| 1 |
|
| 2 | ## compare_shells: bash dash mksh
|
| 3 | ## oils_failures_allowed: 3
|
| 4 |
|
| 5 | #### Case statement
|
| 6 | case a in
|
| 7 | a) echo A ;;
|
| 8 | *) echo star ;;
|
| 9 | esac
|
| 10 |
|
| 11 | for x in a b; do
|
| 12 | case $x in
|
| 13 | # the pattern is DYNAMIC and evaluated on every iteration
|
| 14 | $x) echo loop ;;
|
| 15 | *) echo star ;;
|
| 16 | esac
|
| 17 | done
|
| 18 | ## STDOUT:
|
| 19 | A
|
| 20 | loop
|
| 21 | loop
|
| 22 | ## END
|
| 23 |
|
| 24 | #### Case statement with ;;&
|
| 25 | # ;;& keeps testing conditions
|
| 26 | # NOTE: ;& and ;;& are bash 4 only, no on Mac
|
| 27 | case a in
|
| 28 | a) echo A ;;&
|
| 29 | *) echo star ;;&
|
| 30 | *) echo star2 ;;
|
| 31 | esac
|
| 32 | ## status: 0
|
| 33 | ## STDOUT:
|
| 34 | A
|
| 35 | star
|
| 36 | star2
|
| 37 | ## END
|
| 38 | ## N-I dash stdout-json: ""
|
| 39 | ## N-I dash status: 2
|
| 40 |
|
| 41 | #### Case statement with ;&
|
| 42 | # ;& ignores the next condition. Why would that be useful?
|
| 43 | case a in
|
| 44 | a) echo A ;&
|
| 45 | XX) echo two ;&
|
| 46 | YY) echo three ;;
|
| 47 | esac
|
| 48 | ## status: 0
|
| 49 | ## STDOUT:
|
| 50 | A
|
| 51 | two
|
| 52 | three
|
| 53 | ## END
|
| 54 | ## N-I dash stdout-json: ""
|
| 55 | ## N-I dash status: 2
|
| 56 |
|
| 57 | #### Case with empty condition
|
| 58 | case $empty in
|
| 59 | ''|foo) echo match ;;
|
| 60 | *) echo no ;;
|
| 61 | esac
|
| 62 | ## stdout: match
|
| 63 |
|
| 64 | #### Match a literal with a glob character
|
| 65 | x='*.py'
|
| 66 | case "$x" in
|
| 67 | '*.py') echo match ;;
|
| 68 | esac
|
| 69 | ## stdout: match
|
| 70 |
|
| 71 | #### Match a literal with a glob character with a dynamic pattern
|
| 72 | x='b.py'
|
| 73 | pat='[ab].py'
|
| 74 | case "$x" in
|
| 75 | $pat) echo match ;;
|
| 76 | esac
|
| 77 | ## stdout: match
|
| 78 |
|
| 79 | #### Quoted literal in glob pattern
|
| 80 | x='[ab].py'
|
| 81 | pat='[ab].py'
|
| 82 | case "$x" in
|
| 83 | "$pat") echo match ;;
|
| 84 | esac
|
| 85 | ## stdout: match
|
| 86 |
|
| 87 | #### Multiple Patterns Match
|
| 88 | x=foo
|
| 89 | result='-'
|
| 90 | case "$x" in
|
| 91 | f*|*o) result="$result X"
|
| 92 | esac
|
| 93 | echo $result
|
| 94 | ## stdout: - X
|
| 95 |
|
| 96 | #### Match one unicode char
|
| 97 |
|
| 98 | # These two code points form a single character.
|
| 99 | two_code_points="__$(echo $'\u0061\u0300')__"
|
| 100 |
|
| 101 | # U+0061 is A, and U+0300 is an accent.
|
| 102 | #
|
| 103 | # (Example taken from # https://blog.golang.org/strings)
|
| 104 | #
|
| 105 | # However ? in bash/zsh only counts CODE POINTS. They do NOT take into account
|
| 106 | # this case.
|
| 107 |
|
| 108 | for s in '__a__' '__μ__' "$two_code_points"; do
|
| 109 | case $s in
|
| 110 | __?__)
|
| 111 | echo yes
|
| 112 | ;;
|
| 113 | *)
|
| 114 | echo no
|
| 115 | esac
|
| 116 | done
|
| 117 | ## STDOUT:
|
| 118 | yes
|
| 119 | yes
|
| 120 | no
|
| 121 | ## END
|
| 122 | ## BUG dash/mksh STDOUT:
|
| 123 | yes
|
| 124 | no
|
| 125 | no
|
| 126 | ## END
|
| 127 |
|
| 128 | #### case with single byte LC_ALL=C
|
| 129 |
|
| 130 | LC_ALL=C
|
| 131 |
|
| 132 | c=$(printf \\377)
|
| 133 |
|
| 134 | # OSH prints -1 here
|
| 135 | #echo "${#c}"
|
| 136 |
|
| 137 | case $c in
|
| 138 | '') echo a ;;
|
| 139 | "$c") echo b ;;
|
| 140 | esac
|
| 141 |
|
| 142 | ## STDOUT:
|
| 143 | b
|
| 144 | ## END
|
| 145 |
|
| 146 | #### \(\) in pattern (regression)
|
| 147 | s='foo()'
|
| 148 |
|
| 149 | case $s in
|
| 150 | *\(\)) echo 'match'
|
| 151 | esac
|
| 152 |
|
| 153 | case $SH in (dash) exit;; esac # not implemented
|
| 154 |
|
| 155 | shopt -s extglob
|
| 156 |
|
| 157 | case $s in
|
| 158 | *(foo|bar)'()') echo 'extglob'
|
| 159 | esac
|
| 160 | ## STDOUT:
|
| 161 | match
|
| 162 | extglob
|
| 163 | ## END
|
| 164 | ## N-I dash STDOUT:
|
| 165 | match
|
| 166 | ## END
|
| 167 |
|
| 168 |
|
| 169 | #### case \n bug regression
|
| 170 |
|
| 171 | case
|
| 172 | in esac
|
| 173 |
|
| 174 | ## STDOUT:
|
| 175 | ## END
|
| 176 | ## status: 2
|
| 177 | ## OK mksh status: 1
|
| 178 |
|