166

How do I print the environment variable just being set?

NAME=sam echo "$NAME" # empty

You can see here using eval it works. Is this the way?

NAME=sam eval 'echo $NAME' # => sam
1
  • 2
    NAME=sam echo whatever does not change the value of NAME in the shell.
    – rici
    Oct 15, 2016 at 15:59

5 Answers 5

171

These need to go as different commands e.g.:

NAME=sam; echo "$NAME"
NAME=sam && echo "$NAME"

The expansion $NAME to empty string is done by the shell earlier, before running echo, so at the time the NAME variable is passed to the echo command's environment, the expansion is already done (to null string).

To get the same result in one command:

NAME=sam printenv NAME
2
  • I added a note about printenv. Hope it's OK, @heemayl Oct 15, 2016 at 15:49
  • 5
    Note that only the printenv-based command preserves the semantics of the OP's command: defining NAME as a command-scoped environment variable, which only the invoked command and its child processes see, but no subsequent shell commands. The other commands do something very different: they define NAME as an until-the-current-shell-exits shell-only variable, which all subsequent shell commands see, but no external utilities.
    – mklement0
    Oct 16, 2016 at 2:41
31

To bring the existing answers together with an important clarification:

As stated, the problem with NAME=sam echo "$NAME" is that $NAME gets expanded by the current shell before assignment NAME=sam takes effect.

Solutions that preserve the original semantics (of the (ineffective) solution attempt NAME=sam echo "$NAME"):

Use either eval[1] (as in the question itself), or printenv (as added by Aaron McDaid to heemayl's answer), or bash -c (from Ljm Dullaart's answer), in descending order of efficiency:

NAME=sam eval 'echo "$NAME"'  # use `eval` only if you fully control the command string
NAME=sam printenv NAME
NAME=sam bash -c 'echo "$NAME"'

printenv is not a POSIX utility, but it is available on both Linux and macOS/BSD.

What this style of invocation (<var>=<name> cmd ...) does is to define NAME:

  • as an environment variable
  • that is only defined for the command being invoked.

In other words: NAME only exists for the command (child process) being invoked, and has no effect on the current shell (if no variable named NAME existed before, there will be none after; a preexisting NAME variable remains unchanged).

POSIX defines the rules for this kind of invocation in its Command Search and Execution chapter.


The following solutions work very differently (quoted from heemayl's answer):

NAME=sam; echo "$NAME"
NAME=sam && echo "$NAME"

While they produce the same output, they instead define:

  • a shell variable NAME (only) rather than an environment variable
    • if echo were a command that relied on environment variable NAME, it wouldn't be defined (or potentially defined differently from earlier).
  • that lives on after the command.

Note that every environment variable is also exposed as a shell variable, but the inverse is not true: shell variables are only visible to the current shell and its subshells, but not to child processes, such as external utilities and (non-sourced) scripts (unless shell variables are designated as environment variables (too) with export or declare -x).


[1] Technically, bash is in violation of POSIX here (as is zsh): Since eval is a special shell built-in, the preceding NAME=sam assignment should cause the the variable $NAME to remain in scope after the command finishes, but that's not what happens.
However, when you run bash in POSIX compatibility mode, it is compliant.
dash and ksh are always compliant.
The exact rules are complicated, and some aspects are left up to the implementations to decide; again, see Command Search and Execution.
Also, the usual disclaimer applies: Use eval only on input you fully control or implicitly trust.

6

This works too, with the semi-colon.

NAME=sam; echo $NAME

5

The syntax

variable=value command

is often used to set an environment variables for a specific process. However, you must understand which process gets what variable and who interprets it. As an example, using two shells:

a=5
# variable expansion by the current shell:
a=3 bash -c "echo $a"
# variable expansion by the second shell:
a=3 bash -c 'echo $a'

The result will be 5 for the first echo and 3 for the second.

1

On windows, you can print with this command in your CLI C:\Users\dir\env | more

You can view all environment variables set on your system with the env command. The list is long, so pipe the output through more to make it easier to read.

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