About 2,550,000 results
Open links in new tab
  1. bash - Shell equality operators (=, ==, -eq) - Stack Overflow

    Shell equality operators (=, ==, -eq) Asked 11 years, 11 months ago Modified 3 years, 5 months ago Viewed 645k times

  2. Difference between Login Shell and Non-Login Shell?

    May 8, 2012 · I understand the basic difference between an interactive shell and a non-interactive shell. But what exactly differentiates a login shell from a non-login shell? Can you give …

  3. shell - Difference between sh and Bash - Stack Overflow

    Shell - "Shell" is a program, which facilitates the interaction between the user and the operating system (kernel). There are many shell implementations available, like sh, Bash, C shell, Z …

  4. What is the meaning of $? in a shell script? - Unix & Linux Stack …

    Feb 20, 2011 · When going through one shell script, I saw the term "$?". What is the significance of this term?

  5. What is the purpose of "&&" in a shell command? - Stack Overflow

    Dec 22, 2010 · What is the purpose of "&&" in a shell command? Asked 14 years, 10 months ago Modified 2 years, 5 months ago Viewed 683k times

  6. How to highlight bash/shell commands in markdown?

    Here shell is an alias for bash. Chroma has something called Session. Pygments (doc) uses console, shell-session for bash sessions, pwsh-session, ps1con for power shell sessions and …

  7. When do we need curly braces around shell variables?

    In shell programming, commands and arguments must be separated from each other by whitespace. Here, you see the equal sign with no whitespace, meaning this is a variable …

  8. How to represent multiple conditions in a shell if statement?

    Sep 30, 2010 · How to represent multiple conditions in a shell if statement? Asked 15 years, 1 month ago Modified 3 years, 9 months ago Viewed 1.2m times

  9. shell - How can I compare numbers in Bash? - Stack Overflow

    BTW, in bash a semi-colon is a statement separator, not a statement terminator, which is a new-line. So if you only have one statement on a line then the ; at end-of-line are superfluous. Not …

  10. shell - Redirect stderr and stdout in Bash - Stack Overflow

    I want to redirect both standard output and standard error of a process to a single file. How do I do that in Bash?