2409

How do I know if a variable is set in Bash?

For example, how do I check if the user gave the first parameter to a function?

function a {
    # if $1 is set ?
}
13
  • 17
    if test $# -gt 0; then printf 'arg <%s>\n' "$@"; fi.
    – Jens
    Jul 9, 2013 at 16:57
  • 289
    Note to solution-seekers: There are many highly-rated answers to this question that answer the question "is variable non-empty". The more correction solutions ("is variable set") are mentioned in answers by Jens and Lionel below. Nov 29, 2013 at 17:56
  • 12
    Also Russell Harmon and Seamus are correct with their -v test, although this is seemingly only available on new versions of bash and not portable across shells.
    – Graeme
    Jan 28, 2014 at 17:58
  • 6
    As pointed out by @NathanKidd, correct solutions are given by Lionel and Jens. prosseek, you should switch your accepted answer to one of these.
    – Garrett
    Feb 13, 2014 at 23:22
  • 4
    ... or the incorrect answer could be downvoted by the more discerning among us, since @prosseek is not addressing the problem.
    – dan3
    Jul 15, 2014 at 9:46

38 Answers 38

1
2
0

I like auxiliary functions to hide the crude details of Bash. In this case, doing so adds even more (hidden) crudeness:

# The first ! negates the result (can't use -n to achieve this)
# the second ! expands the content of varname (can't do ${$varname})
function IsDeclared_Tricky
{
  local varname="$1"
  ! [ -z ${!varname+x} ]
}

Because I first had bugs in this implementation (inspired by the answers of Jens and Lionel), I came up with a different solution:

# Ask for the properties of the variable - fails if not declared
function IsDeclared()
{
  declare -p $1 &>/dev/null
}

I find it to be more straight-forward, more bashy and easier to understand/remember. Test case shows it is equivalent:

function main()
{
  declare -i xyz
  local foo
  local bar=
  local baz=''

  IsDeclared_Tricky xyz; echo "IsDeclared_Tricky xyz: $?"
  IsDeclared_Tricky foo; echo "IsDeclared_Tricky foo: $?"
  IsDeclared_Tricky bar; echo "IsDeclared_Tricky bar: $?"
  IsDeclared_Tricky baz; echo "IsDeclared_Tricky baz: $?"

  IsDeclared xyz; echo "IsDeclared xyz: $?"
  IsDeclared foo; echo "IsDeclared foo: $?"
  IsDeclared bar; echo "IsDeclared bar: $?"
  IsDeclared baz; echo "IsDeclared baz: $?"
}

main

The test case also shows that local var does not declare var (unless followed by '='). For quite some time I thought I declared variables this way, just to discover now that I merely expressed my intention... It's a no-op, I guess.

IsDeclared_Tricky xyz: 1 IsDeclared_Tricky foo: 1 IsDeclared_Tricky bar: 0 IsDeclared_Tricky baz: 0 IsDeclared xyz: 1 IsDeclared foo: 1 IsDeclared bar: 0 IsDeclared baz: 0

Bonus: usecase

I mostly use this test to give (and return) parameters to functions in a somewhat "elegant" and safe way (almost resembling an interface...):

# Auxiliary functions
function die()
{
  echo "Error: $1"; exit 1
}

function assertVariableDeclared()
{
  IsDeclared "$1" || die "variable not declared: $1"
}

function expectVariables()
{
  while (( $# > 0 )); do
    assertVariableDeclared $1; shift
  done
}

# Actual example
function exampleFunction()
{
  expectVariables inputStr outputStr
  outputStr="$inputStr, World!"
}

function bonus()
{
  local inputStr='Hello'
  local outputStr= # Remove this to trigger the error
  exampleFunction
  echo $outputStr
}

bonus

If called with all required variables declared:

Hello, World!

else:

Error: variable not declared: outputStr

-1
if [[ ${1:+isset} ]]
then echo "It was set and not null." >&2
else echo "It was not set or it was null." >&2
fi

if [[ ${1+isset} ]]
then echo "It was set but might be null." >&2
else echo "It was was not set." >&2
fi
2
  • $1, $2 and up to $N is always set. Sorry, this is fail.
    – user1261322
    Nov 18, 2013 at 14:45
  • I tried it, and it didn't work, maybe my bash version lacks support for that. Idk, sorry if I'm wrong. :)
    – user1261322
    Nov 20, 2013 at 18:53
-1

Functions to check if variable is declared/unset

including empty $array=()


The following functions test if the given name exists as a variable

# The first parameter needs to be the name of the variable to be checked.
# (See example below)

var_is_declared() {
    { [[ -n ${!1+anything} ]] || declare -p $1 &>/dev/null;}
}

var_is_unset() {
    { [[ -z ${!1+anything} ]] && ! declare -p $1 &>/dev/null;} 
}
  • By first testing if the variable is (un)set, the call to declare can be avoided, if not necessary.
  • If however $1 contains the name of an empty $array=(), the call to declare would make sure we get the right result
  • There's never much data passed to /dev/null as declare is only called if either the variable is unset or an empty array.

This functions would test as showed in the following conditions:

a;       # is not declared
a=;      # is declared
a="foo"; # is declared
a=();    # is declared
a=("");  # is declared
unset a; # is not declared

a;       # is unset
a=;      # is not unset
a="foo"; # is not unset
a=();    # is not unset
a=("");  # is not unset
unset a; # is unset

.

For more details

and a test script see my answer to the question "How do I check if a variable exists in bash?".

Remark: The similar usage of declare -p, as it is also shown by Peregring-lk's answer, is truly coincidental. Otherwise I would of course have credited it!

-2

If you wish to test that a variable is bound or unbound, this works well, even after you've turned on the nounset option:

set -o noun set

if printenv variableName >/dev/null; then
    # variable is bound to a value
else
    # variable is unbound
fi
2
  • 1
    I think you mean set -o nounset, not set -o noun set. This only works for variables that have been exported. It also changes your settings in a way that's awkward to undo. Aug 5, 2013 at 19:10
  • if one really wanted to take this approach, for whatever reason, a subshell is the way: if (set -u; : $var) 2>/dev/null. Or simpler: if (: ${var?}) 2>/dev/null
    – usretc
    Jul 19, 2021 at 9:12
-2

Declare a simple function is_set which uses declare -p to test directly if the variable exists.

$ is_set() {
    declare -p $1 >/dev/null 2>&1
}

$ is_set foo; echo $?
0

$ declare foo

$ is_set foo; echo $?
1
-3

I always use this one, based on the fact that it seems easy to be understood by anybody who sees the code for the very first time:

if [ "$variable" = "" ]
    then
    echo "Variable X is empty"
fi

And, if wanting to check if not empty;

if [ ! "$variable" = "" ]
    then
    echo "Variable X is not empty"
fi

That's it.

2
  • 5
    The question asks how to check if a variable is set, not if a variable is empty. Nov 27, 2013 at 20:45
  • You probably need to use [[ ... ]] instead of [ ... ]. The latter is actually an external command and wouldn't have any visibility into whether a variable is set or not.
    – solidsnack
    Nov 29, 2013 at 22:41
-4

To check if a variable is set or not:

var=""; [[ $var ]] && echo "set" || echo "not set"
1
  • 6
    This will fail if $var is set to the empty string. Nov 27, 2013 at 20:58
-5
case "$1" in
 "") echo "blank";;
 *) echo "set"
esac
1
  • 4
    This will fail if $1 is set to the empty string. Nov 27, 2013 at 20:58
1
2

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