I am trying to learn shell scripting, so I created a simple script with a loop that does nothing:
#!/bin/bash
names=(test test2 test3 test4)
for name in ${names[@]}
do
#do something
done
however, when I run this script I get the following errors:
./test.sh: line 6: syntax error near unexpected token done'
./test.sh: line 6: done'
What have I missed here? are shell scripts 'tab sensitive'?
No, shell scripts are not tab sensitive (unless you do something really crazy, which you are not doing in this example).
You can't have an empty while do done block, (comments don't count)
Try substituting echo $name instead
#!/bin/bash
names=(test test2 test3 test4)
for name in ${names[@]}
do
printf "%s " $name
done
printf "\n"
output
test test2 test3 test4
dash and bash are a bit brain-dead in this case, they do not allow an empty loop so you need to add a no op command to make this run, e.g. true or :. My tests suggest the : is a bit faster, although they should be the same, not sure why:
time (i=100000; while ((i--)); do :; done)
n average takes 0.262 seconds, while:
time (i=100000; while ((i--)); do true; done)
takes 0.293 seconds. Interestingly:
time (i=100000; while ((i--)); do builtin true; done)
takes 0.356 seconds.
All measurements are an average of 30 runs.
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