SC3003
Joachim Ansorg edited this page Nov 12, 2021
·
2 revisions
In POSIX sh, $'..' is undefined.
Problematic code:
#!/bin/sh
IFS=$' \t\n'Correct code:
#!/bin/sh
# Note: \n can not be last, or it will be stripped by $()
IFS=$(printf ' \n\t')or
#!/bin/sh
# Trailing linefeed added literally
IFS="$(printf ' \t')
"or
#!/bin/bash
# Bash supports this
IFS=$' \t\n'Rationale:
You are using the interpolated string Bashism $'..' in a script that declares itself as POSIX sh (e.g. via #!/bin/sh).
To ensure the script runs correctly on other systems, either switch to Bash, or rewrite it in a POSIX compatible way.
This can generally done via printf as in the example. Be careful about strings with trailing linefeeds, as a $(command substitution) will strip them.
Exceptions:
None.
Related resources:
- StackOverflow: Why does my bash code fail when I run it with sh?