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需要一些快速帮助。这是一个大学课程,一切正常,除非我调用我的 :forLoop 方法迭代 100 个数字(1,1,100),从 1 开始,一直到 1 到 100 并进行迭代 % 5(i%%5)。出于某种原因,我无法让它发挥作用。感谢任何帮助或指导。

当我回显 %%A 时,它正在遍历所有完美的数字。当我回显 %result% 时,我得到一个空白的“”(里面什么都没有)

:forLoop
FOR /L %%A IN (1,1,100) DO (
set /A result=%%A %% 2
echo "%%A"
echo "%result%"
)

正确的代码是

:forLoop
setlocal ENABLEDELAYEDEXPANSION
FOR /L %%A IN (1,1,100) DO (
set /A result=%%A %% 5
echo !result! >> results.txt
set /A total=!total!+!result!
echo !total!
)
4

1 回答 1

2

The problem is that the %result% is substituted when the for is read, meaning that it is no longer a variable when the loop is executed. What you need is delayed variable expansion to be enabled and then use ! instead of %:

setlocal ENABLEDELAYEDEXPANSION

:forLoop
FOR /L %%A IN (1,1,100) DO (
set /A result=%%A %% 5
echo "%%A"
echo !result!
)

This is all explained in the help message you get when you run SET /?:

Delayed environment variable expansion is useful for getting around
the limitations of the current expansion which happens when a line
of text is read, not when it is executed.  The following example
demonstrates the problem with immediate variable expansion:

    set VAR=before
    if "%VAR%" == "before" (
        set VAR=after
        if "%VAR%" == "after" @echo If you see this, it worked
    )

would never display the message, since the %VAR% in BOTH IF statements
is substituted when the first IF statement is read, since it logically
includes the body of the IF, which is a compound statement.  So the
IF inside the compound statement is really comparing "before" with
"after" which will never be equal.  Similarly, the following example
will not work as expected:

    set LIST=
    for %i in (*) do set LIST=%LIST% %i
    echo %LIST%

in that it will NOT build up a list of files in the current directory,
but instead will just set the LIST variable to the last file found.
Again, this is because the %LIST% is expanded just once when the
FOR statement is read, and at that time the LIST variable is empty.
So the actual FOR loop we are executing is:

    for %i in (*) do set LIST= %i

which just keeps setting LIST to the last file found.

Delayed environment variable expansion allows you to use a different
character (the exclamation mark) to expand environment variables at
execution time.  If delayed variable expansion is enabled, the above
examples could be written as follows to work as intended:

    set VAR=before
    if "%VAR%" == "before" (
        set VAR=after
        if "!VAR!" == "after" @echo If you see this, it worked
    )

    set LIST=
    for %i in (*) do set LIST=!LIST! %i
    echo %LIST%
于 2013-11-07T03:39:57.893 回答