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First of all, I apologize if this question can be answered with a web search, but I couldn't find anything.

There is some grammar in the cat command which I've seen to "repeat" files.

cat file{,}

Is equivalent to calling

cat file file

Also,

cat file{,}{,}{,}{,}

repeats file not four times, but 16 times. In addition,

cat file{,,}

repeats file 3 times.

I would like to know more about this grammar. What is it called? Is it built into cat or is it a shell feature? Are there more features of this grammar?

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    Alas, no one pointed it put, but this grammar has nothing to do with cat. It works on every command; it is a feature of the shell. See for example how echo {1,2}{3,4}{5,6,7} outputs a lot of combinations.
    – glglgl
    Mar 16, 2014 at 16:03

2 Answers 2

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This feature is called brace expansion.

Generally you can write file{1,2,3} and bash expands it to file1 file2 file3 before running the command.

If you write

mkdir foo{1,2,3}{a,b}

it will be equivalent to

mkdir foo1a foo1b foo2a foo2b foo3a foo3b

and will create those 6 directories.

In your case ({,}) you are adding nothing and nothing and therefore get the same word twice.

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The syntax that you are referring to is known as brace expansion.

The {,,} syntax is often used to repeat words. Saying:

echo foo{,,}

would produce

foo foo foo

When you combine brace expansions, it's equivalent to nesting those:

echo foo{,}{,}{,}

is equivalent to saying

echo foo\ foo{,}{,}

and to

echo foo\ foo\ foo\ foo{,}

and produces

foo foo foo foo foo foo foo foo

Essentially, n pairs of {,} after a given string would generate the string 2n times.

In addition to link mentioned above, you can also learn about brace expansion here.

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