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Date:      Thu, 24 Jun 2010 09:38:33 -0700
From:      Carl Johnson <carlj@peak.org>
To:        freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: .sh check for numeric content
Message-ID:  <87lja4mlme.fsf@cjlinux.localnet>
In-Reply-To: <20100624033257.2D074BEA6@kev.msw.wpafb.af.mil> (Karl Vogel's message of "Wed\, 23 Jun 2010 23\:32\:57 -0400 \(EDT\)")
References:  <4C22B3D7.6070102@comclark.com>	<20100624033257.2D074BEA6@kev.msw.wpafb.af.mil>

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vogelke+unix@pobox.com (Karl Vogel) writes:

>>> On Thu, 24 Jun 2010 09:24:39 +0800, 
>>> Aiza <aiza21@comclark.com> said:
>
> A> Receiving a variable from the command line that is suppose to contain
> A> numeric values.  How do I code a test to verify the content is numeric?
>
>    The script below will work with the Bourne or Korn shell.
>    Results for "0 1 12 1234 .12 1.234 12.3 1a a1":
>
>      0 is numeric
>      1 is numeric
>      12 is numeric
>      1234 is numeric
>      .12 is numeric
>      1.234 is numeric
>      12.3 is numeric
>      1a is NOT numeric
>      a1 is NOT numeric

You might want to try testing "123..45".
I tried changing:
>    if expr "$arg" : "[0-9]*[\.0-9]*$" > /dev/null
to:
    if expr "$arg" : "[0-9]*\.*[0-9]*$" > /dev/null
but it still claims that it is numeric, so *I* must be missing
something.

-- 
Carl Johnson		carlj@peak.org




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