this post was submitted on 26 Aug 2023
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Shell Scripting

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[–] isVeryLoud@lemmy.ca 7 points 1 year ago

2nd one, feels natural as a programmer.

[–] gamma@programming.dev 4 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

I typically use find "$HOME/docs", but with a few caveats:

  • In Zsh or Fish, the quotes are unnecessary: find $HOME/docs
  • If I'm using anything potentially destructive: mv "${HOME:?}/bin" ...
  • Of course, if it's followed by a valid identifier character, I'll add braces: "${basename}_$num.txt"
  • I'm pretty inconsistent when globbing: "$HOME"/docs/* or "$HOME/docs/"* are common for me.
  • I don't use "${HOME}" unless I actually need the braces. The reason? I write more Zsh than anything, and the braces are even less necessary in Zsh: $#array[3] actually gets the length of the third element of the array, rather than substituting the number of arguments, then the string 'array[3]'
[–] txtsd@programming.dev 2 points 1 year ago

I always brace my variables.

While I also use ZSH, I write most of my scripts in bash because they more often than not need to run on a CI/CD server.

[–] Reptorian@programming.dev 2 points 1 year ago

Depends. I use G'MIC (Interpretative language for image processing largely inspired by bash) in CLI.

ig "C:\Users\User..."

If I need something with '$' in CLI, I'd be using $_path_rc\something_something. Sometimes with "" in case of spaces.

Other than that, I would be just running my own coded command in most case.