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Comment: some clean-up; one example was reversed, and table syntax changed slightly in moin 1.5 apparently
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Added examples for or (||) and negation (!)
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Deletions are marked like this. | Additions are marked like this. |
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[[Anchor(faq31)]] == What is the difference between the old and new test commands ([ and [[)? == {{{[}}} ("test" command) and {{{[[}}} ("new test" command) are both used to evaluate expressions. Some examples: |
<<Anchor(faq31)>> == What is the difference between test, [ and [[ ? == {{{[}}} ("test" command) and {{{[[}}} ("new test" command) are used to evaluate expressions. Some examples: |
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if [[ -e $file ]] | if [[ ! -e $file ]] |
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To cut a long story short: {{{[}}} implements the old, portable syntax of the command. Although all modern shells have built-in implementations, there usually still is an external executable of that name, e.g. {{{/bin/[}}}. {{{[[}}} is a new improved version of it, which is a keyword, not a program. This has beneficial effects on the ease of use, see below. {{{[[}}} is understood by KornShell, ["BASH"] (e.g. 2.03), KornShell93, and the ["POSIX"] shell, but not by the older BourneShell. | To cut a long story short: {{{test}}} implements the old, portable syntax of the command. In almost all shells (the oldest Bourne shells are the exception), {{{[}}} is a synonym for {{{test}}} (but requires a final argument of {{{]}}}). Although all modern shells have built-in implementations of {{{[}}}, there usually still is an external executable of that name, e.g. {{{/bin/[}}}. {{{[[}}} is a new improved version of it, which is a keyword, not a program. This has beneficial effects on the ease of use, as shown below. {{{[[}}} is understood by KornShell and [[BASH]] (e.g. 2.03), but not by the older POSIX or BourneShell. |
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||<|4>string comparison||>||(not available)||-|| ||<||(not available)||-|| ||== (or =)||=||-|| ||!=||!=||-|| ||<|2>expression grouping||&&||-a||{{{[[ -n $var && -f $var ]] && echo "$var is a file"}}}|| ||{{{||}}}||-o||-|| ||Pattern matching||== (or =)||(not available)||{{{[[ $name = a* ]] || echo "name does not start with an 'a': $name"}}}|| ||In-process regular expression matching||=~||(not available)||{{{[[ $(date) =~ ^Fri\ ...\ 13 ]] && echo "It's Friday the 13th!"}}}|| |
||<rowspan=4>string comparison||>||\>||{{{[[ a > b ]] || echo "a does not come before b"}}}|| ||<||\<||{{{[[ az < za ]] && echo "az comes before za"}}}|| ||= (or ==)||=||{{{[[ a == a ]] && echo "a equals a"}}}|| ||!=||!=||{{{[[ a != b ]] && echo "a is not equal to b"}}}|| ||<rowspan=6>integer comparison||-gt||-gt||{{{[[ 5 -gt 10 ]] || echo "5 is not bigger than 10"}}}|| ||-lt||-lt||{{{[[ 8 -lt 9 ]] && echo "8 is less than 9"}}}|| ||-ge||-ge||{{{[[ 3 -ge 3 ]] && echo "3 is greater than or equal to 3"}}}|| ||-le||-le||{{{[[ 3 -le 8 ]] && echo "3 is less than or equal to 8"}}}|| ||-eq||-eq||{{{[[ 5 -eq 05 ]] && echo "5 equals 05"}}}|| ||-ne||-ne||{{{[[ 6 -ne 20 ]] && echo "6 is not equal to 20"}}}|| ||<rowspan=2>expression grouping||&&||-a||{{{[[ -n $var && -f $var ]] && echo "$var is a file"}}}|| ||{{{||}}}||-o||{{{[[ -b $var || -c $var ]] && echo "$var is a device"}}}|| ||Pattern matching||= (or ==)||(not available)||{{{[[ $name = a* ]] || echo "name does not start with an 'a': $name"}}}|| ||RegularExpression matching||=~||(not available)||{{{[[ $(date) =~ ^Fri\ ...\ 13 ]] && echo "It's Friday the 13th!"}}}|| |
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||negation||!||-|| | ||negation||!||{{{[[ ! -u $file ]] && echo "$file is not a setuid file"}}}|| |
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* No field splitting will be done for {{{[[}}} (and therefore many arguments need not be quoted) | * No WordSplitting or [[glob]] expansion will be done for {{{[[}}} (and therefore many arguments need not be quoted): |
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* Parentheses in {{{[[}}} do not need to be escaped: {{{ [[ -f $file1 && ( -d $dir1 || -d $dir2) ]] [ -f "$file1" -a \( -d "$dir1" -o -d "$dir2" \) ]}}} |
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* No file name generation will be done for {{{[[}}}. Therefore the following line tries to match the contents of the variable {{{$path}}} with the pattern {{{/*}}} | * As of bash 4.1, string comparisons using `<` or `>` respect the current [[locale]] when done in `[[`, but '''not''' in `[` or `test`. In fact, `[` and `test` have ''never'' used locale collating order even though past man pages ''said'' they did. Bash versions prior to 4.1 do not use locale collating order for `[[` either. |
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{{{ [[ $path = /* ]] && echo "\$path starts with a forward slash /: $path"}}} |
As a rule of thumb, {{{[[}}} is used for strings and files. If you want to compare numbers, use an ArithmeticExpression, e.g. |
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The next command most likely will result in an error, because {{{/*}}} is subject to file name generation: | {{{ # Bash i=0 while ((i<10)); do ... }}} |
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{{{ [ $path = /* ] && echo "this does not work"}}} |
When should the new test command {{{[[}}} be used, and when the old one {{{[}}}? If portability to the BourneShell is a concern, the old syntax should be used. If on the other hand the script requires [[BASH]] or KornShell, the new syntax is much more flexible. |
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(If you need to do that using Bourne shells, use {{{case}}} instead.) * {{{[[}}} is strictly used for strings and files. If you want to compare numbers, use ArithmethicExpression ((''expression'')), e.g. {{{ i=0 while ((i<10)) do echo $i ((i=$i+1)) done}}} When should the new test command {{{[[}}} be used, and when the old one {{{[}}}? If portability to the BourneShell is a concern, the old syntax should be used. If on the other hand the script requires ["BASH"] or KornShell, the new syntax could be preferable. |
See the [[BashGuide/TestsAndConditionals|Tests and Conditionals]] chapter in the BashGuide. ---- CategoryShell |
What is the difference between test, [ and [[ ?
[ ("test" command) and [[ ("new test" command) are used to evaluate expressions. Some examples:
if [ -z "$variable" ] then echo "variable is empty!" fi if [ ! -f "$filename" ] then echo "not a valid, existing file name: $filename" fi
and
if [[ ! -e $file ]] then echo "directory entry does not exist: $file" fi if [[ $file0 -nt $file1 ]] then echo "file $file0 is newer than $file1" fi
To cut a long story short: test implements the old, portable syntax of the command. In almost all shells (the oldest Bourne shells are the exception), [ is a synonym for test (but requires a final argument of ]). Although all modern shells have built-in implementations of [, there usually still is an external executable of that name, e.g. /bin/[.
[[ is a new improved version of it, which is a keyword, not a program. This has beneficial effects on the ease of use, as shown below. [[ is understood by KornShell and BASH (e.g. 2.03), but not by the older POSIX or BourneShell.
Although [ and [[ have much in common, and share many expression operators like "-f", "-s", "-n", "-z", there are some notable differences. Here is a comparison list:
Feature |
new test [[ |
old test [ |
Example |
string comparison |
> |
\> |
[[ a > b ]] || echo "a does not come before b" |
< |
\< |
[[ az < za ]] && echo "az comes before za" |
|
= (or ==) |
= |
[[ a == a ]] && echo "a equals a" |
|
!= |
!= |
[[ a != b ]] && echo "a is not equal to b" |
|
integer comparison |
-gt |
-gt |
[[ 5 -gt 10 ]] || echo "5 is not bigger than 10" |
-lt |
-lt |
[[ 8 -lt 9 ]] && echo "8 is less than 9" |
|
-ge |
-ge |
[[ 3 -ge 3 ]] && echo "3 is greater than or equal to 3" |
|
-le |
-le |
[[ 3 -le 8 ]] && echo "3 is less than or equal to 8" |
|
-eq |
-eq |
[[ 5 -eq 05 ]] && echo "5 equals 05" |
|
-ne |
-ne |
[[ 6 -ne 20 ]] && echo "6 is not equal to 20" |
|
expression grouping |
&& |
-a |
[[ -n $var && -f $var ]] && echo "$var is a file" |
|| |
-o |
[[ -b $var || -c $var ]] && echo "$var is a device" |
|
Pattern matching |
= (or ==) |
(not available) |
[[ $name = a* ]] || echo "name does not start with an 'a': $name" |
RegularExpression matching |
=~ |
(not available) |
[[ $(date) =~ ^Fri\ ...\ 13 ]] && echo "It's Friday the 13th!" |
Special primitives that [[ is defined to have, but [ may be lacking (depending on the implementation):
Description |
Primitive |
Example |
entry (file or directory) exists |
-e |
[[ -e $config ]] && echo "config file exists: $config" |
file is newer/older than other file |
-nt / -ot |
[[ $file0 -nt $file1 ]] && echo "$file0 is newer than $file1" |
two files are the same |
-ef |
[[ $input -ef $output ]] && { echo "will not overwrite input file: $input"; exit 1; } |
negation |
! |
[[ ! -u $file ]] && echo "$file is not a setuid file" |
But there are more subtle differences.
No WordSplitting or glob expansion will be done for [[ (and therefore many arguments need not be quoted):
file="file name" [[ -f $file ]] && echo "$file is a file"
will work even though $file is not quoted and contains whitespace. With [ the variable needs to be quoted:
file="file name" [ -f "$file" ] && echo "$file is a file"
This makes [[ easier to use and less error-prone.
Parentheses in [[ do not need to be escaped:
[[ -f $file1 && ( -d $dir1 || -d $dir2) ]] [ -f "$file1" -a \( -d "$dir1" -o -d "$dir2" \) ]
As of bash 4.1, string comparisons using < or > respect the current locale when done in [[, but not in [ or test. In fact, [ and test have never used locale collating order even though past man pages said they did. Bash versions prior to 4.1 do not use locale collating order for [[ either.
As a rule of thumb, [[ is used for strings and files. If you want to compare numbers, use an ArithmeticExpression, e.g.
# Bash i=0 while ((i<10)); do ...
When should the new test command [[ be used, and when the old one [? If portability to the BourneShell is a concern, the old syntax should be used. If on the other hand the script requires BASH or KornShell, the new syntax is much more flexible.
See the Tests and Conditionals chapter in the BashGuide.