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#!/bin/bash |
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|
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### [[ glob matching, [[ has no glob expansion |
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[[ foo.py == *.py ]] && echo true |
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[[ foo.p == *.py ]] || echo false |
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# stdout-json: "true\nfalse\n" |
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|
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### [[ glob matching with escapes |
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[[ 'foo.*' == *."*" ]] && echo true |
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# note that the pattern arg to fnmatch should be '*.\*' |
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# stdout: true |
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|
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### equality |
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[[ '*.py' == '*.py' ]] && echo true |
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[[ foo.py == '*.py' ]] || echo false |
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# stdout-json: "true\nfalse\n" |
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|
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### [[ glob matching with unquoted var |
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pat=*.py |
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[[ foo.py == $pat ]] && echo true |
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[[ foo.p == $pat ]] || echo false |
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# stdout-json: "true\nfalse\n" |
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|
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### [[ regex matching |
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# mksh doesn't have this syntax of regex matching. I guess it comes from perl? |
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regex='.*\.py' |
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[[ foo.py =~ $regex ]] && echo true |
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[[ foo.p =~ $regex ]] || echo false |
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# stdout-json: "true\nfalse\n" |
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# N-I mksh stdout-json: "" |
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# N-I mksh status: 1 |
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|
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### [[ regex syntax error |
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# hm, it doesn't show any error, but it exits 2. |
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[[ foo.py =~ * ]] && echo true |
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# status: 2 |
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# N-I mksh status: 1 |
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|
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### [[ has no word splitting |
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var='one two' |
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[[ 'one two' == $var ]] && echo true |
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# stdout: true |
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|
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### [[ has quote joining |
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var='one two' |
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[[ 'one 'tw"o" == $var ]] && echo true |
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# stdout: true |
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|
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### [[ empty string is false |
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[[ 'a' ]] && echo true |
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[[ '' ]] || echo false |
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# stdout-json: "true\nfalse\n" |
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|
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### && chain |
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[[ t && t && '' ]] || echo false |
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# stdout: false |
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|
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### || chain |
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[[ '' || '' || t ]] && echo true |
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# stdout: true |
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|
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### [[ compound expressions |
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# Notes on whitespace: |
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# - 1 and == need space seprating them, but ! and ( don't. |
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# - [[ needs whitesapce after it, but ]] doesn't need whitespace before it! |
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[[ ''||!(1 == 2)&&(2 == 2)]] && echo true |
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# stdout: true |
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|
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# NOTE on the two cases below. We're comparing |
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# (a || b) && c vs. a || (b && c) |
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# |
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# a = true, b = false, c = false is an example where they are different. |
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# && and || have precedence inside |
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|
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### precedence of && and || inside [[ |
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[[ True || '' && '' ]] && echo true |
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# stdout: true |
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|
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### precedence of && and || in a command context |
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if test True || test '' && test ''; then |
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echo YES |
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else |
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echo "NO precedence" |
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fi |
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# stdout: NO precedence |
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|
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# http://tldp.org/LDP/abs/html/testconstructs.html#DBLBRACKETS |
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|
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### Octal literals with -eq |
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decimal=15 |
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octal=017 # = 15 (decimal) |
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[[ $decimal -eq $octal ]] && echo true |
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[[ $decimal -eq ZZZ$octal ]] || echo false |
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# stdout-json: "true\nfalse\n" |
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# N-I mksh stdout: false |
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# mksh doesn't implement this syntax for literals. |
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|
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### Hex literals with -eq |
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decimal=15 |
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hex=0x0f # = 15 (decimal) |
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[[ $decimal -eq $hex ]] && echo true |
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[[ $decimal -eq ZZZ$hex ]] || echo false |
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# stdout-json: "true\nfalse\n" |
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# N-I mksh stdout: false |
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|
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# TODO: Add tests for this |
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# https://www.gnu.org/software/bash/manual/bash.html#Bash-Conditional-Expressions |
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# When used with [[, the ‘gt;’ operators sort lexicographically using the current locale. The test command uses ASCII ordering. |
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|
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### >gt; on strings |
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# NOTE: |
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[[ b>gt;a ]] && echo true |
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[[ b
|
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# stdout-json: "true\nfalse\n" |
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|
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### != on strings |
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# NOTE: b!=a does NOT work |
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[[ b != a ]] && echo true |
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[[ a != a ]] || echo false |
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# stdout-json: "true\nfalse\n" |
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|
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### -eq on strings |
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# This is lame behavior: it does a conversion to 0 first for any string |
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[[ a -eq a ]] && echo true |
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[[ a -eq b ]] && echo true |
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# stdout-json: "true\ntrue\n" |
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# OK bash/mksh stdout-json: "true\ntrue\n" |
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|
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### [[ compare with literal -f |
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var=-f |
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[[ $var == -f ]] && echo true |
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[[ '-f' == $var ]] && echo true |
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# stdout-json: "true\ntrue\n" |
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|
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### [ compare with literal -f |
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# Hm this is the same |
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var=-f |
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[ $var == -f ] && echo true |
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[ '-f' == $var ] && echo true |
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# stdout-json: "true\ntrue\n" |
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|
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### [[ with op variable |
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# Parse error -- parsed BEFORE evaluation of vars |
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op='==' |
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[[ a $op a ]] && echo true |
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[[ a $op b ]] || echo false |
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# status: 2 |
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# OK mksh status: 1 |
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|
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### [ with op variable |
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# OK -- parsed AFTER evaluation of vars |
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op='==' |
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[ a $op a ] && echo true |
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[ a $op b ] || echo false |
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# status: 0 |
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# stdout-json: "true\nfalse\n" |
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|
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### [[ with unquoted empty var |
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empty='' |
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[[ $empty == '' ]] && echo true |
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# stdout: true |
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|
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### [ with unquoted empty var |
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empty='' |
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[ $empty == '' ] && echo true |
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# status: 2 |
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|
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### [[ at runtime doesn't work |
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dbracket=[[ |
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$dbracket foo == foo ]] |
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# status: 127 |
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|
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### [[ with env prefix doesn't work |
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FOO=bar [[ foo == foo ]] |
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# status: 127 |
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|
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### [[ over multiple lines is OK |
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# Hm it seems you can't split anywhere? |
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[[ foo == foo |
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&& bar == bar |
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]] && echo true |
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# status: 0 |
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# stdout-json: "true\n" |
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|
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### Argument that looks like a command word operator |
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[[ -f -f ]] || echo false |
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[[ -f == ]] || echo false |
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# stdout-json: "false\nfalse\n" |
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|
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### Argument that looks like a real operator |
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[[ -f
|
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# status: 2 |
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# OK mksh status: 1 |
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|
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### Does user array equal "$@" ? |
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# Oh it coerces both to a string. Lame. |
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# I think it disobeys "${a[@]}", and treats it like an UNQUOTED ${a[@]}. |
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a=(1 3 5) |
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b=(1 2 3) |
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set -- 1 3 5 |
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[[ "$@" = "${a[@]}" ]] && echo true |
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[[ "$@" = "${b[@]}" ]] || echo false |
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# stdout-json: "true\nfalse\n" |
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|
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### Array coerces to string |
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a=(1 3 5) |
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[[ '1 3 5' = "${a[@]}" ]] && echo true |
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[[ '1 3 4' = "${a[@]}" ]] || echo false |
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# stdout-json: "true\nfalse\n" |
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|
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### Quotes don't matter in comparison |
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[[ '3' = 3 ]] && echo true |
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[[ '3' -eq 3 ]] && echo true |
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# stdout-json: "true\ntrue\n" |