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How can I check if a program exists within a fish script?

I know that there is no absolute solution with Bash, but using if type PROGRAM >/dev/null 2>&1; then... gave good results.

Is there something similar with fish?

1 Answer 1

73

There is type -q, as in

if type -q $program
     # do stuff
end

which returns 0 if something is a function, builtin or external program (i.e. if it is something fish will execute).

There is also

  • command -q, which will return 0 only if it exists as an external program
  • builtin -q, which will return 0 only if it is a fish builtin
  • functions -q, which will return 0 only if it is a fish function

For all of these the "-q" flag silences all output and just queries for existence.

If e.g. builtin -q returns true, that just means it is also a builtin - it can still be a function or command as well.

command -q works since fish 3.1.0 because the -q flag implies -s, before it would have to be command -sq.

2
  • Hiya faho, is this the correct way to check multiple executables in path: if type -q tldr; and type -q peco; tldr $argv | peco; end; Or is there a better way? Maybe to do it all in one go e.g. type -q tldr peco (the docs do say we can specify multiple names for type but it does not fail when I try it that it returns true e.g. type -q aaa bbb; and echo true it doesn't print anything as expected but if type -q aaa bbb; echo true; end does print true. So what's up?
    – user14492
    Commented Jul 16, 2021 at 12:14
  • 1
    type -q returns true when at least one of the arguments exists - type -q type slartibartfast will succeed everywhere because type always exists. So yes, you will have to check separately.
    – faho
    Commented Jul 16, 2021 at 14:28

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