this post was submitted on 05 Mar 2025
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I'm not very acquainted with any programming language so maybe I'm wrong here (or I didn't get the joke? XD) but bash didn't change much in the past few years, I even read some scripts more than 10 years still works because the syntax stays the same (or doesn't change a lot ...)
Compared with the switch from python 2 -> python 3 I read a lot of people pulling their hair off xD
Here's an example, I have looked up many times (like just now), which checks whether a string is empty:
Why
-z
? I have no idea. I will also routinely forget the]; then
part. I believe, if you write thethen
onto the next line, then you don't need the semicolon. And then someone's probably gonna tell me to use double-brackets[[ ]]
instead, which probably does something.Arguably, I never fully learned Bash syntax, but it also is just a stupid if-statement. There shouldn't be that much complexity in it.
There isn't. The syntax is
Yes, but that's true of all commands.
is the same as
All the
]
and-z
stuff has nothing to do withif
. In your example, the command you're running is literally called[
. You're passing it three arguments:-z
,"$var"
, and]
. The]
argument is technically pointless but included for aesthetic reasons to match the opening]
(if you wanted to, you could also writetest -z "$var"
because[
is just another name for thetest
command).Since you can logically negate the exit status of every command (technically, every pipeline) by prefixing a
!
, you could also write this as:The default mode of
test
(if given one argument) is to check whether it is non-empty.Now, if you don't want to deal with the vagaries of the
test
command and do a "native" string check, that would be:My god... I'm so confused by your comment XD ! OP's command is something I already came across, so I somehow got it... But your comment put me in total brain rot !
Now this is enlightening