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authorBoris Kolpackov <boris@codesynthesis.com>2021-01-08 09:27:06 +0200
committerBoris Kolpackov <boris@codesynthesis.com>2021-01-08 09:27:06 +0200
commit86bd5f8016919d971b7289811465426d28cf0a31 (patch)
tree36b1deb2b8c0b4ae788e46f0598415f52d8ed501
parent1847b5ba3d51020c44ba2388533a1a5427feadb1 (diff)
Reorder sections in Bash style guide
-rw-r--r--doc/bash-style.cli318
1 files changed, 160 insertions, 158 deletions
diff --git a/doc/bash-style.cli b/doc/bash-style.cli
index 17a850d..435dfe3 100644
--- a/doc/bash-style.cli
+++ b/doc/bash-style.cli
@@ -287,6 +287,28 @@ echo \"files: ${files[@]}\" # $1='files: one', $2='2 two', $3='three'
echo \"files: ${files[*]}\" # $1='files: one 2 two three'
\
+
+\h1#bool|Boolean|
+
+For boolean values use empty for false and \c{true} for true. This way you
+can have terse and natural looking conditions, for example:
+
+\
+first=true
+while ...; do
+
+ if [ ! \"$first\" ]; then
+ ...
+ fi
+
+ if [ \"$first\" ]; then
+ first=
+ fi
+
+done
+\
+
+
\h1#subshell|Subshell|
Bush executes certain constructs in \i{subshells} and some of these constructs
@@ -346,6 +368,144 @@ done
\N|The \c{lastpipe} shell option is inherited by functions and subshells.|
+\h1#function|Functions|
+
+If a function takes arguments, provide a brief usage after the function
+header, for example:
+
+\
+function dist() # <pkg> <dir>
+{
+ ...
+}
+\
+
+For non-trivial/obvious functions also provide a short description of its
+functionality/purpose, for example:
+
+\
+# Prepare a distribution of the specified packages and place it
+# into the specified directory.
+#
+function dist() # <pkg> <dir>
+{
+ ...
+}
+\
+
+Inside functions use local variables, for example:
+
+\
+function dist()
+{
+ local x=\"foo\"
+}
+\
+
+If the evaluation of the value may fail (e.g., it contains a program
+substitution), then place the assignment on a separate line since \c{local}
+will cause the error to be ignored. For example:
+
+\
+function dist()
+{
+ local b
+ b=\"$(basename \"$2\")\"
+}
+\
+
+A function can return data in two primary ways: exit code and stdout.
+Normally, exit code 0 means success and exit code 1 means failure though
+additional codes can be used to distinguish between different kinds of
+failures, signify special conditions, etc., see \l{#error-handing Error
+Handling} for details.
+
+A function can also write to stdout with the result available to the caller in
+the same way as from programs (command substitution, pipeline, etc). If a
+function needs to return multiple values, then it can print them separated
+with newlines with the caller using the \c{readarray} builtin to read them
+into an indexed array, for example:
+
+\
+function foo ()
+{
+ echo one
+ echo two
+ echo three
+}
+
+foo | readarray -t r
+\
+
+In this case, if the function can fail, then the failure should be explicitly
+checked for (either by examining \c{PIPESTATUS} or via the lack of the
+result), since the error trap will not be triggered (unless the \c{pipefail}
+shell option is set; see \l{#error-handing Error Handling} for details). For
+example:
+
+\
+foo | readarray -t r
+
+if [ \"${PIPESTATUS[0]}\" -ne 0 ]; then
+ exit 1
+fi
+\
+
+\N|The use of the newline as a separator means that values may not contain
+newlines. While \c{readarray} supports specifying a custom separator with the
+\c{-d} option, including a \c{NUL} separator, this support is only available
+since Bash 4.4.|
+
+This technique can also be extended to return an associative array by
+returning the values as an indexed array and then converting them to
+an associative array with \c{eval}, for example:
+
+\
+function foo ()
+{
+ echo \"[a]=one\"
+ echo \"[b]=two\"
+ echo \"[c]=three\"
+}
+
+foo | readarray -t ia
+
+if [ \"${PIPESTATUS[0]}\" -ne 0 ]; then
+ exit 1
+fi
+
+eval declare -A aa=(\"${ia[@]}\")
+\
+
+Note that if a key or a value contains whitespaces, then it must be quoted.
+The recommendation is to always quote both, for example:
+
+\
+function foo ()
+{
+ echo \"['a']='one ONE'\"
+ echo \"['b']='two'\"
+ echo \"['c']='three'\"
+}
+\
+
+Or, if returning a local array:
+
+\
+function foo ()
+{
+ declare -A a=([a]='one ONE' [b]=two [c]=three)
+
+ for k in \"${!a[@]}\"; do
+ echo \"['$k']='${a[$k]}'\"
+ done
+}
+\
+
+For more information on returning data from functions, see
+\l{https://mywiki.wooledge.org/BashFAQ/084 BashFAQ#084}.
+
+
\h1#error-handing|Error Handling|
Our scripts use the error trap to automatically terminate the script in case
@@ -510,162 +670,4 @@ esac
\N|We use \c{readarray} instead of \c{read} since the latter fails if the left
hand side of the pipeline does not produce anything.|
-
-\h1#bool|Boolean|
-
-For boolean values use empty for false and \c{true} for true. This way you
-can have terse and natural looking conditions, for example:
-
-\
-first=true
-while ...; do
-
- if [ ! \"$first\" ]; then
- ...
- fi
-
- if [ \"$first\" ]; then
- first=
- fi
-
-done
-\
-
-\h1#function|Functions|
-
-If a function takes arguments, provide a brief usage after the function
-header, for example:
-
-\
-function dist() # <pkg> <dir>
-{
- ...
-}
-\
-
-For non-trivial/obvious functions also provide a short description of its
-functionality/purpose, for example:
-
-\
-# Prepare a distribution of the specified packages and place it
-# into the specified directory.
-#
-function dist() # <pkg> <dir>
-{
- ...
-}
-\
-
-Inside functions use local variables, for example:
-
-\
-function dist()
-{
- local x=\"foo\"
-}
-\
-
-If the evaluation of the value may fail (e.g., it contains a program
-substitution), then place the assignment on a separate line since \c{local}
-will cause the error to be ignored. For example:
-
-\
-function dist()
-{
- local b
- b=\"$(basename \"$2\")\"
-}
-\
-
-A function can return data in two primary ways: exit code and stdout.
-Normally, exit code 0 means success and exit code 1 means failure though
-additional codes can be used to distinguish between different kinds of
-failures, signify special conditions, etc., see \l{#error-handing Error
-Handling} for details.
-
-A function can also write to stdout with the result available to the caller in
-the same way as from programs (command substitution, pipeline, etc). If a
-function needs to return multiple values, then it can print them separated
-with newlines with the caller using the \c{readarray} builtin to read them
-into an indexed array, for example:
-
-\
-function foo ()
-{
- echo one
- echo two
- echo three
-}
-
-foo | readarray -t r
-\
-
-In this case, if the function can fail, then the failure should be explicitly
-checked for (either by examining \c{PIPESTATUS} or via the lack of the
-result), since the error trap will not be triggered (unless the \c{pipefail}
-shell option is set; see \l{#error-handing Error Handling} for details). For
-example:
-
-\
-foo | readarray -t r
-
-if [ \"${PIPESTATUS[0]}\" -ne 0 ]; then
- exit 1
-fi
-\
-
-\N|The use of the newline as a separator means that values may not contain
-newlines. While \c{readarray} supports specifying a custom separator with the
-\c{-d} option, including a \c{NUL} separator, this support is only available
-since Bash 4.4.|
-
-This technique can also be extended to return an associative array by
-returning the values as an indexed array and then converting them to
-an associative array with \c{eval}, for example:
-
-\
-function foo ()
-{
- echo \"[a]=one\"
- echo \"[b]=two\"
- echo \"[c]=three\"
-}
-
-foo | readarray -t ia
-
-if [ \"${PIPESTATUS[0]}\" -ne 0 ]; then
- exit 1
-fi
-
-eval declare -A aa=(\"${ia[@]}\")
-\
-
-Note that if a key or a value contains whitespaces, then it must be quoted.
-The recommendation is to always quote both, for example:
-
-\
-function foo ()
-{
- echo \"['a']='one ONE'\"
- echo \"['b']='two'\"
- echo \"['c']='three'\"
-}
-\
-
-Or, if returning a local array:
-
-\
-function foo ()
-{
- declare -A a=([a]='one ONE' [b]=two [c]=three)
-
- for k in \"${!a[@]}\"; do
- echo \"['$k']='${a[$k]}'\"
- done
-}
-\
-
-For more information on returning data from functions, see
-\l{https://mywiki.wooledge.org/BashFAQ/084 BashFAQ#084}.
-
"