Expressions are used in @, if, and while statements to perform arithmetic, string comparisons, file testing, and so on. exit and set also specify expressions, as can the tcsh built-in command filetest. Expressions are formed by combining variables and constants with operators that resemble those in the C programming language. Operator precedence is the same as in C but can be remembered as follows:
* / %
+ -
Group all other expressions inside parentheses. Parentheses are required if the expression contains <, >, &, or |.
Operators can be one of the following types:
Operator | Description |
---|---|
= | Assign value. |
+= -= | Reassign after addition/subtraction. |
*= /= %= | Reassign after multiplication/division/remainder. |
&= ^= |= | Reassign after bitwise AND/XOR/OR. |
++ | Increment. |
-- | Decrement. |
Operator | Description |
---|---|
* / % | Multiplication; integer division; modulus (remainder) |
+ - | Addition; subtraction |
Operator | Description |
---|---|
~ | Binary inversion (one's complement). |
! | Logical negation. |
<< >> | Bitwise left shift; bitwise right shift. |
& | Bitwise AND. |
^ | Bitwise exclusive OR. |
| | Bitwise OR. |
&& | Logical AND. |
|| | Logical OR. |
{ command } | Return 1 if command is successful, 0 otherwise. Note that this is the opposite of command's normal return code. The $status variable may be more practical. |
Operator | Description |
---|---|
== != | Equality; inequality |
<= >= | Less than or equal to; greater than or equal to |
< > | Less than; greater than |
Command substitution and filename expansion are performed on file before the test is performed. tcsh permits operators to be combined (e.g., -ef). The following is a list of the valid file inquiry operators:
Operator | Description |
---|---|
-d file | The file is a directory. |
-e file | The file exists. |
-f file | The file is a plain file. |
-o file | The user owns the file. |
-r file | The user has read permission. |
-w file | The user has write permission. |
-x file | The user has execute permission. |
-z file | The file has 0 size. |
! | Reverse the sense of any preceding inquiry. |
Some additional operators specific to tcsh are:
Operator | Description |
---|---|
-b file | The file is a block special file. |
-c file | The file is a character special file. |
-g file | The file's set-group-ID bit is set. |
-k file | The file's sticky bit is set. |
-l file | The file is a symbolic link. |
-L file | Apply any remaining operators to symbolic link, not the file it points to. |
-p file | The file is a named pipe (FIFO). |
-s file | The file has nonzero size. |
-S file | The file is a socket special file. |
-t file | file is a digit and is an open file descriptor for a terminal device. |
-u file | The file's set-user-ID bit is set. |
-X file | The file is executable and is in the path or is a shell built-in. |
Finally, tcsh provides the following operators, which return other kinds of information:
Operator | Description |
---|---|
-A[:] file | Last time file was accessed, as the number of seconds since the Epoch. With a colon (:), the result is in timestamp format. |
-C[:] file | Last time inode was modified. With a colon (:), the result is in timestamp format. |
-D file | Device number. |
-F file | Composite file identifier, in the form device:inode. |
-G[:] file | Numeric group ID for the file. With a colon (:), the result is the group name if known; otherwise, the numeric group ID. |
-I file | Inode number. |
-L file | The name of the file pointed to by symbolic link file. |
-M[:] file | Last time file was modified. With a colon (:), the result is in timestamp format. |
-N file | Number of hard links. |
-P[:] file | Permissions in octal, without leading 0. With a colon (:), the result includes a leading 0. |
-Pmode[:] file | Equivalent to -P file ANDed to mode. With a colon (:), the result includes a leading 0. |
-U[:] file | Numeric user ID of the file's owner. With a colon (:), the result is the username if known, otherwise the numeric user ID. |
-Z file | The file's size, in bytes. |
The following examples show @ commands and assume n = 4:
Expression | Value of $x |
---|---|
@ x = ($n > 10 || $n < 5) | 1 |
@ x = ($n >= 0 && $n < 3) | 0 |
@ x = ($n << 2) | 16 |
@ x = ($n >> 2) | 1 |
@ x = $n % 2 | 0 |
@ x = $n % 3 | 1 |
The following examples show the first line of if or while statements:
Expression | Meaning |
---|---|
while ($#argv != 0) | While there are arguments . . . |
if ($today[1] == <">Fri<">) | If the first word is "Fri". . . |
if (-f $argv[1]) | If the first argument is a plain file. . . |
if (! -d $tmpdir) | If tmpdir is not a directory. . . |
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