====== The case statement ====== ===== Synopsis ===== case in [(] ) ;; # or ;& or ;;& in Bash 4 [(] ) ;; [(] | ) ;; ... [(] ) [;;] esac ===== Description ===== The ''case''-statement can execute commands based on a [[syntax:pattern | pattern matching]] decision. The word '''' is matched against every pattern '''' and on a match, the associated [[syntax:basicgrammar#lists | list]] '''' is executed. Every commandlist is terminated by '';;''. This rule is optional for the very last commandlist (i.e., you can omit the '';;'' before the ''esac''). Every '''' is separated from it's associated '''' by a '')'', and is optionally preceded by a ''(''. Bash 4 introduces two new action terminators. The classic behavior using '';;'' is to execute only the list associated with the first matching pattern, then break out of the ''case'' block. The '';&'' terminator causes ''case'' to also execute the next block without testing its pattern. The '';;&'' operator is like '';;'', except the case statement doesn't terminate after executing the associated list - Bash just continues testing the next pattern as though the previous pattern didn't match. Using these terminators, a ''case'' statement can be configured to test against all patterns, or to share code between blocks, for example. The word '''' is expanded using //tilde//, //parameter// and //variable expansion//; //arithmetic//, //command// and //process substitution//; and //quote removal//. **No word splitting, brace, or pathname expansion is done**, which means you can leave expansions unquoted without problems: var="test word" case $var in ... esac This is similar to the behavior of the [[syntax:ccmd:conditional_expression | conditional expression command ("new test command")]] (also no word splitting for expansions). Unlike the C-case-statement, only the matching list and nothing else is executed. If more patterns match the word, only the first match is taken. (**Note** the comment about Bash v4 changes above.) Multiple ''|''-delimited patterns can be specified for a single block. This is a POSIX-compatable equivalent to the ''@(pattern-list)'' extglob construct. The ''case'' statement is one of the most difficult commands to indent clearly, and people frequently ask about the most "correct" style. Just do your best - there are many variations of indenting style for ''case'' and no real agreed-upon best practice. ===== Examples ===== Another one of my stupid examples... printf '%s ' 'Which fruit do you like most?' read -${BASH_VERSION+e}r fruit case $fruit in apple) echo 'Mmmmh... I like those!' ;; banana) echo 'Hm, a bit awry, no?' ;; orange|tangerine) echo $'Eeeks! I don\'t like those!\nGo away!' exit 1 ;; *) echo "Unknown fruit - sure it isn't toxic?" esac Here's a practical example showing a common pattern involving a ''case'' statement. If the first argument is one of a valid set of alternatives, then perform some sysfs operations under Linux to control a video card's power profile. Otherwise, show a usage synopsis, and print the current power profile and GPU temperature. # Set radeon power management function clk { typeset base=/sys/class/drm/card0/device [[ -r ${base}/hwmon/hwmon0/temp1_input && -r ${base}/power_profile ]] || return 1 case $1 in low|high|default) printf '%s\n' "temp: $(<${base}/hwmon/hwmon0/temp1_input)C" "old profile: $(<${base}/power_profile)" echo "$1" >${base}/power_profile echo "new profile: $(<${base}/power_profile)" ;; *) echo "Usage: $FUNCNAME [ low | high | default ]" printf '%s\n' "temp: $(<${base}/hwmon/hwmon0/temp1_input)C" "current profile: $(<${base}/power_profile)" esac } A template for experiments with ''case'' logic, showing shared code between blocks using '';&'', and the non-short-circuiting '';;&'' operator: #!/usr/bin/env bash f() { local -a "$@" local x for x; do case $x in $1) local "$x"'+=(1)' ;;& $2) local "$x"'+=(2)' ;& $3) local "$x"'+=(3)' ;; $1|$2) local "$x"'+=(4)' esac IFS=, local -a "$x"'=("${x}: ${'"$x"'[*]}")' done for x; do echo "${!x}" done } f a b c # output: # a: 1,4 # b: 2,3 # c: 3 ===== Portability considerations ===== * Only the '';;'' delimiter is specified by POSIX. * zsh and mksh use the '';|'' control operator instead of Bash's '';;&''. Mksh has '';;&'' for Bash compatability (undocumented). * ksh93 has the '';&'' operator, but no '';;&'' or equivalent. * ksh93, mksh, zsh, and posh support a historical syntax where open and close braces may be used in place of ''in'' and ''esac'': ''case word { x) ...; };''. This is similar to the alternate form Bash supports for its [[syntax/ccmd/classic_for | for loops]], but Bash doesn't support this syntax for ''case..esac''. ===== See also ===== * [[http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/utilities/V3_chap02.html#tag_18_09_04_05|POSIX case conditional construct]]