koalaman / shellcheck Public
SC2244
Joachim Ansorg edited this page Nov 12, 2021
·
3 revisions
Prefer explicit -n to check non-empty string (or use =/-ne to check boolean/integer).
Problematic code:
if [ "$1" ]
then
echo "True"
fiCorrect code:
# Check if $1 is empty or non-empty
if [ -n "$1" ]
then
echo "True, $1 is a non-empty value"
fi
# Check instead if $1 is true or false, as in Java
[ "$1" = "true" ]
# Check instead if $1 is non-zero or zero, as in C
[ "$1" -ne 0 ]
# Check instead if $1 is defined (even if just assigned the empty string) or undefined
[ "${1+x}" = "x" ]
Rationale:
[ "$var" ] is equivalent to [ -n "$var" ] and checks that a string is non-empty.
Users more familiar with other languages are often surprised to learn that [ "$var" ] is true when:
var=falsevar=0var=nullvar=" "
Adding the explicit -n helps clarify that this is a string comparison, and not related to any concept of boolean values or "truthiness" as it is in most languages.
Exceptions:
If you are familiar with the semantics of [, you can ignore this stylistic suggestion with no ill effects.
Related resources:
- Help by adding links to BashFAQ, StackOverflow, man pages, POSIX, etc!