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author | Vojta Svoboda <vojtasvoboda.cz@gmail.com> | 2015-10-07 14:26:18 +0200 |
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committer | Vojta Svoboda <vojtasvoboda.cz@gmail.com> | 2015-10-07 14:26:18 +0200 |
commit | bff40e2f9816974abd29322f2a50455f51acd22e (patch) | |
tree | 01177dd231841fea5dea3aa6546fde8d6630f5d3 /bash.html.markdown | |
parent | 6dabd9568d2a99e7bbc079d0466588bf68a42283 (diff) | |
parent | 5c677e8071291520297ef3d5d8374c6d11285744 (diff) |
Merge branch 'master' into translation/brainfuck-cs
Diffstat (limited to 'bash.html.markdown')
-rw-r--r-- | bash.html.markdown | 14 |
1 files changed, 7 insertions, 7 deletions
diff --git a/bash.html.markdown b/bash.html.markdown index 08182c2c..d4f3d424 100644 --- a/bash.html.markdown +++ b/bash.html.markdown @@ -51,7 +51,7 @@ echo $Variable echo "$Variable" echo '$Variable' # When you use the variable itself — assign it, export it, or else — you write -# its name without $. If you want to use variable's value, you should use $. +# its name without $. If you want to use the variable's value, you should use $. # Note that ' (single quote) won't expand the variables! # String substitution in variables @@ -70,11 +70,11 @@ echo ${Foo:-"DefaultValueIfFooIsMissingOrEmpty"} # Builtin variables: # There are some useful builtin variables, like -echo "Last program return value: $?" +echo "Last program's return value: $?" echo "Script's PID: $$" -echo "Number of arguments: $#" -echo "Scripts arguments: $@" -echo "Scripts arguments separated in different variables: $1 $2..." +echo "Number of arguments passed to script: $#" +echo "All arguments passed to script: $@" +echo "Script's arguments separated into different variables: $1 $2..." # Reading a value from input: echo "What's your name?" @@ -108,8 +108,8 @@ fi # Expressions are denoted with the following format: echo $(( 10 + 5 )) -# Unlike other programming languages, bash is a shell — so it works in a context -# of current directory. You can list files and directories in the current +# Unlike other programming languages, bash is a shell so it works in the context +# of a current directory. You can list files and directories in the current # directory with the ls command: ls |