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Re: Why is -- in the output of declare -p x?


From: Peng Yu
Subject: Re: Why is -- in the output of declare -p x?
Date: Wed, 25 Jan 2023 11:06:15 -0600

help says `-p   display the attributes and value of each NAME`. I'd
assume at least one purpose is for human to read. If so, then it is
better to remove the unnecessary -- whenever possible.

After all, the program which uses -p has control to what variable
names should be used. It can choose variable names such that -- is
never needed, in such case, those programs never need to test whether
there is -- or not.

On 1/25/23, Koichi Murase <myoga.murase@gmail.com> wrote:
> 2023年1月25日(水) 7:22 Peng Yu <pengyu.ut@gmail.com>:
>> I see -- in the output of declare -p x. Why is it necessary to keep it
>> there? Is it better to remove it for brevity? Thanks.
>
> There can be different kinds of uses for the output of `declare -p'.
> An obvious one is for humans to check the state of the variable, for
> which brevity could be useful. Another one is to serialize the state
> of the variable into a string for later `eval's, for which brevity is
> mostly irrelevant (except that it might reduce the size a bit). Even
> another one is for external programs or shell scripts to read the
> state of the variable, for which consistency wins over brevity.
>
> I don't know what is the original intent of this behavior, but it
> would be useful to always have the variable assignment as the third
> word when one wants to manipulate the output of `declare -p' in a
> program. Otherwise, the program needs to make a test against the value
> of the second word to judge which word it should pick.
>


-- 
Regards,
Peng



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