123

I have defined the following variable:

myVar=true

now I'd like to run something along the lines of this:

if [ myVar ]
then
    echo "true"
else
    echo "false"
fi

The above code does work, but if I try to set

myVar=false

it will still output true. What might be the problem?

edit: I know I can do something of the form

if [ "$myVar" = "true" ]; then ...

but it is kinda awkward.

Thanks

1

2 Answers 2

189

bash doesn't know boolean variables, nor does test (which is what gets called when you use [).

A solution would be:

if $myVar ; then ... ; fi

because true and false are commands that return 0 or 1 respectively which is what if expects.

Note that the values are "swapped". The command after if must return 0 on success while 0 means "false" in most programming languages.

SECURITY WARNING: This works because BASH expands the variable, then tries to execute the result as a command! Make sure the variable can't contain malicious code like rm -rf /

3
  • 1
    Might add not to forget the ; fi at the end. So it's if $myVar ; then ... ; fi Nov 5, 2013 at 16:53
  • 17
    and if ! $myVar ; then ... ; fi gives the converse
    – Pancho
    Aug 18, 2014 at 22:07
  • 3
    The case answer (from @Jens) is safer and doesn't require a fork to test a simple variable. Sep 22, 2015 at 17:22
73

Note that the if $myVar; then ... ;fi construct has a security problem you might want to avoid with

case $myvar in
  (true)    echo "is true";;
  (false)   echo "is false";;
  (rm -rf*) echo "I just dodged a bullet";;
esac

You might also want to rethink why if [ "$myvar" = "true" ] appears awkward to you. It's a shell string comparison that beats possibly forking a process just to obtain an exit status. A fork is a heavy and expensive operation, while a string comparison is dead cheap. Think a few CPU cycles versus several thousand. My case solution is also handled without forks.

3
  • 2
    true and false are built-in commands in most shells. Invoking them is unlikely to require a fork() call. Sep 22, 2015 at 17:40
  • Calling which true in bash, zsh, ksh, dash, and fish, it seems that only zsh has true and false as built-ins. Seems like a sensible thing for shells to implement though! Sep 13, 2020 at 13:39
  • 2
    don't use which -- that only searches the $PATH -- use type -a true -- true and false are builtin to bash and ksh and dash Sep 13, 2020 at 20:15

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