I run across many shell scripts with variables in all caps, and I\'ve always thought that there is a severe misunderstanding with that. My understanding is that, by convention (and perhaps by necessity long ago), environment variables are in all-caps.
But in modern scripting environments like Bash, I have always preferred the convention of lower-case names for temporary variables, and upper-case ones only for exported (i.e. environment) variables. For example:
#!/usr/bin/env bash
year=`date +%Y`
echo \"It is $year.\"
export JAVA_HOME=\"$HOME/java\"
That has always been my take on things. Are there any authoritative sources which either agree or disagree with this approach, or is it purely a matter of style?
By convention, environment variables (PAGER
, EDITOR
, ...) and internal shell variables (SHELL
, BASH_VERSION
, ...) are capitalized. All other variable names should be lower case.
Remember that variable names are case-sensitive; this convention avoids accidentally overriding environmental and internal variables.
Keeping to this convention, you can rest assured that you don\'t need to know every environment variable used by UNIX tools or shells in order to avoid overwriting them. If it\'s your variable, lowercase it. If you export it, uppercase it.
Any naming conventions followed consistently will always help. Here are a few helpful tips for shell variable naming:
Use all caps and underscores for exported variables and constants, especially when they are shared across multiple scripts or processes. Use a common prefix whenever applicable so that related variables stand out and won\'t clash with Bash internal variables which are all upper case.
Examples:
- Exported variables with a common prefix:
JOB_HOME
JOB_LOG
JOB_TEMP
JOB_RUN_CONTROL
- Constants:
LOG_DEBUG
LOG_INFO
LOG_ERROR
STATUS_OK
STATUS_ERROR
STATUS_WARNING
Use \"snake case\" (all lowercase and underscores) for all variables that are scoped to a single script or a block.
Examples: input_file
first_value
max_amount
num_errors
Mixed case when local variable has some relationship with an environment variable, like: old_IFS
old_HOME
Use a leading underscore for \"private\" variables and functions. This is especially relevant if you ever write a shell library where functions within a library file or across files need to share variables, without ever clashing with anything that might be similarly named in the main code.
Examples: _debug
_debug_level
_current_log_file
Avoid camel case. This will minimize the bugs caused by case typos. Remember, shell variables are case sensitive.
Examples: inputArray
thisLooksBAD
, numRecordsProcessed
, veryInconsistent_style
See also:
- The Open Group Base Specifications Issue 7 - Environment Variables
I do what you do. I doubt there\'s an authoritative source, but it seems a fairly widespread de-facto standard.
It\'s just a very widely held convention, I doubt there\'s any \"authoritative\" source for it.
Actually, the term \"environment variables\" seems to be of fairly recent coinage. Kernighan and Pike in their classic book \"The UNIX Programming Environment\", published in 1984, speak only of \"shell variables\" - there is not even an entry for \"environment\" in the index!
i tend use ALL_CAPS both for environment and global variables. of course, in Bash there\'s no real variable scope, so there\'s a good portion of variables used as globals (mostly settings and state tracking), and relatively few \'locals\' (counters, iterators, partly-constructed strings, and temporaries)
If shell variables are going to be exported to the environment, it’s worth considering that the POSIX (Issue 7, 2018 edition) Environment Variable Definition specifies:
Environment variable names used by the utilities in the Shell and Utilities
volume of POSIX.1-2017 consist solely of uppercase letters, digits, and the
underscore ( _
) from the characters defined in Portable Character Set
and do not begin with a digit.
...
The name space of environment variable names containing lowercase letters is
reserved for applications. Applications can define any environment variables
with names from this name space without modifying the behavior of the
standard utilities.