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I am creating a script using bash. However during the IF statement it raises this error: [[: not found. I read this topic in other posts but it seems that my predecessors were writing bad their code (e.g. forgetting spaces or else). My question is a little bit different because THE SAME code if run within other parts does not work but if I launch it totally alone it correctly works. Why does this happens? I permit that the variable used is the only one along the whole code.

echo "Digit how many codon positions do you want to use for your partition. [2-3]"
read codonpos
echo $codonpos
[[ "$codonpos" = "2" ]] && echo im here

I also tried:

echo "Digit how many codon positions do you want to use for your partition. [2-3]"
read codonpos
echo $codonpos
if [[ "$codonpos" = "2" ]] 
     then
     echo im here

fi

I repeat you that if launch independently it works but, if this is embedded in a larger code it doesn't.

4
  • 1
    Please include a minimal reproducible example, I can't reproduce this. Aug 6, 2020 at 8:06
  • Here are a couple of questions that would help us out if you could answer them: (1) Can you show us the exact error line (i.e. the full line on the screen) (2) What is your shebang/ (3) Can you show us the lines of code which produce the error, i.e. not a rewrite (4) And preferable, can you show us a minimal example that always fails? I.e. Your script, but with all redundant stuff removed, and exact input which you type.
    – kvantour
    Aug 6, 2020 at 8:14
  • I have a couple of suspicions here: (1) you make use of the wrong shebang (2) you have a heisenbug, a bug somewhere else in the code and only due to particularities of the input, the codesection with the bug is executed leading to the error (3) The unlikely case that you have another blank character instead of a clean space after [[ (long space, short space, thin space, ...)
    – kvantour
    Aug 6, 2020 at 8:16
  • @Claudio21 : You obviously did not run it under bash. You can easily test it by doing a echo $BASH_VERSION in your script. If the output is empty, it's not bash. Aug 6, 2020 at 9:44

1 Answer 1

2

I solved the error myself. The issue was due to the presence of an error in the shebang.

I wrote #!/bin/sh instead of #!/bin/bash.

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