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CHAPTER 9 Shell Programming 9.6 Here DocumentA here document is a form of quoting that allows shell variables to be substituted. It's a special form of redirection that starts with <<WORD and ends with WORD as the only contents of a line. In the Bourne shell you can prevent shell substitution by escaping WORD by putting a \ in front of it on the redirection line, i.e. <<\WORD, but not on the ending line. To have the same effect the C shell expects the \ in front of WORD at both locations. The following scripts illustrate this, for the Bourne shell: and for the C shell: #!/bin/sh #!/bin/csh -f does=does set does =index.html does not="" set not =index.html "" cat << EOF cat << EOF This here document This here document $does $not $does $not do variable substitution do variable substitution EOF EOF cat << \EOF cat << \EOF This here document This here document $does $not $does $not do variable substitution do variable substitution EOF \EOF Both produce the output: This here document does do variable substitution This here document $does $not do variable substitution In the top part of the example the shell variables $does and $not are substituted. In the bottom part they are treated as simple text strings without substitution.
Introduction to Unix - 14 AUG 1996 [Next] [Previous] [Up] [Top] [Contents]
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