber" | grep -qE '^[0-9]*\.?[0-9]+$'; then
echo "Valid number."
else
echo "Error: not a number."
fi
Output: Error: not a number.
For Negatives
To allow negative integers, just change the regular expression from '^[0-9]+$' to '^\-?[0-9]+$'.
To allow negative floats or doubles, just change the regular expression from '^[0-9]*\.?[0-9]+$' to '^\-?[0-9]*\.?[0-9]+$'.
Old question, but I just wanted to tack on my solution. This one doesn't require any strange shell tricks, or rely on something that hasn't been around forever.
if [ -n "$(printf '%s\n' "$var" | sed 's/[0-9]//g')" ]; then
echo 'is not numeric'
else
echo 'is numeric'
fi
Basically it just removes all digits from the input, and if you're left with a non-zero-length string then it wasn't a number.
I would try this:
printf "%g" "$var" &> /dev/null
if [[ $? == 0 ]] ; then
echo "$var is a number."
else
echo "$var is not a number."
fi
Note: this recognizes nan and inf as number.
Can't comment yet so I'll add my own answer, which is an extension to glenn jackman's answer using bash pattern matching.
My original need was to identify numbers and distinguish integers and floats. The function definitions deducted to:
function isInteger() {
[[ ${1} == ?(-)+([0-9]) ]]
}
function isFloat() {
[[ ${1} == ?(-)#(+([0-9]).*([0-9])|*([0-9]).+([0-9]))?(E?(-|+)+([0-9])) ]]
}
I used unit testing (with shUnit2) to validate my patterns worked as intended:
oneTimeSetUp() {
int_values="0 123 -0 -123"
float_values="0.0 0. .0 -0.0 -0. -.0 \
123.456 123. .456 -123.456 -123. -.456
123.456E08 123.E08 .456E08 -123.456E08 -123.E08 -.456E08 \
123.456E+08 123.E+08 .456E+08 -123.456E+08 -123.E+08 -.456E+08 \
123.456E-08 123.E-08 .456E-08 -123.456E-08 -123.E-08 -.456E-08"
}
testIsIntegerIsFloat() {
local value
for value in ${int_values}
do
assertTrue "${value} should be tested as integer" "isInteger ${value}"
assertFalse "${value} should not be tested as float" "isFloat ${value}"
done
for value in ${float_values}
do
assertTrue "${value} should be tested as float" "isFloat ${value}"
assertFalse "${value} should not be tested as integer" "isInteger ${value}"
done
}
Notes: The isFloat pattern can be modified to be more tolerant about decimal point (#(.,)) and the E symbol (#(Ee)). My unit tests test only values that are either integer or float, but not any invalid input.
[[ $1 =~ ^-?[0-9]+$ ]] && echo "number"
Don't forget - to include negative numbers!
A clear answer has already been given by #charles Dufy and others.
A pure bash solution would be using the following :
string="-12,345"
if [[ "$string" =~ ^-?[0-9]+[.,]?[0-9]*$ ]]
then
echo $string is a number
else
echo $string is not a number
fi
Although for real numbers it is not mandatory to have a number before the radix point.
To provide a more thorough support of floating numbers and scientific notation (many programs in C/Fortran or else will export float this way), a useful addition to this line would be the following :
string="1.2345E-67"
if [[ "$string" =~ ^-?[0-9]*[.,]?[0-9]*[eE]?-?[0-9]+$ ]]
then
echo $string is a number
else
echo $string is not a number
fi
Thus leading to a way to differentiate types of number, if you are looking for any specific type :
string="-12,345"
if [[ "$string" =~ ^-?[0-9]+$ ]]
then
echo $string is an integer
elif [[ "$string" =~ ^-?[0-9]*[.,]?[0-9]*$ ]]
then
echo $string is a float
elif [[ "$string" =~ ^-?[0-9]*[.,]?[0-9]*[eE]-?[0-9]+$ ]]
then
echo $string is a scientific number
else
echo $string is not a number
fi
Note: We could list the syntactical requirements for decimal and scientific notation, one being to allow comma as radix point, as well as ".". We would then assert that there must be only one such radix point. There can be two +/- signs in an [Ee] float. I have learned a few more rules from Aulu's work, and tested against bad strings such as '' '-' '-E-1' '0-0'. Here are my regex/substring/expr tools that seem to be holding up:
parse_num() {
local r=`expr "$1" : '.*\([.,]\)' 2>/dev/null | tr -d '\n'`
nat='^[+-]?[0-9]+[.,]?$' \
dot="${1%[.,]*}${r}${1##*[.,]}" \
float='^[\+\-]?([.,0-9]+[Ee]?[-+]?|)[0-9]+$'
[[ "$1" == $dot ]] && [[ "$1" =~ $float ]] || [[ "$1" =~ $nat ]]
} # usage: parse_num -123.456
I use expr. It returns a non-zero if you try to add a zero to a non-numeric value:
if expr -- "$number" + 0 > /dev/null 2>&1
then
echo "$number is a number"
else
echo "$number isn't a number"
fi
It might be possible to use bc if you need non-integers, but I don't believe bc has quite the same behavior. Adding zero to a non-number gets you zero and it returns a value of zero too. Maybe you can combine bc and expr. Use bc to add zero to $number. If the answer is 0, then try expr to verify that $number isn't zero.
One simple way is to check whether it contains non-digit characters. You replace all digit characters with nothing and check for length. If there's length it's not a number.
if [[ ! -n ${input//[0-9]/} ]]; then
echo "Input Is A Number"
fi
http://tldp.org/LDP/Bash-Beginners-Guide/html/sect_04_03.html
You can also use bash's character classes.
if [[ $VAR = *[[:digit:]]* ]]; then
echo "$VAR is numeric"
else
echo "$VAR is not numeric"
fi
Numerics will include space, the decimal point, and "e" or "E" for floating point.
But, if you specify a C-style hex number, i.e. "0xffff" or "0XFFFF", [[:digit:]] returns true. A bit of a trap here, bash allows you do to something like "0xAZ00" and still count it as a digit (isn't this from some weird quirk of GCC compilers that let you use 0x notation for bases other than 16???)
You might want to test for "0x" or "0X" before testing if it's a numeric if your input is completely untrusted, unless you want to accept hex numbers. That would be accomplished by:
if [[ ${VARIABLE:1:2} = "0x" ]] || [[ ${VARIABLE:1:2} = "0X" ]]; then echo "$VAR is not numeric"; fi
As i had to tamper with this lately and like karttu's appoach with the unit test the most. I revised the code and added some other solutions too, try it out yourself to see the results:
#!/bin/bash
# N={0,1,2,3,...} by syntaxerror
function isNaturalNumber()
{
[[ ${1} =~ ^[0-9]+$ ]]
}
# Z={...,-2,-1,0,1,2,...} by karttu
function isInteger()
{
[[ ${1} == ?(-)+([0-9]) ]]
}
# Q={...,-½,-¼,0.0,¼,½,...} by karttu
function isFloat()
{
[[ ${1} == ?(-)#(+([0-9]).*([0-9])|*([0-9]).+([0-9]))?(E?(-|+)+([0-9])) ]]
}
# R={...,-1,-½,-¼,0.E+n,¼,½,1,...}
function isNumber()
{
isNaturalNumber $1 || isInteger $1 || isFloat $1
}
bools=("TRUE" "FALSE")
int_values="0 123 -0 -123"
float_values="0.0 0. .0 -0.0 -0. -.0 \
123.456 123. .456 -123.456 -123. -.456 \
123.456E08 123.E08 .456E08 -123.456E08 -123.E08 -.456E08 \
123.456E+08 123.E+08 .456E+08 -123.456E+08 -123.E+08 -.456E+08 \
123.456E-08 123.E-08 .456E-08 -123.456E-08 -123.E-08 -.456E-08"
false_values="blah meh mooh blah5 67mooh a123bc"
for value in ${int_values} ${float_values} ${false_values}
do
printf " %5s=%-30s" $(isNaturalNumber $value) ${bools[$?]} $(printf "isNaturalNumber(%s)" $value)
printf "%5s=%-24s" $(isInteger $value) ${bools[$?]} $(printf "isInteger(%s)" $value)
printf "%5s=%-24s" $(isFloat $value) ${bools[$?]} $(printf "isFloat(%s)" $value)
printf "%5s=%-24s\n" $(isNumber $value) ${bools[$?]} $(printf "isNumber(%s)" $value)
done
So isNumber() includes dashes, commas and exponential notation and therefore returns TRUE on integers & floats where on the other hand isFloat() returns FALSE on integer values and isInteger() likewise returns FALSE on floats. For your convenience all as one liners:
isNaturalNumber() { [[ ${1} =~ ^[0-9]+$ ]]; }
isInteger() { [[ ${1} == ?(-)+([0-9]) ]]; }
isFloat() { [[ ${1} == ?(-)#(+([0-9]).*([0-9])|*([0-9]).+([0-9]))?(E?(-|+)+([0-9])) ]]; }
isNumber() { isNaturalNumber $1 || isInteger $1 || isFloat $1; }
I use printf as other answers mentioned, if you supply the format string "%f" or "%i" printf will do the checking for you. Easier than reinventing the checks, the syntax is simple and short and printf is ubiquitous. So its a decent choice in my opinion - you can also use the following idea to check for a range of things, its not only useful for checking numbers.
declare -r CHECK_FLOAT="%f"
declare -r CHECK_INTEGER="%i"
## <arg 1> Number - Number to check
## <arg 2> String - Number type to check
## <arg 3> String - Error message
function check_number() {
local NUMBER="${1}"
local NUMBER_TYPE="${2}"
local ERROR_MESG="${3}"
local -i PASS=1
local -i FAIL=0
case "${NUMBER_TYPE}" in
"${CHECK_FLOAT}")
if ((! $(printf "${CHECK_FLOAT}" "${NUMBER}" &>/dev/random;echo $?))); then
echo "${PASS}"
else
echo "${ERROR_MESG}" 1>&2
echo "${FAIL}"
fi
;;
"${CHECK_INTEGER}")
if ((! $(printf "${CHECK_INTEGER}" "${NUMBER}" &>/dev/random;echo $?))); then
echo "${PASS}"
else
echo "${ERROR_MESG}" 1>&2
echo "${FAIL}"
fi
;;
*)
echo "Invalid number type format: ${NUMBER_TYPE} to check_number()." 1>&2
echo "${FAIL}"
;;
esac
}
>$ var=45
>$ (($(check_number $var "${CHECK_INTEGER}" "Error: Found $var - An integer is required."))) && { echo "$var+5" | bc; }
I like Alberto Zaccagni's answer.
if [ "$var" -eq "$var" ] 2>/dev/null; then
Important prerequisites:
- no subshells spawned
- no RE parsers invoked
- most shell applications don't use real numbers
But if $var is complex (e.g. an associative array access), and if the number will be a non-negative integer (most use-cases), then this is perhaps more efficient?
if [ "$var" -ge 0 ] 2> /dev/null; then ..
To catch negative numbers:
if [[ $1 == ?(-)+([0-9.]) ]]
then
echo number
else
echo not a number
fi
You could use "let" too like this :
[ ~]$ var=1
[ ~]$ let $var && echo "It's a number" || echo "It's not a number"
It\'s a number
[ ~]$ var=01
[ ~]$ let $var && echo "It's a number" || echo "It's not a number"
It\'s a number
[ ~]$ var=toto
[ ~]$ let $var && echo "It's a number" || echo "It's not a number"
It\'s not a number
[ ~]$
But I prefer use the "=~" Bash 3+ operator like some answers in this thread.
Almost as you want in syntax. Just need a function isnumber:
#!/usr/bin/bash
isnumber(){
num=$1
if [ -z "${num##*[!0-9]*}" ];
then return 1
else
return 0
fi
}
$(isnumber $1) && VAR=$1 || echo "need a number";
echo "VAR is $VAR"
test:
$ ./isnumtest 10
VAR is 10
$ ./isnumtest abc10
need a number
VAR is
printf '%b' "-123\nABC" | tr '[:space:]' '_' | grep -q '^-\?[[:digit:]]\+$' && echo "Integer." || echo "NOT integer."
Remove the -\? in grep matching pattern if you don't accept negative integer.
Did the same thing here with a regular expression that test the entire part and decimals part, separated with a dot.
re="^[0-9]*[.]{0,1}[0-9]*$"
if [[ $1 =~ $re ]]
then
echo "is numeric"
else
echo "Naahh, not numeric"
fi
Easy-to-understand and compatible solution, with test command :
test $myVariable -eq 0 2>/dev/null
if [ $? -le 1 ]; then echo 'ok'; else echo 'KO'; fi
If myVariable = 0, the return code is 0
If myVariable > 0, the return code is 1
If myVariable is not an integer, the return code is 2
I use the following (for integers):
## ##### constants
##
## __TRUE - true (0)
## __FALSE - false (1)
##
typeset -r __TRUE=0
typeset -r __FALSE=1
## --------------------------------------
## isNumber
## check if a value is an integer
## usage: isNumber testValue
## returns: ${__TRUE} - testValue is a number else not
##
function isNumber {
typeset TESTVAR="$(echo "$1" | sed 's/[0-9]*//g' )"
[ "${TESTVAR}"x = ""x ] && return ${__TRUE} || return ${__FALSE}
}
isNumber $1
if [ $? -eq ${__TRUE} ] ; then
print "is a number"
fi
Is there a way to do something like this
int a = (b == 5) ? c : d;
using Bash?
ternary operator ? : is just short form of if/else
case "$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.