Standard Input to a for Loop

An obvious place to use a Bourne shell for loop () is to step through a list of arguments - from the command line or a variable. But combine the loop with backquotes () and cat (), and the loop will step through the words on standard input.

Here's an example:

for x in `cat` do handle $x done

Because this method splits the input into separate words, no matter how many words are on each input line, it can be more convenient than a while loop running the read command, as in article . When you use this script interactively though, the loop won't start running until you've typed all of the input; using while read will run the loop after each line of input.

- JP