Your confusion seems to be arising more from this + echo --vendor 'Bleep\' Bloop
. The reason it appears like that is because it is printing what it would look like when you expand X
. In other words doing $X
evaluates to putting the independent "words" --vendor
, Bleep\
, and Bloop
on the command line. However, this means that Bloop\
is a word and to prevent the \
from being interpreted to escape the
(space), it is preserving the \
. If these are meant to be parameters to a different command, I would suggest doing either:
export X='--vendor "Bleep Bloop"'
or
export X="--vendor \"Bleep Bloop\""
but I'm 100% not sure if either work. If you want to store parameters to a command you could do:
# optional:
# declare -a ARGS
ARGS=('--vendor' '"Bleep Bloop"')
And then use them as:
echo ${ARGS[@]}