Hi, Thanks for the quick reply. :) [I tried to cc b...@tlinx.org on this email, but get a SERVFAIL from both DNS servers, so couldn't copy you in directly, sorry!]
On Wed, 17 Jul 2019, L A Walsh wrote: > In bash4.4.12, Using: > I think you need to tell bask that you are updating 'foo' > instead of assigning to it: > This seems to do what you want: > foo+=([key]="${foo[key]} value2") > > my -p foo > declare -A foo=([key]="value1 value2" ) Indeed. I found a couple of ways of achieving what I wanted, using the += operator being one of them - but this is only available in bash 4.4+ and I need to support older versions (back to 4.0). > I think that without the update it becomes an assign and clears > the value assigned to 'key' before using it to form the string. But the 'wipe before assignment' is inconsistent with how bash handles any other assignment. For example: FOO=bar FOO="$bar baz" will result in FOO = "bar baz", not simply " baz" as happens with the array assignment. I can work around the issue using a different syntax, but I thought it might be worth reporting the inconsistency :) Cheers, Darren.