How can I check if a variable is empty in Bash?
问题:
回答1:
In bash at least the following command tests if $var is empty:
if [[ -z "$var" ]]; then
#do what you want
fi
The command man test
is your friend.
回答2:
Presuming bash:
var=""
if [ -n "$var" ]; then
echo "not empty"
else
echo "empty"
fi
回答3:
I have also seen
if [ "x$variable" = "x" ]; then ...
which is obviously very robust and shell independent.
Also, there is a difference between "empty" and "unset". See How to tell if a string is not defined in a bash shell script?.
回答4:
if [ ${foo:+1} ]
then
echo "yes"
fi
prints yes
if the variable is set. ${foo:+1}
will return 1 when the variable is set, otherwise it will return empty string.
回答5:
[ "$variable" ] || echo empty
: ${variable="value_to_set_if_unset"}
回答6:
if [[ "$variable" == "" ]] ...
回答7:
This will return true
if a variable is unset or set to the empty string ("").
if [ -z "$MyVar" ]
then
echo "The variable MyVar has nothing in it."
elif ! [ -z "$MyVar" ]
then
echo "The variable MyVar has something in it."
fi
回答8:
The question asks how to check if a variable is an empty string and the best answers are already given for that.
But I landed here after a period passed programming in php and what I was actually searching was a check like the empty function in php working in a bash shell.
After reading the answers I realized I was not thinking properly in bash, but anyhow in that moment a function like empty in php would have been soooo handy in my bash code.
As I think this can happen to others, I decided to convert the php empty function in bash
According to the php manual:
a variable is considered empty if it doesn't exist or if its value is one of the following:
- "" (an empty string)
- 0 (0 as an integer)
- 0.0 (0 as a float)
- "0" (0 as a string)
- an empty array
- a variable declared, but without a value
Of course the null and false cases cannot be converted in bash, so they are omitted.
function empty
{
local var="$1"
# Return true if:
# 1. var is a null string ("" as empty string)
# 2. a non set variable is passed
# 3. a declared variable or array but without a value is passed
# 4. an empty array is passed
if test -z "$var"
then
[[ $( echo "1" ) ]]
return
# Return true if var is zero (0 as an integer or "0" as a string)
elif [ "$var" == 0 2> /dev/null ]
then
[[ $( echo "1" ) ]]
return
# Return true if var is 0.0 (0 as a float)
elif [ "$var" == 0.0 2> /dev/null ]
then
[[ $( echo "1" ) ]]
return
fi
[[ $( echo "" ) ]]
}
Example of usage:
if empty "${var}"
then
echo "empty"
else
echo "not empty"
fi
Demo:
the following snippet:
#!/bin/bash
vars=(
""
0
0.0
"0"
1
"string"
" "
)
for (( i=0; i<${#vars[@]}; i++ ))
do
var="${vars[$i]}"
if empty "${var}"
then
what="empty"
else
what="not empty"
fi
echo "VAR \"$var\" is $what"
done
exit
outputs:
VAR "" is empty
VAR "0" is empty
VAR "0.0" is empty
VAR "0" is empty
VAR "1" is not empty
VAR "string" is not empty
VAR " " is not empty
Having said that in a bash logic the checks on zero in this function can cause side problems imho, anyone using this function should evaluate this risk and maybe decide to cut those checks off leaving only the first one.
回答9:
You may want to distinguish between unset variables and variables that are set and empty:
is_empty() {
local var_name="$1"
local var_value="${!var_name}"
if [[ -v "$var_name" ]]; then
if [[ -n "$var_value" ]]; then
echo "set and non-empty"
else
echo "set and empty"
fi
else
echo "unset"
fi
}
str="foo"
empty=""
is_empty str
is_empty empty
is_empty none
Result:
set and non-empty
set and empty
unset
BTW, I recommend using set -u
which will cause an error when reading unset variables, this can save you from disasters such as
rm -rf $dir
You can read about this and other best practices for a "strict mode" here.
回答10:
To check if variable v is not set
if [ "$v" == "" ]; then
echo "v not set"
fi