$1 means an input argument and -z means non-defined or empty. You're testing whether an input argument to the script was defined when running the script. Follow this answer to receive notifications.
bash [filename] runs the commands saved in a file. $@ refers to all of a shell script's command-line arguments. $1 , $2 , etc., refer to the first command-line argument, the second command-line argument, etc. Place variables in quotes if the values might have spaces in them.
You can use parameter expansion, e.g.
read -p "Enter your name [Richard]: " name
name=${name:-Richard}
echo $name
Including the default value in the prompt between brackets is a fairly common convention
What does the :-Richard
part do? From the bash manual:
${parameter:-word}
If parameter is unset or null, the expansion of word is substituted. Otherwise, the value of parameter is substituted.
Also worth noting that...
In each of the cases below, word is subject to tilde expansion, parameter expansion, command substitution, and arithmetic expansion.
So if you use webpath=${webpath:-~/httpdocs}
you will get a result of /home/user/expanded/path/httpdocs
not ~/httpdocs
, etc.
read -e -p "Enter Your Name:" -i "Ricardo" NAME
echo $NAME
In Bash 4:
name="Ricardo"
read -e -i "$name" -p "Please enter your name: " input
name="${input:-$name}"
This displays the name after the prompt like this:
Please enter your name: Ricardo
with the cursor at the end of the name and allows the user to edit it. The last line is optional and forces the name to be the original default if the user erases the input or default (submitting a null).
Code:
IN_PATH_DEFAULT="/tmp/input.txt"
read -p "Please enter IN_PATH [$IN_PATH_DEFAULT]: " IN_PATH
IN_PATH="${IN_PATH:-$IN_PATH_DEFAULT}"
OUT_PATH_DEFAULT="/tmp/output.txt"
read -p "Please enter OUT_PATH [$OUT_PATH_DEFAULT]: " OUT_PATH
OUT_PATH="${OUT_PATH:-$OUT_PATH_DEFAULT}"
echo "Input: $IN_PATH Output: $OUT_PATH"
Sample run:
Please enter IN_PATH [/tmp/input.txt]:
Please enter OUT_PATH [/tmp/output.txt]: ~/out.txt
Input: /tmp/input.txt Output: ~/out.txt
I found this question, looking for a way to present something like:
Something interesting happened. Proceed [Y/n/q]:
Using the above examples I deduced this:-
echo -n "Something interesting happened. "
DEFAULT="y"
read -e -p "Proceed [Y/n/q]:" PROCEED
# adopt the default, if 'enter' given
PROCEED="${PROCEED:-${DEFAULT}}"
# change to lower case to simplify following if
PROCEED="${PROCEED,,}"
# condition for specific letter
if [ "${PROCEED}" == "q" ] ; then
echo "Quitting"
exit
# condition for non specific letter (ie anything other than q/y)
# if you want to have the active 'y' code in the last section
elif [ "${PROCEED}" != "y" ] ; then
echo "Not Proceeding"
else
echo "Proceeding"
# do proceeding code in here
fi
Hope that helps someone to not have to think out the logic, if they encounter the same problem
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