| 1 | #!/usr/bin/env bash |
| 2 | |
| 3 | ### Append string to string |
| 4 | s='abc' |
| 5 | s+=d |
| 6 | echo $s |
| 7 | # stdout: abcd |
| 8 | |
| 9 | ### Append array to array |
| 10 | a=(x y ) |
| 11 | a+=(t 'u v') |
| 12 | argv.py "${a[@]}" |
| 13 | # stdout: ['x', 'y', 't', 'u v'] |
| 14 | |
| 15 | ### Append array to string should be an error |
| 16 | s='abc' |
| 17 | s+=(d e f) |
| 18 | echo $s |
| 19 | # BUG bash/mksh stdout: abc |
| 20 | # BUG bash/mksh status: 0 |
| 21 | # status: 1 |
| 22 | |
| 23 | ### Append string to array should be disallowed |
| 24 | # They treat this as implicit index 0. We disallow this on the LHS, so we will |
| 25 | # also disallow it on the RHS. |
| 26 | a=(x y ) |
| 27 | a+=z |
| 28 | argv.py "${a[@]}" |
| 29 | # OK bash/mksh stdout: ['xz', 'y'] |
| 30 | # OK bash/mksh status: 0 |
| 31 | # status: 1 |
| 32 | |
| 33 | ### Append string to array element |
| 34 | # They treat this as implicit index 0. We disallow this on the LHS, so we will |
| 35 | # also disallow it on the RHS. |
| 36 | a=(x y ) |
| 37 | a[1]+=z |
| 38 | argv.py "${a[@]}" |
| 39 | # stdout: ['x', 'yz'] |
| 40 | # status: 0 |
| 41 | |
| 42 | ### Append to last element |
| 43 | # Works in bash, but not mksh. It seems like bash is doing the right thing. |
| 44 | # a[-1] is allowed on the LHS. mksh doesn't have negative indexing? |
| 45 | a=(1 '2 3') |
| 46 | a[-1]+=' 4' |
| 47 | argv.py "${a[@]}" |
| 48 | # stdout: ['1', '2 3 4'] |
| 49 | # BUG mksh stdout: ['1', '2 3', ' 4'] |
| 50 | |
| 51 | ### Try to append list to element |
| 52 | # bash - cannot assign list to array number |
| 53 | # mksh - a[-1]+: is not an identifier |
| 54 | a=(1 '2 3') |
| 55 | a[-1]+=(4 5) |
| 56 | # status: 1 |
| 57 | |
| 58 | ### Strings have value semantics, not reference semantics |
| 59 | s1='abc' |
| 60 | s2=$s1 |
| 61 | s1+='d' |
| 62 | echo $s1 $s2 |
| 63 | # stdout: abcd abc |
| 64 | |
| 65 | ### Append to nonexistent string |
| 66 | f() { |
| 67 | local a+=a |
| 68 | echo $a |
| 69 | |
| 70 | b+=b |
| 71 | echo $b |
| 72 | |
| 73 | readonly c+=c |
| 74 | echo $c |
| 75 | |
| 76 | export d+=d |
| 77 | echo $d |
| 78 | |
| 79 | # Not declared anywhere |
| 80 | e[1]+=e |
| 81 | echo ${e[1]} |
| 82 | |
| 83 | # Declare is the same, but mksh doesn't support it |
| 84 | #declare e+=e |
| 85 | #echo $e |
| 86 | } |
| 87 | f |
| 88 | # stdout-json: "a\nb\nc\nd\ne\n" |
| 89 | |
| 90 | ### Append to nonexistent array |
| 91 | f() { |
| 92 | # NOTE: mksh doesn't like a=() after keyword. Doesn't allow local arrays! |
| 93 | local x+=(a b) |
| 94 | argv "${x[@]}" |
| 95 | |
| 96 | y+=(c d) |
| 97 | argv "${y[@]}" |
| 98 | |
| 99 | readonly z+=(e f) |
| 100 | argv "${z[@]}" |
| 101 | } |
| 102 | f |
| 103 | # stdout-json: "['a', 'b']\n['c', 'd']\n['e', 'f']\n" |
| 104 | # N-I mksh stdout-json: "" |
| 105 | # N-I mksh status: 1 |
| 106 | |
| 107 | ### Append used like env prefix is a parse error |
| 108 | # This should be an error in other shells but it's not. |
| 109 | A=a |
| 110 | A+=a printenv.py A |
| 111 | # status: 2 |
| 112 | # BUG bash stdout: aa |
| 113 | # BUG bash status: 0 |
| 114 | # BUG mksh stdout: a |
| 115 | # BUG mksh status: 0 |