Short answer: you can't, bash doesn't have the equivalent of pointers. The variable $TITLE
is assigned with the expansion of the rhs of the assignment character, so $TITLE
has the value %s\e[m
since $FG
is not defined at expansion time, and hence expands to the empty string. As a work-around you could instead do:
rt=$'\e[m'
title="%s%s$rt"
one() {
local fg=$'\e[33m'
printf "$title" "$fg" "One"
}
two() {
local fg=$'\e[32m'
printf "$title" "$fg" "Two"
}
And using eval
is not really a good option, as eval
is evil!
I've also modified a few things from your script:
- Used lower case variable names (as using upper case variable names is considered bad practice in bash),
- Use
$'...'
to have the correct colors (instead of the strings "\e[m"
, ...),
- Used the proper way to define functions in bash (without the keyword
function
).
Edit. From your comment, I see you're really troubled with having to type "$fg"
each time. So here's another possibility: instead of defining a variable $title
, define a function title
that echos the formating string and use it like so:
rt=$'\e[m'
title() {
echo "$fg%s$rt"
}
one() {
local fg=$'\e[33m'
printf "$(title)" "One"
}
two() {
local fg=$'\e[32m'
printf "$(title)" "Two"
}
Each time you call the function title, it echoes the formating string you need, hence $(title)
will expand to that formating string. Each time you call the function title
, the string "$fg%s$rt"
is expanded, with whatever values the variables $fg
and $rt
have at this expansion time.