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abbazs
abbazs

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array, dictionary, for and while loops to score 25 marks in System Commands OPPE

Introduction

This guide covers concepts focusing on arrays, loops, file operations, arithmetic operations, and string manipulation.

1. Arrays in Bash

Arrays in Bash are zero-indexed lists of values. There are several ways to declare and initialize arrays.

Declaring and Initializing Arrays

  1. Using declare: ```bash

declare -a my_array


2. Implicit declaration with initialization:
```bash


my_array=(apple banana cherry)


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  1. Empty array declaration: ```bash

my_array=()


4. Declaring with specific indices:
```bash


my_array=([0]="apple" [1]="banana" [5]="cherry")


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  1. Declaring empty and adding elements: ```bash

my_array=()
my_array+=("apple")
my_array+=("banana")


6. Declaring a read-only array:
```bash


declare -ar my_readonly_array=(apple banana cherry)


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Accessing and Manipulating Arrays



# Access elements
echo ${my_array[0]}  # Output: apple

# Get all elements
echo ${my_array[@]}  # Output: apple banana cherry

# Get array length
echo ${#my_array[@]}  # Output: 3

# Slicing an array
echo ${my_array[@]:1:2}  # Output: banana cherry (from index 1, take 2 elements)

# Finding the indices of an array
echo ${!my_array[@]}  # Output: 0 1 2 (or 0 1 5 for the array with specific indices)


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2. Loops in Bash

Bash provides several types of loops for repetitive tasks.

For Loops

  1. Traditional for loop: ```bash

for i in 1 2 3 4 5
do
echo $i
done


2. C-style for loop:
```bash


for ((i=0; i<5; i++))
do
    echo $i
done


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  1. For loop with array: ```bash

fruits=(apple banana cherry)
for fruit in "${fruits[@]}"
do
echo $fruit
done


4. For loop with command substitution:
```bash


for file in $(ls)
do
    echo $file
done


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While Loops

Basic while loop syntax:



count=1
while [ $count -le 5 ]
do
    echo "Count is: $count"
    ((count++))
done


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3. File Operations

Reading from and writing to files is a common task in Bash scripting.

Reading a File Line by Line



while IFS= read -r line
do
    echo "Line: $line"
done < "input.txt"


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Writing to a File



echo "Hello, World!" > output.txt
echo "Appending this line" >> output.txt


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4. Arithmetic Operations in Bash

Bash offers various methods for arithmetic operations:



# Using let
let result=5+3
echo $result  # Output: 8

# Using (( ))
((result = 5 + 3))
echo $result  # Output: 8

# Using $[ ]
result=$[5 + 3]
echo $result  # Output: 8

# Using expr (note the spaces)
result=$(expr 5 + 3)
echo $result  # Output: 8


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5. String Manipulation

String Case Checking

This example checks if given strings start with uppercase or lowercase letters:



#!/bin/bash

declare -a upper
declare -a lower

words=("Hello" "world" "BASH" "script" "ARRAY" "example")

for word in "${words[@]}"
do
    if [[ $word == [[:upper:]]* ]]
    then
        upper+=("$word")
    elif [[ $word == [[:lower:]]* ]]
    then
        lower+=("$word")
    fi
done

echo "Uppercase words: ${upper[@]}"
echo "Lowercase words: ${lower[@]}"


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Advanced Pattern Matching

This script demonstrates number detection and pattern matching:



#!/bin/bash

declare -a num_var
declare -a userid_var
declare -a other_var

strings=("123" "abc" "456" "1234abcd56" "789xyz" "2023user01" "hello123")

for str in "${strings[@]}"
do
    if [[ $str =~ ^[0-9]+$ ]]
    then
        # String is a number
        num_var+=("$str")
    elif [[ $str =~ ^[0-9]{4}[a-z]{4}[0-9]{2}$ ]]
    then
        # String matches pattern \d{4}[a-z]{4}\d{2}
        userid_var+=("$str")
    else
        # String doesn't match any specific category
        other_var+=("$str")
    fi
done

echo "Numbers: ${num_var[@]}"
echo "User IDs: ${userid_var[@]}"
echo "Other strings: ${other_var[@]}"


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6. Comprehensive Example: File Processing and Data Categorization

This example combines file reading, loops, and string manipulation to categorize data from a file:



#!/bin/bash

# Initialize arrays for different types of data
declare -a names
declare -a numbers
declare -a emails
declare -a mixed

# Read the file line by line
while IFS= read -r line
do
    # Check if line is a name (contains only letters and spaces)
    if [[ $line =~ ^[[:alpha:][:space:]]+$ ]]
    then
        names+=("$line")
    # Check if line is a number
    elif [[ $line =~ ^[0-9]+$ ]]
    then
        numbers+=("$line")
    # Check if line is an email
    elif [[ $line =~ ^[A-Za-z0-9._%+-]+@[A-Za-z0-9.-]+\.[A-Z|a-z]{2,}$ ]]
    then
        emails+=("$line")
    # If it doesn't match any of the above, it's mixed content
    else
        mixed+=("$line")
    fi
done < "data.txt"

# Print the categorized data
echo "Names: ${names[@]}"
echo "Numbers: ${numbers[@]}"
echo "Emails: ${emails[@]}"
echo "Mixed Content: ${mixed[@]}"


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This script reads a file named data.txt, categorizes each line based on its content, and stores it in the appropriate array.

Conclusion

This tutorial has covered essential Bash scripting concepts including:

  1. Array declaration and manipulation
  2. For and while loops
  3. File reading and writing operations
  4. Arithmetic operations
  5. String manipulation and pattern matching
  6. A comprehensive example combining multiple concepts

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