[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
Re: More fun with IFS
From: |
Thorsten Glaser |
Subject: |
Re: More fun with IFS |
Date: |
Sun, 24 Feb 2013 22:26:52 +0000 |
Dan Douglas dixit:
>Zsh and pdkshes produce:
>
>one:::two:three:::four
>
>For all of the above, which I think is wrong for the last 4. ksh93 produces:
Why is it incorrect?
The mksh manpage documents $@ behaving like $*:
@ Same as $*, unless it is used inside double quotes, in which case
a separate word is generated for each positional parameter. If
there are no positional parameters, no word is generated. $@ can
be used to access arguments, verbatim, without losing NULL argu-
ments or splitting arguments with spaces.
And $* uses the first char of IFS:
* All positional parameters (except 0), i.e. $1, $2, $3, ...
If used outside of double quotes, parameters are separate words
(which are subjected to word splitting); if used within double
quotes, parameters are separated by the first character of the
IFS parameter (or the empty string if IFS is NULL).
POSIX is just as explicit on $* (with better wording for the
two distinguished cases of IFS being unset or empty which the
mksh code implements correctly, though):
*
Expands to the positional parameters, starting from one.
When the expansion occurs within a double-quoted string
(see [54]Double-Quotes ), it shall expand to a single
field with the value of each parameter separated by the
first character of the IFS variable, or by a <space> if
IFS is unset. If IFS is set to a null string, this is not
equivalent to unsetting it; its first character does not
exist, so the parameter values are concatenated.
And POSIX on $@ doesn’t specify anything different for when the
result of $@ is used where it isn’t multiple fields:
@
Expands to the positional parameters, starting from one.
When the expansion occurs within double-quotes, and where
field splitting (see [53]Field Splitting ) is performed,
each positional parameter shall expand as a separate
field, with the provision that the expansion of the first
parameter shall still be joined with the beginning part of
the original word (assuming that the expanded parameter
was embedded within a word), and the expansion of the last
parameter shall still be joined with the last part of the
original word. If there are no positional parameters, the
expansion of '@' shall generate zero fields, even when '@'
is double-quoted.
So I think mksh at least behaves as specified, and the standard
doesn’t contradict it. Inside the code, there’s even special-casing
for “ifs0”, so I believe this is no accident.
In other words, “don’t do that then” (rely on this behaviour).
I think eval is evil anyway ;-)
(Thanks to ormaaj for pointing out this posting.)
bye,
//mirabilos
--
“It is inappropriate to require that a time represented as
seconds since the Epoch precisely represent the number of
seconds between the referenced time and the Epoch.”
-- IEEE Std 1003.1b-1993 (POSIX) Section B.2.2.2
- Re: More fun with IFS,
Thorsten Glaser <=