How to declare 2D array in bash
You can simulate them for example with hashes, but need care about the leading zeroes and many other things. The next demonstration works, but it is far from optimal solution.
#!/bin/bash
declare -A matrix
num_rows=4
num_columns=5
for ((i=1;i<=num_rows;i++)) do
for ((j=1;j<=num_columns;j++)) do
matrix[$i,$j]=$RANDOM
done
done
f1="%$((${#num_rows}+1))s"
f2=" %9s"
printf "$f1" ''
for ((i=1;i<=num_rows;i++)) do
printf "$f2" $i
done
echo
for ((j=1;j<=num_columns;j++)) do
printf "$f1" $j
for ((i=1;i<=num_rows;i++)) do
printf "$f2" ${matrix[$i,$j]}
done
echo
done
the above example creates a 4x5 matrix with random numbers and print it transposed, with the example result
1 2 3 4
1 18006 31193 16110 23297
2 26229 19869 1140 19837
3 8192 2181 25512 2318
4 3269 25516 18701 7977
5 31775 17358 4468 30345
The principle is: Creating one associative array where the index is an string like 3,4
. The benefits:
- it's possible to use for any-dimension arrays ;) like:
30,40,2
for 3 dimensional. - the syntax is close to "C" like arrays
${matrix[2,3]}
Bash doesn't have multi-dimensional array. But you can simulate a somewhat similar effect with associative arrays. The following is an example of associative array pretending to be used as multi-dimensional array:
declare -A arr
arr[0,0]=0
arr[0,1]=1
arr[1,0]=2
arr[1,1]=3
echo "${arr[0,0]} ${arr[0,1]}" # will print 0 1
If you don't declare the array as associative (with -A
), the above won't work. For example, if you omit the declare -A arr
line, the echo
will print 2 3
instead of 0 1
, because 0,0
, 1,0
and such will be taken as arithmetic expression and evaluated to 0
(the value to the right of the comma operator).