Counting characters, words, length of the words and total length in a sentence

限于喜欢 提交于 2019-12-04 02:12:38

riffing on Jaypal Singh's answer:

jcomeau@intrepid:~$ mystring="one two three four five"
jcomeau@intrepid:~$ echo "string length: ${#mystring}"
string length: 23
jcomeau@intrepid:~$ echo -n "lengths of words: "; i=0; for token in $mystring; do echo -n "${#token} "; i=$((i+1)); done; echo; echo "word count: $i"
lengths of words: 3 3 5 4 4 
word count: 5
jcomeau@intrepid:~$ echo -n "maximum string length: "; maxlen=0; for token in $mystring; do if [ ${#token} -gt $maxlen ]; then maxlen=${#token}; fi; done; echo $maxlen
maximum string length: 5
echo $mystring | wc -w

or

echo $mystring | wc --words

will do a word count for you.

You can pipe each word to wc:

echo $token | wc -m

to store the result in a variable:

mycount=`echo $token | wc -m`
echo $mycount

to add to the total as you go word by word, do math with this syntax:

total=0
#start of your loop
total=$((total+mycount))
#end of your loop
echo $total
daya
string="i am a string"

n=$(echo $string | wc -w )

echo $n

4

The value of n can be used as an integer in expressions

eg.

echo $((n+1))
5
#!/bin/bash

mystring="one two three test five"
for token in $mystring; do
  echo -n "$token: ";
  echo -n $token | wc -m;
done
echo "--------------------------";
echo -n "Total words: ";
echo "$mystring" | wc -w;
echo -n "Total chars: ";
echo "$mystring" | wc -m;

You are very close. In bash you can use # to get the length of your variable.

Also, if you want to use bash interpreter use bash instead of sh and the first line goes like this -

#!/bin/bash

Use this script -

#!/bin/bash

mystring="one two three test five"
for token in $mystring
do
    if [ $token = "one" ]
    then
        echo ${#token}
    elif [ $token = "two" ]
    then
        echo ${#token}
    elif [ $token = "three" ]
    then
        echo ${#token}
    elif [ $token = "test" ]
    then
        echo ${#token}
    elif [ $token = "five" ]
    then
        echo ${#token}
    fi
done

The wc command is a good bet.

$ echo "one two three four five" | wc
       1       5      24

where the result is number of lines, words and characters. In a script:

#!/bin/sh

mystring="one two three four five"

read lines words chars <<< `wc <<< $mystring`

echo "lines: $lines"
echo "words: $words"
echo "chars: $chars"

echo -n "word lengths:"
declare -i nonspace=0
declare -i longest=0
for word in $mystring; do
  echo -n " ${#word}"
  nonspace+=${#word}"
  if [[ ${#word} -gt $longest ]]; then
    longest=${#word}
  fi
done
echo ""
echo "nonspace chars: $nonspace"
echo "longest word: $longest chars"

The declare built-in casts a variable as an integer here, so that += will add rather than append.

$ ./doit
lines: 1
words: 5
chars: 24
word lengths: 3 3 5 4 4
nonspace chars: 19

code

var=(one two three)
length=${#var[@]}
echo $length

output

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