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{{{case}}} allows you to match variables against [:globbing:]-style patterns. If you need a portable way to match variables against regular expressions, use {{{grep}}} or {{{egrep}}}. | {{{case}}} allows you to match variables against [:globbing:]-style patterns. If you need a portable way to match variables against [:RegularExpression:regular expressions], use {{{grep}}} or {{{egrep}}}. |
How do I determine whether a variable contains a substring?
if [[ $foo = *bar* ]]
The above works in virtually all versions of Bash. Bash version 3 also allows regular expressions:
if [[ $foo =~ ab*c ]] # bash 3, matches abbbbcde, or ac, etc.
If you are programming in the BourneShell instead of Bash, there is a more portable (but less pretty) syntax:
case "$foo" in *bar*) .... ;; esac
case allows you to match variables against [:globbing:]-style patterns. If you need a portable way to match variables against [:RegularExpression:regular expressions], use grep or egrep.
if echo "$foo" | grep bar >/dev/null; then ...