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Positional Parameters in Shell Script in Linux

Positional Parameters in Shell Script

Positional Parameters are used to pass the information to the shell directly with command line argument or indirectly using set and command substitution. It can be assigned from shell argument and it is denoted by $N, where N is the single digit and referred as parameter N. if N is double digit use braces ${N}.


Command Line Argument for positional Parameters

You can pass many arguments in command line.
For Example we run a script script.sh with 10 argument a to j

  • $ ./script.sh a b c d e f g h i j

Now the detail of output we get from positional parameters

  • $0 is the name of script 

        ./script.sh

  • $1 is the first parameter passed.

        a

  • $2 is second parameter passed.

        b

  • ${10} is the 10 parameter passed, use bracket for double digit

        j

  • if no bracket is used i.e. $10 then the output is 

        a0

  • $@ lists all positional parameters, it sees parameters as different words.

         a b c d e f g h i j

  • $* lists all parameter, it sees parameters as a single word if quoted (“$*”). Use IFS to separate the different word. 

        a b c d e f g h i j

  • $# is the number of parameter passed.

         10

In command-line, however, $0 is the name of the shell.

$ $0

-bash

  • $? Gives the exit status of most recently executed command.

        It gives 0 for successful, or an integer in the range 1 - 255 on error.





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