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Updated SC2070 (markdown)
12
SC2070.md
12
SC2070.md
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
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## Always true because you failed to quote. Use [[ ]] instead.
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## -n doesn't work with unquoted arguments. Quote or use [[ ]].
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### Problematic code:
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@@ -13,10 +13,10 @@ fi
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### Correct code:
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In bash/ksh:
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In POSIX:
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```sh
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if [[ -n $var ]]
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if [ -n "$var" ]
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then
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echo "var has a value"
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else
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@@ -24,10 +24,10 @@ else
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fi
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```
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In POSIX:
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In bash/ksh:
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```sh
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if [ -n "$var" ]
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if [[ -n $var ]]
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then
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echo "var has a value"
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else
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@@ -47,7 +47,7 @@ When `$var` is unquoted, a blank value will cause it to wordsplit and disappear.
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`[ string ]` is shorthand for testing if a string is empty. This is still true if `string` happens to be `-n`. `[ -n ]` is therefore true, and by extension so is `[ -n $var ]`.
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To fix this, either use `[[ -n $var ]]` which has fewer caveats than `[`, or quote the variable.
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To fix this, either quote the variable, or (if your shell supports it) use `[[ -n $var ]]` which generally has fewer caveats than `[`.
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### Exceptions:
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