Is there a simple way to reverse an array?
#!/bin/bash
array=(1 2 3 4 5 6 7)
echo "${array[@]}"
so I would get: 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
instead of: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
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Sign up to join this communityAnother unconventional approach:
#!/bin/bash
array=(1 2 3 4 5 6 7)
f() { array=("${BASH_ARGV[@]}"); }
shopt -s extdebug
f "${array[@]}"
shopt -u extdebug
echo "${array[@]}"
Output:
7 6 5 4 3 2 1
If extdebug
is enabled, array BASH_ARGV
contains in a function all positional parameters in reverse order.
f() ( shopt -s extdebug; echo "${BASH_ARGV[@]}" ); f {1..7}
Jun 10, 2022 at 14:46
Unconventional approach (all not pure bash
):
if all elements in an array are just one characters (like in the question) you can use rev
:
echo "${array[@]}" | rev
otherwise:
printf '%s\n' "${array[@]}" | tac | tr '\n' ' '; echo
and if you can use zsh
:
echo ${(Oa)array}
tac
, as the opposite of cat
quite good to remember, THANKS!
rev
, i need to mention that rev
will not work correctly for numbers with two digits. For example an array element of 12
using rev will be printed as 21
. Give it a try ;-)
Dec 26, 2017 at 21:46
(Oa)
and not a 0
.
Oct 12, 2022 at 6:42
I have answered the question as written, and this code reverses the array. (Printing the elements in reverse order without reversing the array is just a for
loop counting down from the last element to zero.) This is a standard "swap first and last" algorithm.
array=(1 2 3 4 5 6 7)
min=0
max=$(( ${#array[@]} -1 ))
while [[ min -lt max ]]
do
# Swap current first and last elements
x="${array[$min]}"
array[$min]="${array[$max]}"
array[$max]="$x"
# Move closer
(( min++, max-- ))
done
echo "${array[@]}"
It works for arrays of odd and even length.
If you actually want the reverse in another array:
reverse() {
# first argument is the array to reverse
# second is the output array
declare -n arr="$1" rev="$2"
for i in "${arr[@]}"
do
rev=("$i" "${rev[@]}")
done
}
Then:
array=(1 2 3 4)
reverse array foo
echo "${foo[@]}"
Gives:
4 3 2 1
This should correctly handle cases where an array index is missing, say you had array=([1]=1 [2]=2 [4]=4)
, in which case looping from 0 to the highest index may add additional, empty, elements.
shellcheck
prints two warnings: array=(1 2 3 4)
<-- SC2034: array appears unused. Verify it or export it.
and for: echo "${foo[@]}"
<-- SC2154: foo is referenced but not assigned.
declare -n
seems not to work in bash versions before 4.3.
Sep 9, 2018 at 21:33
-n
option to the declare
or local
builtin commands (see Bash Builtins) to create a nameref, or a reference to another variable." -- GNU Bash Manual
To swap the array positions in place (even with sparse arrays)(since bash 3.0):
#!/bin/bash
# Declare an sparse array to test:
array=([5]=101 [6]=202 [10]=303 [11]=404 [20]=505 [21]=606 [40]=707)
echo "Initial array values"
declare -p array
swaparray(){ local temp; temp="${array[$1]}"
array[$1]="${array[$2]}"
array[$2]="$temp"
}
ind=("${!array[@]}") # non-sparse array of indexes.
min=-1; max="${#ind[@]}" # limits to one before real limits.
while [[ min++ -lt max-- ]] # move closer on each loop.
do
swaparray "${ind[min]}" "${ind[max]}" # Exchange first and last
done
echo "Final Array swapped in place"
declare -p array
echo "Final Array values"
echo "${array[@]}"
On execution:
./script
Initial array values
declare -a array=([5]="101" [6]="202" [10]="303" [11]="404" [20]="505" [21]="606" [40]="707")
Final Array swapped in place
declare -a array=([5]="707" [6]="606" [10]="505" [11]="404" [20]="303" [21]="202" [40]="101")
Final Array values
707 606 505 404 303 202 101
For older bash, you need to use a loop (in bash (since 2.04)) and using $a
to avoid the trailing space:
#!/bin/bash
array=(101 202 303 404 505 606 707)
last=${#array[@]}
a=""
for (( i=last-1 ; i>=0 ; i-- ));do
printf '%s%s' "$a" "${array[i]}"
a=" "
done
echo
For bash since 2.03:
#!/bin/bash
array=(101 202 303 404 505 606 707)
last=${#array[@]}
a="";i=0
while [[ last -ge $((i+=1)) ]]; do
printf '%s%s' "$a" "${array[ last-i ]}"
a=" "
done
echo
Also (using the bitwise negation operator) (since bash 4.2+):
#!/bin/bash
array=(101 202 303 404 505 606 707)
last=${#array[@]}
a=""
for (( i=0 ; i<last ; i++ )); do
printf '%s%s' "$a" "${array[~i]}"
a=" "
done
echo
Ugly, unmaintainable, but one-liner:
eval eval echo "'\"\${array['{$((${#array[@]}-1))..0}']}\"'"
eval eval echo "'\"\${array[-'{1..${#array[@]}}']}\"'"
.
ind=("${!array[@]}");eval eval echo "'\"\${array[ind[-'{1..${#array[@]}}']]}\"'"
eval eval "'rev=(\$(printf \"%q \"' '\"\${array[-'{1..${#array[@]}}']}\"' '))'"
. This is for dense, non-empty arrays. Doing the same for sparse arrays should be possible too.
Pure bash solution, would work as a one-liner.
$: for (( i=${#array[@]}-1; i>=0; i-- ))
> do rev[${#rev[@]}]=${array[i]}
> done
$: echo "${rev[@]}"
7 6 5 4 3 2 1
rev+=( "${array[i]}" )
seems simpler.
To reverse an arbitrary array (which may contain any number of elements with any values):
With zsh
:
array_reversed=("${(@Oa)array}")
With bash
4.4+, given that bash
variables can't contain NUL bytes anyway, you can use GNU tac -s ''
on the elements printed as NUL delimited records:
readarray -td '' array_reversed < <(
((${#array[@]})) && printf '%s\0' "${array[@]}" | tac -s '')
Note however that bash arrays were inspired from ksh arrays instead of csh/zsh arrays, and are more like associative arrays with keys limited to positive integers (so called sparse arrays), and that method doesn't preserve the keys of the arrays. For instance, for an array like:
array=( [3]=a [12]=b [42]=c )
You get
array_reversed=( [0]=c [1]=b [2]=a )
POSIXly, to reverse the one and only POSIX shell array ($@
, made of $1
, $2
...) in place:
code='set --'
n=$#
while [ "$n" -gt 0 ]; do
code="$code \"\${$n}\""
n=$((n - 1))
done
eval "$code"
#!/bin/bash
(a=(1 2 3 4 5) r=(); for e in "${a[@]}"; do r=("$e" "${r[@]}"); done; declare -p a r)
prints
declare -a a=([0]="1" [1]="2" [2]="3" [3]="4" [4]="5")
declare -a r=([0]="5" [1]="4" [2]="3" [3]="2" [4]="1")
Try this
#!/bin/bash
array=(1 2 3 4 5 6)
index=$((${#array[@]}-1))
for e in "${array[@]}"; do
result[$((index--))]="$e"
done
echo "${result[@]}"
According to TIMTOWDI (There Is More Than One Way To Do It), here is my solution, reversing array a
into r
:
#!/bin/bash
set -u
a=(1 2 3)
t=("${a[@]}")
declare -p a t
r=()
while [ "${#t[@]}" -gt 0 ]
do
r+=("${t[-1]}")
unset 't[-1]'
done
echo "${r[@]}"
declare -p r
When executing with BASH "4.4.23(1)-release (x86_64-suse-linux-gnu)" I got:
+ set -u
+ a=(1 2 3)
+ t=("${a[@]}")
+ declare -p a t
declare -a a=([0]="1" [1]="2" [2]="3")
declare -a t=([0]="1" [1]="2" [2]="3")
+ r=()
+ '[' 3 -gt 0 ']'
+ r+=("${t[-1]}")
+ unset 't[-1]'
+ '[' 2 -gt 0 ']'
+ r+=("${t[-1]}")
+ unset 't[-1]'
+ '[' 1 -gt 0 ']'
+ r+=("${t[-1]}")
+ unset 't[-1]'
+ '[' 0 -gt 0 ']'
+ echo 3 2 1
3 2 1
+ declare -p r
declare -a r=([0]="3" [1]="2" [2]="1")
a=('*' $'a\nb' 'foo bar')
for instance or after IFS=0123456789
.
Nov 18, 2022 at 8:44
${#t[@]}
still asks the shell to split+glob it. In bash, you need to quote expansions in list contexts (and here it's in arguments to the [
command so is a list context) unless you want split+glob. See also Security implications of forgetting to quote a variable in bash/POSIX shells
Nov 18, 2022 at 9:04
Inspired from Cyrus's answer and wiki.wooledge.org. Very quick as there are no loop and no forks! ... On not too large bunch of data!!, regarding Stéphane Chazelas's comment, if you plan to manipulate big bunch of datas, you'd better mandate specialised tools!
And here, confined into one single function.
printReverseArray () {
if shopt -q extdebug; then
printf "%s " "${BASH_ARGV[@]}"
else
shopt -s extdebug
"${FUNCNAME}" "$@"
shopt -u extdebug
fi
}
Sample run:
printReverseArray world! good Hello
Hello good world!
printReverseArray baz "Foo bar"
Foo bar baz
reverseArray() {
if shopt -q extdebug; then
_ArrayToReverse=("${BASH_ARGV[@]}")
else
local -n _ArrayToReverse=$1
shopt -s extdebug
"${FUNCNAME}" "${_ArrayToReverse[@]}"
shopt -u extdebug
fi
}
Then
myArray=({a..d}{1,2})
echo ${myArray[@]}
a1 a2 b1 b2 c1 c2 d1 d2
reverseArray myArray
echo ${myArray[@]}
d2 d1 c2 c1 b2 b1 a2 a1
tac
, I find my approach is more than 10 times as fast as your very quick one on array=( {1..10000} )
on my system for instance (0.07 vs 0.8 second). Remember bash is one of the slowest shells around, and doing things builtin is not always a guarantee that it will be faster, especially for large datasets (where efficiency matters most).
May 16 at 6:41
array=([0]="c" [1]="b" [2]="a")
: 1000x reverseArray
=> 0.034s, while your approach: 1000x readarray...tac)
=> 4.882 seconds!!!
May 16 at 7:12
a=()
(where tac
is not run) and 2.6 vs 2.3 for 1000x on a=(x)
.
May 16 at 7:22
array=(1 2 3 4 5 6 7)
echo "${array[@]} " | tac -s ' '
Or
array=(1 2 3 4 5 6 7)
reverse=$(echo "${array[@]} " | tac -s ' ')
echo ${reverse[@]}
7 6 5 4 3 2 1
$ tac --version
tac (GNU coreutils) 8.28
tac
was already mentioned: unix.stackexchange.com/a/412874/260978, unix.stackexchange.com/a/467924/260978, unix.stackexchange.com/a/413176/260978
tac -s ' '
to separate the input according to spaces. This makes the implementation short and easy to understand.
reverse
is not an array.
reverse=($(echo "${array[@]} " | tac -s ' '))
Jun 27, 2021 at 21:54
tac
won't work robustly unless you print with null byte as separator and use -s ''
as shown in Stéphane's answer.
Nov 18, 2022 at 19:25
You can also consider using seq
:
array=(1 2 3 4 5 6 7)
for i in $(seq $((${#array[@]} - 1)) -1 0); do
echo "${array[$i]}"
done
In FreeBSD you can omit the -1
increment parameter:
for i in $(seq $((${#array[@]} - 1)) 0); do
echo "${array[$i]}"
done