8.2. Numerical Constants
A shell script interprets a number
as decimal (base 10), unless that number has a
special prefix or notation. A number preceded by a
0 is octal
(base 8). A number preceded by 0x
is hexadecimal (base 16). A number
with an embedded # evaluates as
BASE#NUMBER (with range and notational
restrictions).
Example 8-4. Representation of numerical constants
#!/bin/bash
# numbers.sh: Representation of numbers in different bases.
# Decimal: the default
let "dec = 32"
echo "decimal number = $dec" # 32
# Nothing out of the ordinary here.
# Octal: numbers preceded by '0' (zero)
let "oct = 032"
echo "octal number = $oct" # 26
# Expresses result in decimal.
# --------- ------ -- -------
# Hexadecimal: numbers preceded by '0x' or '0X'
let "hex = 0x32"
echo "hexadecimal number = $hex" # 50
# Expresses result in decimal.
# Other bases: BASE#NUMBER
# BASE between 2 and 64.
# NUMBER must use symbols within the BASE range, see below.
let "bin = 2#111100111001101"
echo "binary number = $bin" # 31181
let "b32 = 32#77"
echo "base-32 number = $b32" # 231
let "b64 = 64#@_"
echo "base-64 number = $b64" # 4031
# This notation only works for a limited range (2 - 64) of ASCII characters.
# 10 digits + 26 lowercase characters + 26 uppercase characters + @ + _
echo
echo $((36#zz)) $((2#10101010)) $((16#AF16)) $((53#1aA))
# 1295 170 44822 3375
# Important note:
# --------------
# Using a digit out of range of the specified base notation
#+ gives an error message.
let "bad_oct = 081"
# (Partial) error message output:
# bad_oct = 081: value too great for base (error token is "081")
# Octal numbers use only digits in the range 0 - 7.
exit 0 # Thanks, Rich Bartell and Stephane Chazelas, for clarification. |