944

In Bash, there appear to be several variables which hold special, consistently-meaning values. For instance,

./myprogram &; echo $!

will return the PID of the process which backgrounded myprogram. I know of others, such as $? which I think is the current TTY. Are there others?

6
  • 24
    Several of them are not Bash-only. They're also used in other Bourne-related shells and in fact are specified by POSIX. Mar 2, 2011 at 5:22
  • 1
    What about: IFS=$'\n' See: stackoverflow.com/questions/4128235/…
    – sgu
    Apr 3, 2017 at 22:20
  • 1
    @sgu That's not a parameter; that's a special type of quoting. $'\n' is a literal newline character that result from replacing the digraph \n with ASCII 10.
    – chepner
    Mar 25, 2019 at 16:37
  • 3
    If you came here looking for ${1}, ${*}, etc, the braces are just for disambiguation, and often redundant. In isolation, ${x} is exactly equivalent to $x.
    – tripleee
    Jul 21, 2019 at 7:58
  • for $IFS see What is the exact meaning of IFS=$'\n' Apr 4, 2021 at 15:59

4 Answers 4

1643
  • $1, $2, $3, ... are the positional parameters.
  • "$@" is an array-like construct of all positional parameters, {$1, $2, $3 ...}.
  • "$*" is the IFS expansion of all positional parameters, $1 $2 $3 ....
  • $# is the number of positional parameters.
  • $- current options set for the shell.
  • $$ pid of the current shell (not subshell).
  • $_ most recent parameter (or the abs path of the command to start the current shell immediately after startup).
  • $IFS is the (input) field separator.
  • $? is the most recent foreground pipeline exit status.
  • $! is the PID of the most recent background command.
  • $0 is the name of the shell or shell script.

Most of the above can be found under Special Parameters in the Bash Reference Manual. Here are all the environment variables set by the shell.

For a comprehensive index, please see the Reference Manual Variable Index.

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    They are all documented in the bash man page. The only oddity is that $_ is only mentioned in the context of its use in the MAILPATH variable.
    – chepner
    Jul 17, 2012 at 1:41
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    @chepner look in man(1) bash under Special Parameters for the rest of the definition of $_.
    – kojiro
    Jul 17, 2012 at 12:52
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    I use !$ instead of $_ in bash scripts, because the latter sometimes fails.
    – user339222
    Sep 3, 2012 at 3:57
  • 3
    @amc: See unix.stackexchange.com/questions/271659/… for differences between !$ and $_.
    – tricasse
    Apr 20, 2017 at 17:54
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    @Timo how can you ask the shell for a pid if the command is not in the background?
    – kojiro
    Sep 9, 2020 at 17:36
53
  • $_ last argument of last command
  • $# number of arguments passed to current script
  • $* / $@ list of arguments passed to script as string / delimited list

off the top of my head. Google for bash special variables.

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  • 148
    "I did. They sent me here." -- Bookshop skit (official doc: gnu.org/software/bash/manual/bashref.html#Special-Parameters)
    – greggo
    Feb 5, 2013 at 17:58
  • 1
    I think $@ is the string and $* is the delimited list (according to the above accepted answer, anyways).
    – RastaJedi
    Aug 20, 2016 at 19:02
  • 1
    @RastaJedi: "$@" expands to a list, "$*" expands to a single string. The special behavior of $@ applies when it's within double quotes. Apr 5, 2018 at 16:25
  • 17
    Downvoted because this is not a very complete or helpful answer. Saying "Google it" shows a lack of effort, especially considering that the vast majority of people end up here from Google search. I think the least you could do is add links to official documentation. TBH, the only reason I didn't flag it for deletion was because it is at least a partial answer to the question. I know it's old, but please consider editing it to provide more detail. Sep 11, 2018 at 20:17
27

To help understand what $#, $0 and $1, ..., $n do, I use this script:

#!/bin/bash

for ((i=0; i<=$#; i++)); do
  echo "parameter $i --> ${!i}"
done

Running it returns a representative output:

$ ./myparams.sh "hello" "how are you" "i am fine"
parameter 0 --> myparams.sh
parameter 1 --> hello
parameter 2 --> how are you
parameter 3 --> i am fine
2
4

Take care with some of the examples; $0 may include some leading path as well as the name of the program. Eg save this two line script as ./mytry.sh and the execute it.

#!/bin/bash

echo "parameter 0 --> $0" ; exit 0

Output:

parameter 0 --> ./mytry.sh

This is on a current (year 2016) version of Bash, via Slackware 14.2

1
  • 6
    Whether $0 does include a path or not depends on how you ran the script in the first place. If you executed "./mytry.sh" that's what you will see in $0. If you entered "~/mytry.sh" you will see the full path (because the shell will have expanded ~). If you did ". mytry.sh" you will see 'bash'. Oct 30, 2017 at 16:23

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