Trying to add a zero before the varaible if it\'s less than 10 and create said directory. I can\'t seem to get the zero to add correctly. Keeps resulting in making 02.1.20
You can replace the whole lot with:
for day in 0{1..9} {10..31} ; do
mkdir ${path}/02.${day}.2011
done
while still not having to start up any external processes (other than what may be in the loop body).
That's probably not that important here since mkdir
is not one of those things you tend to do a lot of in a tight loop but it will be important if you write a lot of your quick and dirty code in bash
.
Process creation is expensive when you're doing it hundreds of thousands of times as some of my scripts have occasionally done :-)
Example so you can see it in action:
pax$ for day in 0{8..9} {10..11}; do echo ${day}; done
08
09
10
11
And, if you have a recent-enough version of bash
, it will honor your request for leading digits:
A sequence expression takes the form
{x..y[..incr]}
, wherex
andy
are either integers or single characters, andincr
, an optional increment, is an integer.When integers are supplied, the expression expands to each number between
x
andy
, inclusive.Supplied integers may be prefixed with
0
to force each term to have the same width. When eitherx
ory
begins with a zero, the shell attempts to force all generated terms to contain the same number of digits, zero-padding where necessary.
So, on my Debian 6 box, with bash
version 4.1.5:
pax$ for day in {08..11} ; do echo ${day} ; done
08
09
10
11