On 11/6/24 9:38 PM, David Linden wrote:
Bash Version: 4.4 Patch Level: 20 Release Status: releaseDescription: This errors in 4.4, did not in 4.2: set -u; declare -A foo; echo ${#foo[@]}
Yes, this was a bug in bash-4.2, fixed in bash-4.3. A variable isn't set until it's been assigned a value. This fix aligns the array variable behavior with the scalar (non-array) variable behavior.
How am I supposed to determine that a declared associative array is empty?
That's not the question that `set -u' answers. It will tell you whether a variable with attributes (or without) has been assigned a value. Does your code manage this variable? If it does, you should be able to determine whether or not it was ever assigned a value, or make sure that it has been assigned a value, if that's important. The empty array is a valid value, just like the empty string is a valid value for scalar variables.
Or even use it in a conditional even one where the value won't be evaluated?
What do you mean? Using something like foo[@] is fine in expansions where it won't be expanded: echo ${foo[@]-unset} or v=set; echo ${v:-foo[@]} But if you get into a case where the variable needs to be expanded, you're going to get an error if the variable isn't set. -- ``The lyf so short, the craft so long to lerne.'' - Chaucer ``Ars longa, vita brevis'' - Hippocrates Chet Ramey, UTech, CWRU c...@case.edu http://tiswww.cwru.edu/~chet/
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