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I reviewed the multiple threads on this and am still having issues, here is the command I'm trying to execute. Commands without the $() print the desired output to the console without issue, I just can't seem to put that value into a variable to be used later on.

MODEL3= $(/usr/sbin/getSystemId | grep "Product Name" | awk '{print $4}')

but

MODEL3= /usr/sbin/getSystemId | grep "Product Name" | awk '{print $4}'  

-will output to the console. Thanks so much!

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  • 2
    the problem is the space after MODEL3=. this shouldn't be.
    – tzelleke
    Aug 2, 2012 at 15:01
  • 4
    Grep is not needed. MODEL3=$(/usr/sbin/getSystemId | awk '/Product Name/ {print $4}')
    – jordanm
    Aug 2, 2012 at 15:06

2 Answers 2

5

That is correct:

MODEL3=$(/usr/sbin/getSystemId | grep "Product Name" | awk '{print $4}')

But you can write the same without grep:

MODEL3=$(/usr/sbin/getSystemId | awk '/Product Name/{print $4}')

Now you have the result in the MODEL3 variable and you can use it further as $MODEL3:

echo "$MODEL3"
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  • thank you! I simply retyped my echo statement on a new line of vi and it worked as it should. Aug 2, 2012 at 15:13
  • You should use echo "$MODEL3" with double quotes. The situations where unquoted variable interpolations are strictly correct are rare, although too many people are getting away with it too often to really understand the magnitude of the problem.
    – tripleee
    Aug 2, 2012 at 15:36
  • @triplee: Thank you for the tip, fixed! Aug 2, 2012 at 15:42
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Spaces Not Legal in Variable Assignments

Variable assignments must not have spaces between the variable name, the assignment operator, and the value. Your current line says:

MODEL3= $(/usr/sbin/getSystemId | grep "Product Name" | awk '{print $4}')

This actually means "run the following expression with an empty environment variable, where MODEL3 is set but empty."

What you want is an actual assignment:

MODEL3=$(/usr/sbin/getSystemId | grep "Product Name" | awk '{print $4}')

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