Hello 2015-11-03 8:35 GMT+01:00 Stephane Chazelas : > 2015-11-03 07:52:51 +0100, Alexander Skwar: > > Hello > > > > I've got a variable, where seperate values are limited with a delimiter. > > Let's say PATH with : (but the question is general). > > > > With bash, I can easily create a for loop which loops over all the > > elements, when I have bash replace the ":" with a " ", like so: > ${PATH//:/ > > }. > > > > a@ubuntu-notebook:~$ echo $PATH > > > /home/a/Applications/go/bin:/home/a/bin:/opt/bin:/opt/sbin:/usr/local/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/home/a/Applications/copy/x86_64:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/bin:/usr/games:/usr/local/games:/home/a/Applications/adt-bundle-linux-x86_64/sdk/platform-tools:/home/a/Applications/btsync:/home/a/.rvm/bin > > > > a@ubuntu-notebook:~$ for e in ${PATH//:/ }; do echo e: $e; done > > e: /home/a/Applications/go/bin > > e: /home/a/bin > > e: /opt/bin > > e: /opt/sbin > > e: /usr/local/sbin > > e: /usr/local/bin > > e: /home/a/Applications/copy/x86_64 > > e: /usr/sbin > > e: /usr/bin > > e: /sbin > > e: /bin > > e: /usr/games > > e: /usr/local/games > > e: /home/a/Applications/adt-bundle-linux-x86_64/sdk/platform-tools > > e: /home/a/Applications/btsync > > e: /home/a/.rvm/bin > > That approach is wrong. You're replacing : with space and > invoking the split+glob operator (leaving an expansion unquoted > in ksh/bash/sh, not zsh) with the default value of IFS which > contains space, tab and newline. > > That means that approach only works if $PATH components don't > contain blanks or wildcards. > ​Well, but I do know that my variable does not contain blanks or wildcards. As I said, PATH was just an example, so that everybody can easily follow. So, no, ​the approach was not at all wrong. Your assumption was, though. > > Here, you could use the split+glob operator, but you want to > split on :, not blanks, and not invoke the glob part. > > So it would be (bash/ksh/sh, not zsh unless in sh/ksh emulation): > > IFS=: # split on : > set -f # disabe glob > for e in $PATH > ​Thanks a lot. Works great.​ > > However with bash/ksh/sh (not zsh), it's still wrong, because it > would discard a trailing empty component (like for a $PATH value > of /bin:/usr/bin:) > ​Good catch ;)​ > > > > > > In zsh, the same for loop does not work (like it does in bash): > > No, because and that's the most FAQ for zsh, leaving a variable > unquoted is not the split+glob operator (like it is in most > other shells and the number one source of bugs and security > vulnerabilities in them, > ( > http://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/171346/security-implications-of-forgetting-to-quote-a-variable-in-bash-posix-shells > ) > > In zsh, you invoke the split ($=var) or glob ($~var) operators > explicitely, so: > > IFS=: > for e in $~PATH > > Or use the "s" expansion flag: > > for e in "${(s(:))PATH}" > > ​Great. Thanks. Appreciated. Too bad, that there's such a difference between the shells. Makes it hard to share snippets with co-workers, who (for reasons, that I fail to understand) don't use zsh. Because of that, I'm actually using something along the lines of: for e in $(echo "$PATH" | tr ':' ' '); do echo e $e; done This works everywhere.​ > For PATH however, you don't need to as zsh ties the $PATH > variable to the $path array. > ​I shouldn't have used PATH as an example… :/​ But thanks for the heads up for that as well. Alexander -- => *Google+* => http://plus.skwar.me <== => *Chat* (Jabber/Google Talk) => a.skwar@gmail.com <==