Difference between revisions of "CSC231 Bash Tutorial 7"
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Revision as of 06:34, 31 March 2017
--D. Thiebaut (talk) 06:15, 31 March 2017 (EDT)
This lab deals with if-statements in bash scripts. If statements in Bash work the same way they work in Python and Java: if somebooleanexpression then dothis else dothat.
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Reference
- This Bash tutorial heavily uses material presented in the excellent set of pages "Ryan's Tutorials" at http://ryanstutorials.net/bash-scripting-tutorial/. Do not hesitate to study these tutorials if you need additional information.
Backing up your files
Just in case you mess up and erase files in your account by mistake, you will make an archive of all your files and save it in your instructor's account:
cd tar -czvf backup2.tgz * rsubmit backup backup2.tgz
That's it! An archive of all your file should now be saved and available in case of accident!
The Bash If-Statement
The Bash if-statement looks like this:
if [ someExpression ] ; then bash statement bash statement else bash statement bash statement fi
Of course, there can be as many bash statements inside the then or else block, including for loops, or other if statements.
- Make sure to end the if statement with a fi keyword.
- The else block is not necessary and can be omitted if the logic doesn't call for it.
Testing Numerical Values
- Create this bash script, make it executable, and run it a couple times:
#! /bin/bash # if0.sh #--- get input from user --- echo -n "Please enter an integer between 1 and 10 (included): " read guess #--- display number back --- echo "You have entered $guess"
- Let's modify it and test the value the user enters:
#! /bin/bash # if0.sh #--- get input from user --- echo -n "Please enter an integer between 1 and 10 (included): " read guess #--- test if number entered is below or above 5 --- if [ "$guess" -le "5" ] ; then echo "You aim low!" else echo "Above average!" fi
- Make sure you have spaces around the brackets and around the operator inside the brackets!
- The "-le" operator stands for "less than or equal to." Bash supports the following operators for comparing numbers:
- -le (less than or equal to)
- -lt (less than )
- -ge (greater than or equal to)
- -gt (greater than)
- -eq (equal to)
- -ne (not equal to)
Nested If-Statements
- Of course, if Bash supports if statements, it will support nested if statements.
- Try this new version of the script:
#! /bin/bash # if2.sh #--- get user input --- echo -n "Please enter an integer between 1 and 10 (included): " read guess #--- test if below or above 5 --- if [ "$guess" -le "5" ] ; then #--- compute even/odd property of guess x=$( expr $guess % 2 ) #--- test if guess is odd or even --- if [ $x -eq 0 ] ; then echo "low even number" else echo "low odd number" fi else echo "Above average!" fi
Challenge #1: |
Write a script that prompts the user for an integer number between 0 and 100 (inclusive) and outputs a letter grade, using Moodle's grade table:
Range | Letter Grade |
---|---|
100.00 -93.00 |
A |
92.99 - 90.00 |
A- |
89.99 - 87.00 |
B+ |
86.99 - 83.00 |
B |
82.99 - 80.00 |
B- |
79.99 - 77.00 |
C+ |
76.99 - 73.00 |
C |
72.99 - 70.00 |
C- |
69.99 - 67.00 |
D+ |
66.99 - 60.00 |
D |
59.99 - 0.00 |
F |
- Note: to test if a quantity is less than or equal to 59.99, for example, you can use less than 60.
- Note: Feel free to test just the top 3 ranges of numbers. If you can do it for 3, you can do it for the full list!
Testing and Comparing Strings
Bash uses different operators for strings: = for equality, and != for inequality. Here is an example:
#! /bin/bash # if3.sh for name in "Smith" "Hampshire" "Umass" "Amherst" "MtHolyoke" ; do if [ "$name" == "Smith" ]; then town="Northampton" suffix="College" fi if [ "$name" == "Amherst" ]; then town="Amherst" suffix="College" fi if [ "$name" == "Umass" ]; then town="Amherst" suffix="" name="University of Mass." fi if [ "$name" == "MtHolyoke" ]; then town="South Hadley" suffix="College" fi if [ "$name" == "Hampshire" ]; then town="Amherst" suffix="College" fi echo "$name $suffix, $town, Massachusetts" done
- Try it!
- You will have noticed that the then-blocks for "Amherst" and "Hampshire" are the same, so we could simplify our code by using a logical OR operator for "Amherst" and "Hampshire". The syntax for logical operators in Bash is a bit weird, though... logical:
if [ "$name" == "Amherst" ] || [ "$name" == "Hampshire" ]; then town="Amherst" suffix="College" fi
- The OR operator is || and the AND operator is &&.
Challenge #2: |
Modify the previous script, noticing that "Smith", "Amherst", "Hampshire", and "MtHolyoke" all have suffix College, and therefore one if statement with a then and else block can be used to set the suffix. You will need other if statements for the towns.
<showafterdate after="20170331 11:45" before="20170601 00:00">
Solutions to Challenges
- Challenge 1
#! /bin/bash # challenge1.sh # D. Thiebaut # get integer grade echo -n "Enter the grade (0-100): " read grade if [ "$grade" -gt "93" ]; then echo "A" else if [ "$grade" -gt "90" ]; then echo "A-" else if [ "$grade" -gt "87" ]; then echo "B+" else if [ "$grade" -gt "83" ]; then echo "B" else echo "Grade lower than B" fi fi fi fi
- Challenge 2
#! /bin/bash # Challenge2.sh # D. Thiebaut # displays the name of the 5 colleges and where they are located for name in "Smith" "Hampshire" "Umass" "Amherst" "MtHolyoke" ; do if [ "$name" == "Amherst" ] || [ "$name" == "Hampshire" ] || [ "$name" == "Umass" ]; then town="Amherst" else if [ "$name" == "Smith" ]; then town="Northampton" else town="South Hadley" fi fi if [ "$name" == "Smith" ] || [ "$name" == "Amherst" ] || [ "$name" == "Hampshire" ] \ || [ "$name" == "MtHolyoke" ] ; then suffix="College" else name="University of Mass." suffix="" fi echo "$name $suffix, $town, Massachusetts" done
</showafterdate>
Cateory:Lab