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Re: Why can redirection be combined in an assignment statement?
From: |
Koichi Murase |
Subject: |
Re: Why can redirection be combined in an assignment statement? |
Date: |
Tue, 11 May 2021 01:41:13 +0900 |
2021年5月11日(火) 0:41 Peng Yu <pengyu.ut@gmail.com>:
> I can not see why redirection is allowed in an assignment statement.
> For example, redirection in the following command does not do anything
> useful.
I think it's just because the syntactic rule becomes simpler, i.e., it
is easier to explain the rule to users than disallowing or allowing
each combination separately.
It is not the reason for allowing variable assignments combined with
redirections, but we may think of the following use cases:
some-condition &&
x=$(something1) z=$(something2) > tmpfile
If we need to always separate unrelated simple command elements with
`;' or new lines, we need to write
some-condition &&
{ x=$(something1); z=$(something2); > tmpfile; }
Another use case might be
tmpfile=$RANDOM.tmp > "$tmpfile"
to create an empty temporary file with its name assigned to a variable
`tmpfile'. But again, these are not the original motivation of
allowing just combining variable assignments and redirections.
Re: Why can redirection be combined in an assignment statement?,
Koichi Murase <=
Re: Why can redirection be combined in an assignment statement?, Eli Schwartz, 2021/05/10
Re: Why can redirection be combined in an assignment statement?, Chet Ramey, 2021/05/10