On Tue, Jul 29, 2008 at 1:00 AM, Xavier <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Tue, Jul 29, 2008 at 2:06 AM, Henning Garus
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> On Mon, 28 Jul 2008 23:44:13 +0200
>> Xavier <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>
>>> Anyway, I have something else, look :
>>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] ~]$ array=('' {foo,bar,baz})
>>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] ~]$ [ -z "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" ] || echo array not empty
>>> bash: [: too many arguments
>>> array not empty
>>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] ~]$ [ -z "${array[*]}" ] || echo array not empty
>>> array not empty
>>>
>>> I never understood what the differences between @ and * were though...
>>>
>>
>>
>> The way I understand it "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" is expanded to "foo" "bar" "baz",
>> while "${array[*]}" is expanded to "foo%bar%baz" where % is the first
>> character of $IFS (meaning ' ' if not set otherwise).
>>
>> So with @ you get several words for the test, which would explain the
>> observed behaviour.
>>
>> Interestingly enough [[ -z "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" ]] seems to work as well...
>>
>
> Hmm now we have too many solutions and I don't know which one to choose.
> 1) [ -z "$array" ]
> 2) [ -z "${array[*]}" ]
> 3) [[ -z "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" ]]
>
> (the current problematic one is [ -z "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" ] ).
> So you can vote now :)

I think (2) is what we are looking for. "If the array (as a whole)
contains anything, then..."

-Dan

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