Table of Contents

The C-style for-loop

Synopsis

for (( <EXPR1> ; <EXPR2> ; <EXPR3> )); do
  <LIST>
done

# as a special case: without semicolon after ((...))
for (( <EXPR1> ; <EXPR2> ; <EXPR3> )) do
  <LIST>
done

# alternative, historical and undocumented syntax
for (( <EXPR1> ; <EXPR2> ; <EXPR3> )) {
  <LIST>
}

Description

The C-style for-loop is a compound command derived from the equivalent ksh88 feature, which is in turn derived from the C "for" keyword. Its purpose is to provide a convenient way to evaluate arithmetic expressions in a loop, plus initialize any required arithmetic variables. It is one of the main "loop with a counter" mechanisms available in the language.

The ((;;)) syntax at the top of the loop is not an ordinary arithmetic compound command, but is part of the C-style for-loop's own syntax. The three sections separated by semicolons are arithmetic expression contexts. Each time one of the sections is to be evaluated, the section is first processed for: brace, parameter, command, arithmetic, and process substitution/expansion as usual for arithmetic contexts. When the loop is entered for the first time, <EXPR1> is evaluated, then <EXPR2> is evaluated and checked. If <EXPR2> is true, then the loop body is executed. After the first and all subsequent iterations, <EXPR1> is skipped, <EXPR3> is evaluated, then <EXPR2> is evaluated and checked again. This process continues until <EXPR2> is false.

:!: If one of these arithmetic expressions in the for-loop is empty, it behaves as if it would be 1 (TRUE in arithmetic context).

:!: Like all loops (Both types of for-loop, while and until), this loop can be:

The equivalent construct using a while loop and the arithmetic expression compound command would be structured as:

(( <EXPR1> ))
while (( <EXPR2> )); do
  <LIST>
  (( <EXPR3> ))
done
The equivalent while construct isn't exactly the same, because both, the for and the while loop behave differently in case you use the continue command.

Alternate syntax

Bash, Ksh93, Mksh, and Zsh also provide an alternate syntax for the for loop - enclosing the loop body in {...} instead of do ... done:

for ((x=1; x<=3; x++))
{
  echo $x
}

This syntax is not documented and shouldn't be used. I found the parser definitions for it in 1.x code, and in modern 4.x code. My guess is that it's there for compatibility reasons. Unlike the other aforementioned shells, Bash does not support the analogous syntax for case..esac.

Return status

The return status is that of the last command executed from <LIST>, or FALSE if any of the arithmetic expressions failed.

Alternatives and best practice

TODO: Show some alternate usages involving functions and local variables for initialization.

Examples

Simple counter

A simple counter, the loop iterates 101 times ("0" to "100" are 101 numbers → 101 runs!), and everytime the variable x is set to the current value.

for ((x = 0 ; x <= 100 ; x++)); do
  echo "Counter: $x"
done

Stepping counter

This is the very same counter (compare it to the simple counter example above), but the change that is made is a x += 10. That means, it will count from 0 to 100, but with a step of 10.

for ((x = 0 ; x <= 100 ; x += 10)); do
  echo "Counter: $x"
done

Bits analyzer

This example loops through the bit-values of a Byte, beginning from 128, ending at 1. If that bit is set in the testbyte, it prints "1", else "0" ⇒ it prints the binary representation of the testbyte value (8 bits).

#!/usr/bin/env bash
# Example written for http://wiki.bash-hackers.org/syntax/ccmd/c_for#bits_analyzer
# Based on TheBonsai's original.

function toBin {
	typeset m=$1 n=2 x='x[(n*=2)>m]'
	for ((x = x; n /= 2;)); do
		printf %d $(( m & n && 1))
	done
}

function main {
	[[ $1 == +([0-9]) ]] || return
	typeset result
	if (( $(ksh -c 'printf %..2d $1' _ "$1") == ( result = $(toBin "$1") ) )); then
		printf '%s is %s in base 2!\n' "$1" "$result"
	else
		echo 'Oops, something went wrong with our calculation.' >&2
		exit 1
	fi
}

main "${1:-123}"

# vim: set fenc=utf-8 ff=unix ft=sh :

testbyte=123
for (( n = 128 ; n >= 1 ; n /= 2 )); do
  if (( testbyte & n )); then
    printf %d 1
  else
    printf %s 0
  fi
done
echo

Why that one begins at 128 (highest value, on the left) and not 1 (lowest value, on the right)? It's easier to print from left to right…

We arrive at 128 for n through the recursive arithmetic expression stored in x, which calculates the next-greatest power of 2 after m. To show that it works, we use ksh93 to double-check the answer, because it has a built-in feature for printf to print a representation of any number in an arbitrary base (up to 64). Very few languages have that ability built-in, even things like Python.

Up, down, up, down...

This counts up and down from 0 to ${1:-5}, ${2:-4} times, demonstrating more complicated arithmetic expressions with multiple variables.

for (( incr = 1, n=0, times = ${2:-4}, step = ${1:-5}; (n += incr) % step || (incr *= -1, --times);)); do
    printf '%*s\n' "$((n+1))" "$n"
done
 ~ $ bash <(xclip -o)
 1
  2
   3
    4
     5
    4
   3
  2
 1
0
 1
  2
   3
    4
     5
    4
   3
  2
 1

Portability considerations

Bugs

See also