| 1 |
#
|
| 2 |
# Differences from bash:
|
| 3 |
# - literal syntax alternates key-value
|
| 4 |
# - (@k) syntax for keys. Although this is sort of like my ${@array} syntax
|
| 5 |
# for arrays.
|
| 6 |
# - zsh allows $a[$k], not just ${a[$k]}
|
| 7 |
|
| 8 |
|
| 9 |
|
| 10 |
typeset -A a
|
| 11 |
a=(aa b foo bar a+1 c)
|
| 12 |
|
| 13 |
|
| 14 |
typeset -A a
|
| 15 |
a=(aa b foo bar a+1 c)
|
| 16 |
echo ${a[aa]}
|
| 17 |
## stdout: b
|
| 18 |
|
| 19 |
|
| 20 |
typeset -A a
|
| 21 |
a=(aa b foo bar a+1 c)
|
| 22 |
a[X]=XX
|
| 23 |
argv.py "${a[@]}"
|
| 24 |
# What order is this?
|
| 25 |
## stdout: ['bar', 'b', 'c', 'XX']
|
| 26 |
|
| 27 |
|
| 28 |
typeset -A assoc
|
| 29 |
assoc=(k1 v1 k2 v2 k3 v3)
|
| 30 |
for k in "${(@k)assoc}"; do
|
| 31 |
echo "$k: $assoc[$k]"
|
| 32 |
done
|
| 33 |
## stdout-json: "k1: v1\nk2: v2\nk3: v3\n"
|
| 34 |
|
| 35 |
|
| 36 |
typeset -A assoc
|
| 37 |
assoc=(k1 v1 k2 v2 k3 v3)
|
| 38 |
for k v ("${(@kv)assoc}"); do
|
| 39 |
echo "$k: $v"
|
| 40 |
done
|
| 41 |
## stdout-json: "k1: v1\nk2: v2\nk3: v3\n"
|
| 42 |
|
| 43 |
|
| 44 |
typeset -A assoc
|
| 45 |
assoc=(k1 v1 k2 v2 k3 v3)
|
| 46 |
echo ${#assoc} ${#assoc[k1]}
|
| 47 |
## stdout: 3 2
|
| 48 |
|
| 49 |
|
| 50 |
typeset -A assoc
|
| 51 |
assoc=(k1 v1 k2 v2 k3 v3)
|
| 52 |
argv.py "${assoc[1]}"
|
| 53 |
## stdout: ['']
|