SC2204
Joachim Ansorg edited this page Nov 12, 2021
·
2 revisions
(..) is a subshell. Did you mean [ .. ], a test expression?
Problematic code:
if ( -d mydir )
then
echo "It's a directory"
fiCorrect code:
if [ -d mydir ]
then
echo "It's a directory"
fiRationale:
Tests like -d to see if something is a directory or -z to see if it's non-empty are actually flags to the test command, and only work as tests in that context. [ is an alias for test, so you'll frequently see them written as [ -d mydir ].
( .. ) is completely unrelated, and is a subshell mostly used to scope shell modifications. They should not be used in if or while statements in shell scripts.
If you wanted to test a condition, rewrite the ( .. ) to [ .. ].
Exceptions:
None.
This error is triggered by having a unary test operator as the first command name in a subshell, which won't normally happen. Note that there's a similar warning SC2205 with a higher false positive rate.