Is $(...)
the same as (...)
in Bash?
Also, is $((...))
the same as ((...))
?
Also, is ${...}
the same as {...}
?
More generally what does the dollar sign stand for? Thank you.
In the following, I use "returns" to indicate return values and "produces" to indicate "substitutes the resulting text."
$(...)
means execute the command in the parens in a subshell and produces its stdout. Example:
$ echo "The current date is $(date)"
The current date is Mon Jul 6 14:27:59 PDT 2015
(...)
means run the commands listed in the parens in a subshell. Example:
$ a=1; (a=2; echo "inside: a=$a"); echo "outside: a=$a"
inside: a=2
outside: a=1
$((...))
means perform arithmetic and produce the result of the calculation. Example:
$ a=$((2+3)); echo "a=$a"
a=5
((...))
means perform arithmetic, possibly changing the values of shell variables, but don't produce its result. Example:
$ ((a=2+3)); echo "a=$a"
a=5
Note that the return value of the calculation is returned, so it can be used in while
or if
.
${...}
means produce the value of the shell variable named in the braces. Example:
$ echo ${SHELL}
/bin/bash
{...}
means execute the commands in the braces as a group. Example:
$ false || { echo "We failed"; exit 1; }
We failed
More generally what does the dollar sign stand for?
It means whatever it means in the given context.
((...))
and (...)
, you can think of the dollar-prefixed version as working the same as the statement, but expanding to the output (where the "output" of ((...))
is the arithmetic result. There's a more subtle analogy for {...}
; in each case, they group their contents away from their surroundings. Think ${foo}_bar
vs $foo_bar
and echo foo; echo bar > /dev/null
vs { echo foo; echo bar; } > /dev/null
.
$
sign invariably signifies an expansion. I.e., based on what comes after the $
(like ((
, (
, {
, etc.) some string value is computed and the $...
expression is replaced with the computed string.
Oct 8, 2020 at 15:21
((...))
is to return result, but it does not print output and $((...)) prints output but does not return result. That's why ((...)) can be used as a condition: if ((1 == 1)); then echo OK; fi
or ((1 == 1)) && echo OK
. Another difference, the ((...)) is bashism, $((...)) is POSIX
MYARRAY=(element1 element2 element3)
Jun 23, 2022 at 13:23
Adding to the answer above:
[..]
is used in conditions or logical expressions. Example:$ VAR=2
$ if [ $VAR -eq 2 ]
> then
> echo 'yes'
> fi
yes
[[...]]
offers extended functionality to single square brackets. Particularly, it is useful for =~ operator (used in regular expressions). Example:$ VAR='some string'
$ if [[ $VAR =~ [a-z] ]]; then
> echo 'is alphabetic'
> fi
is alphabetic
Reference:
https://linuxconfig.org/bash-scripting-parenthesis-explained
tldp.org
isn't a great source for Bash related things because the site has many errors and misleading information.