Loop through a comma-separated shell variable

If you set a different field separator, you can directly use a for loop:

IFS=","
for v in $variable
do
   # things with "$v" ...
done

You can also store the values in an array and then loop through it as indicated in How do I split a string on a delimiter in Bash?:

IFS=, read -ra values <<< "$variable"
for v in "${values[@]}"
do
   # things with "$v"
done

Test

$ variable="abc,def,ghij"
$ IFS=","
$ for v in $variable
> do
> echo "var is $v"
> done
var is abc
var is def
var is ghij

You can find a broader approach in this solution to How to iterate through a comma-separated list and execute a command for each entry.

Examples on the second approach:

$ IFS=, read -ra vals <<< "abc,def,ghij"
$ printf "%s\n" "${vals[@]}"
abc
def
ghij
$ for v in "${vals[@]}"; do echo "$v --"; done
abc --
def --
ghij --

Not messing with IFS
Not calling external command

variable=abc,def,ghij
for i in ${variable//,/ }
do
    # call your procedure/other scripts here below
    echo "$i"
done

Using bash string manipulation http://www.tldp.org/LDP/abs/html/string-manipulation.html


You can use the following script to dynamically traverse through your variable, no matter how many fields it has as long as it is only comma separated.

variable=abc,def,ghij
for i in $(echo $variable | sed "s/,/ /g")
do
    # call your procedure/other scripts here below
    echo "$i"
done

Instead of the echo "$i" call above, between the do and done inside the for loop, you can invoke your procedure proc "$i".


Update: The above snippet works if the value of variable does not contain spaces. If you have such a requirement, please use one of the solutions that can change IFS and then parse your variable.


Hope this helps.