Friday, June 21, 2019

bash - How to use double or single brackets, parentheses, curly braces




I am confused by the usage of brackets, parentheses, curly braces in Bash, as well as the difference between their double or single forms. Is there a clear explanation?


Answer



In Bash, test and [ are shell builtins.



The double bracket, which is a shell keyword, enables additional functionality. For example, you can use && and || instead of -a and -o and there's a regular expression matching operator =~.



Also, in a simple test, double square brackets seem to evaluate quite a lot quicker than single ones.



$ time for ((i=0; i<10000000; i++)); do [[ "$i" = 1000 ]]; done


real 0m24.548s
user 0m24.337s
sys 0m0.036s
$ time for ((i=0; i<10000000; i++)); do [ "$i" = 1000 ]; done

real 0m33.478s
user 0m33.478s
sys 0m0.000s



The braces, in addition to delimiting a variable name are used for parameter expansion so you can do things like:




  • Truncate the contents of a variable



    $ var="abcde"; echo ${var%d*}
    abc

  • Make substitutions similar to sed




    $ var="abcde"; echo ${var/de/12}
    abc12

  • Use a default value



    $ default="hello"; unset var; echo ${var:-$default}
    hello

  • and several more





Also, brace expansions create lists of strings which are typically iterated over in loops:



$ echo f{oo,ee,a}d
food feed fad

$ mv error.log{,.OLD}
(error.log is renamed to error.log.OLD because the brace expression
expands to "mv error.log error.log.OLD")


$ for num in {000..2}; do echo "$num"; done
000
001
002

$ echo {00..8..2}
00 02 04 06 08

$ echo {D..T..4}
D H L P T



Note that the leading zero and increment features weren't available before Bash 4.



Thanks to gboffi for reminding me about brace expansions.



Double parentheses are used for arithmetic operations:



((a++))


((meaning = 42))

for ((i=0; i<10; i++))

echo $((a + b + (14 * c)))


and they enable you to omit the dollar signs on integer and array variables and include spaces around operators for readability.



Single brackets are also used for array indices:




array[4]="hello"

element=${array[index]}


Curly brace are required for (most/all?) array references on the right hand side.



ephemient's comment reminded me that parentheses are also used for subshells. And that they are used to create arrays.




array=(1 2 3)
echo ${array[1]}
2

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