The
utility evaluates
expression
and writes the result on standard output.
All operators and operands must be passed as separate arguments.
Several of the operators have special meaning to command interpreters
and must therefore be quoted appropriately.
All integer operands are interpreted in base 10.
Arithmetic operations are performed using signed integer math.
If the
-e
flag is specified, arithmetic uses the C
Vt intmax_t
data type (the largest integral type available), and
will detect arithmetic overflow and return an error indication.
If a numeric operand is specified which is so large as to overflow
conversion to an integer, it is parsed as a string instead.
If
-e
is not specified, arithmetic operations and parsing of integer
arguments will overflow silently according to the rules of the C
standard, using the
Vt long
data type.
Operators are listed below in order of increasing precedence; all
are left-associative.
Operators with equal precedence are grouped within symbols
`{'
and
`}'
expr1 | expr2
Return the evaluation of
expr1
if it is neither an empty string nor zero;
otherwise, returns the evaluation of
expr2
expr1 & expr2
Return the evaluation of
expr1
if neither expression evaluates to an empty string or zero;
otherwise, returns zero.
expr1 {=, >, >=, <, <=, !=} expr2
Return the results of integer comparison if both arguments are integers;
otherwise, returns the results of string comparison using the locale-specific
collation sequence.
The result of each comparison is 1 if the specified relation is true,
or 0 if the relation is false.
expr1 {+, -} expr2
Return the results of addition or subtraction of integer-valued arguments.
expr1 {*, /, %} expr2
Return the results of multiplication, integer division, or remainder of integer-valued arguments.
expr1 : expr2
The
``:
''
operator matches
expr1
against
expr2
which must be a basic regular expression.
The regular expression is anchored
to the beginning of the string with an implicit
``^
''
If the match succeeds and the pattern contains at least one regular
expression subexpression
``\(...\)
''
the string corresponding to
``\1
''
is returned;
otherwise the matching operator returns the number of characters matched.
If the match fails and the pattern contains a regular expression subexpression
the null string is returned;
otherwise 0.
Parentheses are used for grouping in the usual manner.
The
utility makes no lexical distinction between arguments which may be
operators and arguments which may be operands.
An operand which is lexically identical to an operator will be considered a
syntax error.
See the examples below for a work-around.
The syntax of the
command in general is historic and inconvenient.
New applications are advised to use shell arithmetic rather than
.
Compatibility with previous implementations
Unless
Fx 4.x
compatibility is enabled, this version of
adheres to the
POSIX
Utility Syntax Guidelines, which require that a leading argument beginning
with a minus sign be considered an option to the program.
The standard
--
syntax may be used to prevent this interpretation.
However, many historic implementations of
,
including the one in previous versions of
Fx ,
will not permit this syntax.
See the examples below for portable ways to guarantee the correct
interpretation.
The
check_utility_compat3
function (with a
Fa utility
argument of
``expr
''
is used to determine whether compatibility mode should be enabled.
This feature is intended for use as a transition and debugging aid, when
is used in complex scripts which cannot easily be recast to avoid the
non-portable usage.
Enabling compatibility mode
also implicitly enables the
-e
option, since this matches the historic behavior of
in
Fx .
For historical reasons, defining the environment variable
EXPR_COMPAT
also enables compatibility mode.
ENVIRONMENT
EXPR_COMPAT
If set, enables compatibility mode.
EXIT STATUS
The
utility exits with one of the following values:
0
the expression is neither an empty string nor 0.
1
the expression is an empty string or 0.
2
the expression is invalid.
EXAMPLES
The following example (in
sh(1)
syntax) adds one to the variable
a
"a=$(expr $a + 1)"
This will fail if the value of
a
is a negative number.
To protect negative values of
a
from being interpreted as options to the
command, one might rearrange the expression:
"a=$(expr 1 + $a)"
More generally, parenthesize possibly-negative values:
"a=$(expr \( $a \) + 1)"
This example prints the filename portion of a pathname stored
in variable
a
Since
a
might represent the path
/
it is necessary to prevent it from being interpreted as the division operator.
The
//
characters resolve this ambiguity.
"expr //$a : '.*/\(.*\)'"
The following examples output the number of characters in variable
a
Again, if
a
might begin with a hyphen, it is necessary to prevent it from being
interpreted as an option to
.
If the
command conforms to
St -p1003.1-2001 ,
this is simple:
"expr -- $a : .*"
For portability to older systems, however, a more complicated command
is required: