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Re: bash test -n && test -z return tru


> On Fri, Aug 19, 2005 at 03:01:19PM -0400, Poor Yorick wrote:
> >from reading the bash man pages, I would have thought the -n and -z were 
> >mutually exclusive.  Therefore I don't understand this result:
> >
> >~>$ [ -n $(which nonexisingfilename 2>/dev/null) ] && [ -z $(which 
> >nonexistingfilename 2&>/dev/null) ]  && echo hello
> >hello
> >~>$
> >
> >can anyone help explain this?
> 
> This defaults to
> 
>   [ -n ] && [ -z ] && echo hello
> 
> I would have expected a syntax error in that case.

Nope.  POSIX requires that when there is one argument, it evaluates
to true if it is not empty.  Neither -n nor -z is empty, so they are both
true.  Remember, if there are no quotes around a word, it is subject to
field splitting, such that an empty string disappears from the argument
list altogether, and you are only giving one argument to [.

> 
> Regardless of that, however, if you want to actually make this work you
> need to do something like:
> 
>   [ -n "$(which nonexisingfilename 2>/dev/null)" ]

Yep - adding the quotes now forces the second word to remain,
even if it is empty, and with two arguments to [, -n and -z now
become mutually exclusive unary operators instead of strings.


--
Eric Blake
volunteer cygwin bash maintainer



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