Absolute value of a number

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梦毁少年i
梦毁少年i 2021-01-17 08:41

I want to take the absolute of a number by the following code in bash:

#!/bin/bash
echo \"Enter the first file name: \"
read first

echo \"Enter the second f         


        
4条回答
  •  一向
    一向 (楼主)
    2021-01-17 09:27

    $ s2=5 s1=4
    $ echo $s2 $s1
    5 4
    $ res= expr $s2 - $s1
    1
    $ echo $res
    

    What's actually happening on the fourth line is that res is being set to nothing and exported for the expr command. Thus, when you run [ "$res" -lt 0 ] res is expanding to nothing and you see the error.

    You could just use an arithmetic expression:

    $ (( res=s2-s1 ))
    $ echo $res
    1
    

    Arithmetic context guarantees the result will be an integer, so even if all your terms are undefined to begin with, you will get an integer result (namely zero).

    $ (( res = whoknows - whocares )); echo $res
    0
    

    Alternatively, you can tell the shell that res is an integer by declaring it as such:

    $ declare -i res
    $ res=s2-s1
    

    The interesting thing here is that the right hand side of an assignment is treated in arithmetic context, so you don't need the $ for the expansions.

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