Calculate interest rates with a shell script
If you put your cash to a bank account, you will want to know how much money you get with a certain amount at a given rate within a given period. Save the following Bash script as /usr/local/bin/loancalc (or something like that), make it executable, and you will be able to calculate the return on your investments with a single one-liner.
CODE:
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#!/bin/bash
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function calc()
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{
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return $(echo "scale=$2; $1" | bc)
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}
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if [ "$1" == "-h" ] || [ "$1" == "--help" ]; then
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echo "$0 calculates the interest loan of a given amount with a given rate for a given duration."
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echo "Usage: $0 AMOUNT RATE DURATION"
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exit 0
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fi
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if [ -z "$3" ]; then
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echo "Please enter the amount, the rate and the duration (in this order)."
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exit 1
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fi
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AMOUNT=$1
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ZINS=$2
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DURATION=$3
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echo "Investment: $AMOUNT bucks at a rate of $ZINS% for $DURATION years."
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echo " Loan Total"
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for i in $(seq 1 $DURATION); do
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INTERESTLOAN=$(echo "scale=10; ($AMOUNT/100)*$ZINS" | bc)
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AMOUNT=$(echo "scale=10; $AMOUNT+$INTERESTLOAN" | bc)
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printf "Year ${i} %8.2f " $INTERESTLOAN; printf " %14.2f\n" $AMOUNT;
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done
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printf "Final amount: %1.2f bucks.\n" $AMOUNT
For example:
CODE:
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you@yourmachine ~ $ loancalc 3000 3.5 5
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Investment: 3000 bucks at a rate of 3.5% for 5 years.
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Loan Total
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Year 1 105.00 3105.00
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Year 2 108.68 3213.68
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Year 3 112.48 3326.15
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Year 4 116.42 3442.57
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Year 5 120.49 3563.06
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Final amount: 3563.06 bucks.

