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Re: The builtin array variable 'FUNCNAME' is considered unset by many ex
From: |
Greg Wooledge |
Subject: |
Re: The builtin array variable 'FUNCNAME' is considered unset by many expansions, even when set. |
Date: |
Thu, 8 Nov 2018 08:27:05 -0500 |
User-agent: |
NeoMutt/20170113 (1.7.2) |
On Thu, Nov 08, 2018 at 01:15:56AM -0500, Great Big Dot wrote:
> Description:
> The builtin array variable FUNCNAME (which provides a way to trace the
> stack of functions called so far) appears to be unset according to certain
> bash expansions, even when it isn't. If the following code is saved to a
> file and executed (this doesn't work at the command line), the problems
> begin to appear:
>
> printf -- '%q\n' "${FUNCNAME}"
> printf -- '%q\n' "${FUNCNAME[0]}"
> printf -- '%q\n' "${FUNCNAME[*]}"
I don't see any functions there. From the manual:
FUNCNAME
[...]
This variable exists only when a shell function is executing.
Assignments to FUNCNAME have no effect. If FUNCNAME is unset,
it loses its special properties, even if it is subsequently
reset.
Since your example doesn't show a function being defined or called, I
would expect it to show only empty strings.
Also, as a side note, "${x}" and "${x[0]}" are always the same. Literally
always. Doesn't matter what type of variable x is (or isn't).