I can run a while loop with regex successfully
$ cat while.sh
#!/bin/sh
arr=(a1c a2c a3c b4c)
i=0
while [[ ${arr[i]} =~ a(.)c ]]
do
echo ${BASH_REMATCH[1]}
((i++))
done
$ ./while.sh
1
2
3
A for loop causes this error
$ cat for.sh
#!/bin/sh
arr=(a1c a2c a3c b4c)
for ((i=0; [[ ${arr[i]} =~ a(.)c ]]; i++))
do
echo ${BASH_REMATCH[1]}
done
$ ./for.sh
./for.sh: line 3: ((: [[ a1c =~ a(.)c ]]: syntax error: operand expected (error
token is "[[ a1c =~ a(.)c ]]")
I’m not sure your
forloop construct is legal with regex. Double parenthesis are for Arithmetic expressions and that includes for loops. Regex matching is not arithmetic. I think if you were really set on usingforfor some reason, you would have to do something like: