xref: /freebsd/bin/expr/expr.1 (revision 59c8e88e72633afbc47a4ace0d2170d00d51f7dc)
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31.Dd October 5, 2016
32.Dt EXPR 1
33.Os
34.Sh NAME
35.Nm expr
36.Nd evaluate expression
37.Sh SYNOPSIS
38.Nm
39.Op Fl e
40.Ar expression
41.Sh DESCRIPTION
42The
43.Nm
44utility evaluates
45.Ar expression
46and writes the result on standard output.
47.Pp
48All operators and operands must be passed as separate arguments.
49Several of the operators have special meaning to command interpreters
50and must therefore be quoted appropriately.
51All integer operands are interpreted in base 10 and must consist of only
52an optional leading minus sign followed by one or more digits (unless
53less strict parsing has been enabled for backwards compatibility with
54prior versions of
55.Nm
56in
57.Fx ) .
58.Pp
59Arithmetic operations are performed using signed integer math with a
60range according to the C
61.Vt intmax_t
62data type (the largest signed integral type available).
63All conversions and operations are checked for overflow.
64Overflow results in program termination with an error message on stdout
65and with an error status.
66.Pp
67The
68.Fl e
69option enables backwards compatible behaviour as detailed below.
70.Pp
71Operators are listed below in order of increasing precedence; all
72are left-associative.
73Operators with equal precedence are grouped within symbols
74.Ql {
75and
76.Ql } .
77.Bl -tag -width indent
78.It Ar expr1 Li \&| Ar expr2
79Return the evaluation of
80.Ar expr1
81if it is neither an empty string nor zero;
82otherwise, returns the evaluation of
83.Ar expr2
84if it is not an empty string;
85otherwise, returns zero.
86.It Ar expr1 Li & Ar expr2
87Return the evaluation of
88.Ar expr1
89if neither expression evaluates to an empty string or zero;
90otherwise, returns zero.
91.It Ar expr1 Bro =, >, >=, <, <=, != Brc Ar expr2
92Return the results of integer comparison if both arguments are integers;
93otherwise, returns the results of string comparison using the locale-specific
94collation sequence.
95The result of each comparison is 1 if the specified relation is true,
96or 0 if the relation is false.
97.It Ar expr1 Bro +, - Brc Ar expr2
98Return the results of addition or subtraction of integer-valued arguments.
99.It Ar expr1 Bro *, /, % Brc Ar expr2
100Return the results of multiplication, integer division, or remainder of integer-valued arguments.
101.It Ar expr1 Li \&: Ar expr2
102The
103.Dq Li \&:
104operator matches
105.Ar expr1
106against
107.Ar expr2 ,
108which must be a basic regular expression.
109The regular expression is anchored
110to the beginning of the string with an implicit
111.Dq Li ^ .
112.Pp
113If the match succeeds and the pattern contains at least one regular
114expression subexpression
115.Dq Li "\e(...\e)" ,
116the string corresponding to
117.Dq Li \e1
118is returned;
119otherwise the matching operator returns the number of characters matched.
120If the match fails and the pattern contains a regular expression subexpression
121the null string is returned;
122otherwise 0.
123.El
124.Pp
125Parentheses are used for grouping in the usual manner.
126.Pp
127The
128.Nm
129utility makes no lexical distinction between arguments which may be
130operators and arguments which may be operands.
131An operand which is lexically identical to an operator will be considered a
132syntax error.
133See the examples below for a work-around.
134.Pp
135The syntax of the
136.Nm
137command in general is historic and inconvenient.
138New applications are advised to use shell arithmetic rather than
139.Nm .
140.Ss Compatibility with previous implementations
141Unless
142.Fx
1434.x
144compatibility is enabled, this version of
145.Nm
146adheres to the
147.Tn POSIX
148Utility Syntax Guidelines, which require that a leading argument beginning
149with a minus sign be considered an option to the program.
150The standard
151.Fl Fl
152syntax may be used to prevent this interpretation.
153However, many historic implementations of
154.Nm ,
155including the one in previous versions of
156.Fx ,
157will not permit this syntax.
158See the examples below for portable ways to guarantee the correct
159interpretation.
160The
161.Xr check_utility_compat 3
162function (with a
163.Fa utility
164argument of
165.Dq Li expr )
166is used to determine whether backwards compatibility mode should be enabled.
167This feature is intended for use as a transition and debugging aid, when
168.Nm
169is used in complex scripts which cannot easily be recast to avoid the
170non-portable usage.
171Enabling backwards compatibility mode also implicitly enables the
172.Fl e
173option, since this matches the historic behavior of
174.Nm
175in
176.Fx . This option makes number parsing less strict and permits leading
177white space and an optional leading plus sign.
178In addition, empty operands
179have an implied value of zero in numeric context.
180For historical reasons, defining the environment variable
181.Ev EXPR_COMPAT
182also enables backwards compatibility mode.
183.Sh ENVIRONMENT
184.Bl -tag -width ".Ev EXPR_COMPAT"
185.It Ev EXPR_COMPAT
186If set, enables backwards compatibility mode.
187.El
188.Sh EXIT STATUS
189The
190.Nm
191utility exits with one of the following values:
192.Bl -tag -width indent -compact
193.It 0
194the expression is neither an empty string nor 0.
195.It 1
196the expression is an empty string or 0.
197.It 2
198the expression is invalid.
199.El
200.Sh EXAMPLES
201.Bl -bullet
202.It
203The following example (in
204.Xr sh 1
205syntax) adds one to the variable
206.Va a :
207.Dl "a=$(expr $a + 1)"
208.It
209This will fail if the value of
210.Va a
211is a negative number.
212To protect negative values of
213.Va a
214from being interpreted as options to the
215.Nm
216command, one might rearrange the expression:
217.Dl "a=$(expr 1 + $a)"
218.It
219More generally, parenthesize possibly-negative values:
220.Dl "a=$(expr \e( $a \e) + 1)"
221.It
222With shell arithmetic, no escaping is required:
223.Dl "a=$((a + 1))"
224.It
225This example prints the filename portion of a pathname stored
226in variable
227.Va a .
228Since
229.Va a
230might represent the path
231.Pa / ,
232it is necessary to prevent it from being interpreted as the division operator.
233The
234.Li //
235characters resolve this ambiguity.
236.Dl "expr \*q//$a\*q \&: '.*/\e(.*\e)'"
237.It
238With modern
239.Xr sh 1
240syntax,
241.Dl "\*q${a##*/}\*q"
242expands to the same value.
243.El
244.Pp
245The following examples output the number of characters in variable
246.Va a .
247Again, if
248.Va a
249might begin with a hyphen, it is necessary to prevent it from being
250interpreted as an option to
251.Nm ,
252and
253.Va a
254might be interpreted as an operator.
255.Bl -bullet
256.It
257To deal with all of this, a complicated command
258is required:
259.Dl "expr \e( \*qX$a\*q \&: \*q.*\*q \e) - 1"
260.It
261With modern
262.Xr sh 1
263syntax, this can be done much more easily:
264.Dl "${#a}"
265expands to the required number.
266.El
267.Sh SEE ALSO
268.Xr sh 1 ,
269.Xr test 1 ,
270.Xr check_utility_compat 3
271.Sh STANDARDS
272The
273.Nm
274utility conforms to
275.St -p1003.1-2008 ,
276provided that backwards compatibility mode is not enabled.
277.Pp
278Backwards compatibility mode performs less strict checks of numeric arguments:
279.Bl -bullet
280.It
281An empty operand string is interpreted as 0.
282.El
283.Bl -bullet
284.It
285Leading white space and/or a plus sign before an otherwise valid positive
286numeric operand are allowed and will be ignored.
287.El
288.Pp
289The extended arithmetic range and overflow checks do not conflict with
290POSIX's requirement that arithmetic be done using signed longs, since
291they only make a difference to the result in cases where using signed
292longs would give undefined behavior.
293.Pp
294According to the
295.Tn POSIX
296standard, the use of string arguments
297.Va length ,
298.Va substr ,
299.Va index ,
300or
301.Va match
302produces undefined results.
303In this version of
304.Nm ,
305these arguments are treated just as their respective string values.
306.Pp
307The
308.Fl e
309flag is an extension.
310.Sh HISTORY
311An
312.Nm
313utility first appeared in the Programmer's Workbench (PWB/UNIX).
314A public domain version of
315.Nm
316written by
317.An Pace Willisson Aq Mt pace@blitz.com
318appeared in
319.Bx 386 0.1 .
320.Sh AUTHORS
321Initial implementation by
322.An Pace Willisson Aq Mt pace@blitz.com
323was largely rewritten by
324.An -nosplit
325.An J.T. Conklin Aq Mt jtc@FreeBSD.org .
326