What is the logic behind how bash tests for true/false?





.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty{ margin-bottom:0;
}







2















This:



$ echo $VAR
something


And this:



$ [[ -z "$VAR" ]]
$ echo $?
1


Yet this:



if [[ -z "$TMUX_MAN_PANE" ]]; then
echo 'NEVER PRINTS!'


This screws with my head.



UPDATE



Here's some real code. I can't get this to work.



tmux_man_page() {
if [[ "$TERM" =~ 'screen' ]] && [[ -n "$TMUX" ]]; then
tmux list-panes -t $TMUX_MAN_PANE &> /dev/null
echo $?
echo $TMUX_MAN_PANE
[[ -z "$TMUX_MAN_PANE" ]]
echo $?
if ! [[ -z "$TMUX_MAN_PANE" ]] && [[ $? ]]; then
echo luck
tmux -q respawn-pane -k -t $TMUX_MAN_PANE man $1
else
echo fuck
tmux split-window -vf man $1
TMUX_MAN_PANE=$(tmux display-message -p "#{pane_id}")
export TMUX_MAN_PANE
tmux select-pane -t {last}
fi
fi
}


UPDATE 2: Success



Finally figured it out. Was having problems getting the status of the first line in the if statement. Had to do some trickery to get the output of the tmux statement in the first line of the if statement. If anyone knows a cleaner way to do this, I'm all ears.



Here's the working code:



tmux_man_page() {
if [[ "$TERM" =~ 'screen' ]] && [[ -n "$TMUX" ]]; then
fucker=$(tmux list-panes -t $TMUX_MAN_PANE 2>&1)
if ! [[ -z "$TMUX_MAN_PANE" ]] && ! [[ $fucker =~ 'find pane' ]]; then
tmux -q respawn-pane -k -t $TMUX_MAN_PANE man $1
else
tmux split-window -vf man $1
TMUX_MAN_PANE=$(tmux display-message -p "#{pane_id}")
export TMUX_MAN_PANE
tmux select-pane -t {last}
fi
fi
}

tmux_man_page_close() {
if [ $TMUX_MAN_PANE ]; then
tmux kill-pane -t $TMUX_MAN_PANE
fi
}









share|improve this question




















  • 2





    Your update does not include enough information. Please (a) include the values of TERM, TMUX, and TMUX_MAN_PANE from before the function runs and (b) include the output of the function and then (c) explain how that output differs from what you expect.

    – John1024
    yesterday











  • It's all a mess. In the first line of the if statement, I just want to know if that command is throwing an error. There is no seemingly rational way to do that. I don't want the output from the command, I want to know if it's throwing an error. That's it.

    – StevieD
    yesterday













  • It's showing the command was a success even though it can't find the pane. I see no way to extract the output from that tmux command.

    – StevieD
    yesterday











  • I should just be going this in perl. Fuck this crazy shit.

    – StevieD
    yesterday











  • Jesus, finally figured it out. Posting solution.

    – StevieD
    yesterday




















2















This:



$ echo $VAR
something


And this:



$ [[ -z "$VAR" ]]
$ echo $?
1


Yet this:



if [[ -z "$TMUX_MAN_PANE" ]]; then
echo 'NEVER PRINTS!'


This screws with my head.



UPDATE



Here's some real code. I can't get this to work.



tmux_man_page() {
if [[ "$TERM" =~ 'screen' ]] && [[ -n "$TMUX" ]]; then
tmux list-panes -t $TMUX_MAN_PANE &> /dev/null
echo $?
echo $TMUX_MAN_PANE
[[ -z "$TMUX_MAN_PANE" ]]
echo $?
if ! [[ -z "$TMUX_MAN_PANE" ]] && [[ $? ]]; then
echo luck
tmux -q respawn-pane -k -t $TMUX_MAN_PANE man $1
else
echo fuck
tmux split-window -vf man $1
TMUX_MAN_PANE=$(tmux display-message -p "#{pane_id}")
export TMUX_MAN_PANE
tmux select-pane -t {last}
fi
fi
}


UPDATE 2: Success



Finally figured it out. Was having problems getting the status of the first line in the if statement. Had to do some trickery to get the output of the tmux statement in the first line of the if statement. If anyone knows a cleaner way to do this, I'm all ears.



Here's the working code:



tmux_man_page() {
if [[ "$TERM" =~ 'screen' ]] && [[ -n "$TMUX" ]]; then
fucker=$(tmux list-panes -t $TMUX_MAN_PANE 2>&1)
if ! [[ -z "$TMUX_MAN_PANE" ]] && ! [[ $fucker =~ 'find pane' ]]; then
tmux -q respawn-pane -k -t $TMUX_MAN_PANE man $1
else
tmux split-window -vf man $1
TMUX_MAN_PANE=$(tmux display-message -p "#{pane_id}")
export TMUX_MAN_PANE
tmux select-pane -t {last}
fi
fi
}

tmux_man_page_close() {
if [ $TMUX_MAN_PANE ]; then
tmux kill-pane -t $TMUX_MAN_PANE
fi
}









share|improve this question




















  • 2





    Your update does not include enough information. Please (a) include the values of TERM, TMUX, and TMUX_MAN_PANE from before the function runs and (b) include the output of the function and then (c) explain how that output differs from what you expect.

    – John1024
    yesterday











  • It's all a mess. In the first line of the if statement, I just want to know if that command is throwing an error. There is no seemingly rational way to do that. I don't want the output from the command, I want to know if it's throwing an error. That's it.

    – StevieD
    yesterday













  • It's showing the command was a success even though it can't find the pane. I see no way to extract the output from that tmux command.

    – StevieD
    yesterday











  • I should just be going this in perl. Fuck this crazy shit.

    – StevieD
    yesterday











  • Jesus, finally figured it out. Posting solution.

    – StevieD
    yesterday
















2












2








2








This:



$ echo $VAR
something


And this:



$ [[ -z "$VAR" ]]
$ echo $?
1


Yet this:



if [[ -z "$TMUX_MAN_PANE" ]]; then
echo 'NEVER PRINTS!'


This screws with my head.



UPDATE



Here's some real code. I can't get this to work.



tmux_man_page() {
if [[ "$TERM" =~ 'screen' ]] && [[ -n "$TMUX" ]]; then
tmux list-panes -t $TMUX_MAN_PANE &> /dev/null
echo $?
echo $TMUX_MAN_PANE
[[ -z "$TMUX_MAN_PANE" ]]
echo $?
if ! [[ -z "$TMUX_MAN_PANE" ]] && [[ $? ]]; then
echo luck
tmux -q respawn-pane -k -t $TMUX_MAN_PANE man $1
else
echo fuck
tmux split-window -vf man $1
TMUX_MAN_PANE=$(tmux display-message -p "#{pane_id}")
export TMUX_MAN_PANE
tmux select-pane -t {last}
fi
fi
}


UPDATE 2: Success



Finally figured it out. Was having problems getting the status of the first line in the if statement. Had to do some trickery to get the output of the tmux statement in the first line of the if statement. If anyone knows a cleaner way to do this, I'm all ears.



Here's the working code:



tmux_man_page() {
if [[ "$TERM" =~ 'screen' ]] && [[ -n "$TMUX" ]]; then
fucker=$(tmux list-panes -t $TMUX_MAN_PANE 2>&1)
if ! [[ -z "$TMUX_MAN_PANE" ]] && ! [[ $fucker =~ 'find pane' ]]; then
tmux -q respawn-pane -k -t $TMUX_MAN_PANE man $1
else
tmux split-window -vf man $1
TMUX_MAN_PANE=$(tmux display-message -p "#{pane_id}")
export TMUX_MAN_PANE
tmux select-pane -t {last}
fi
fi
}

tmux_man_page_close() {
if [ $TMUX_MAN_PANE ]; then
tmux kill-pane -t $TMUX_MAN_PANE
fi
}









share|improve this question
















This:



$ echo $VAR
something


And this:



$ [[ -z "$VAR" ]]
$ echo $?
1


Yet this:



if [[ -z "$TMUX_MAN_PANE" ]]; then
echo 'NEVER PRINTS!'


This screws with my head.



UPDATE



Here's some real code. I can't get this to work.



tmux_man_page() {
if [[ "$TERM" =~ 'screen' ]] && [[ -n "$TMUX" ]]; then
tmux list-panes -t $TMUX_MAN_PANE &> /dev/null
echo $?
echo $TMUX_MAN_PANE
[[ -z "$TMUX_MAN_PANE" ]]
echo $?
if ! [[ -z "$TMUX_MAN_PANE" ]] && [[ $? ]]; then
echo luck
tmux -q respawn-pane -k -t $TMUX_MAN_PANE man $1
else
echo fuck
tmux split-window -vf man $1
TMUX_MAN_PANE=$(tmux display-message -p "#{pane_id}")
export TMUX_MAN_PANE
tmux select-pane -t {last}
fi
fi
}


UPDATE 2: Success



Finally figured it out. Was having problems getting the status of the first line in the if statement. Had to do some trickery to get the output of the tmux statement in the first line of the if statement. If anyone knows a cleaner way to do this, I'm all ears.



Here's the working code:



tmux_man_page() {
if [[ "$TERM" =~ 'screen' ]] && [[ -n "$TMUX" ]]; then
fucker=$(tmux list-panes -t $TMUX_MAN_PANE 2>&1)
if ! [[ -z "$TMUX_MAN_PANE" ]] && ! [[ $fucker =~ 'find pane' ]]; then
tmux -q respawn-pane -k -t $TMUX_MAN_PANE man $1
else
tmux split-window -vf man $1
TMUX_MAN_PANE=$(tmux display-message -p "#{pane_id}")
export TMUX_MAN_PANE
tmux select-pane -t {last}
fi
fi
}

tmux_man_page_close() {
if [ $TMUX_MAN_PANE ]; then
tmux kill-pane -t $TMUX_MAN_PANE
fi
}






bash






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited yesterday









Rui F Ribeiro

42k1483142




42k1483142










asked yesterday









StevieDStevieD

1759




1759








  • 2





    Your update does not include enough information. Please (a) include the values of TERM, TMUX, and TMUX_MAN_PANE from before the function runs and (b) include the output of the function and then (c) explain how that output differs from what you expect.

    – John1024
    yesterday











  • It's all a mess. In the first line of the if statement, I just want to know if that command is throwing an error. There is no seemingly rational way to do that. I don't want the output from the command, I want to know if it's throwing an error. That's it.

    – StevieD
    yesterday













  • It's showing the command was a success even though it can't find the pane. I see no way to extract the output from that tmux command.

    – StevieD
    yesterday











  • I should just be going this in perl. Fuck this crazy shit.

    – StevieD
    yesterday











  • Jesus, finally figured it out. Posting solution.

    – StevieD
    yesterday
















  • 2





    Your update does not include enough information. Please (a) include the values of TERM, TMUX, and TMUX_MAN_PANE from before the function runs and (b) include the output of the function and then (c) explain how that output differs from what you expect.

    – John1024
    yesterday











  • It's all a mess. In the first line of the if statement, I just want to know if that command is throwing an error. There is no seemingly rational way to do that. I don't want the output from the command, I want to know if it's throwing an error. That's it.

    – StevieD
    yesterday













  • It's showing the command was a success even though it can't find the pane. I see no way to extract the output from that tmux command.

    – StevieD
    yesterday











  • I should just be going this in perl. Fuck this crazy shit.

    – StevieD
    yesterday











  • Jesus, finally figured it out. Posting solution.

    – StevieD
    yesterday










2




2





Your update does not include enough information. Please (a) include the values of TERM, TMUX, and TMUX_MAN_PANE from before the function runs and (b) include the output of the function and then (c) explain how that output differs from what you expect.

– John1024
yesterday





Your update does not include enough information. Please (a) include the values of TERM, TMUX, and TMUX_MAN_PANE from before the function runs and (b) include the output of the function and then (c) explain how that output differs from what you expect.

– John1024
yesterday













It's all a mess. In the first line of the if statement, I just want to know if that command is throwing an error. There is no seemingly rational way to do that. I don't want the output from the command, I want to know if it's throwing an error. That's it.

– StevieD
yesterday







It's all a mess. In the first line of the if statement, I just want to know if that command is throwing an error. There is no seemingly rational way to do that. I don't want the output from the command, I want to know if it's throwing an error. That's it.

– StevieD
yesterday















It's showing the command was a success even though it can't find the pane. I see no way to extract the output from that tmux command.

– StevieD
yesterday





It's showing the command was a success even though it can't find the pane. I see no way to extract the output from that tmux command.

– StevieD
yesterday













I should just be going this in perl. Fuck this crazy shit.

– StevieD
yesterday





I should just be going this in perl. Fuck this crazy shit.

– StevieD
yesterday













Jesus, finally figured it out. Posting solution.

– StevieD
yesterday







Jesus, finally figured it out. Posting solution.

– StevieD
yesterday












1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















7














The key is that 0 means true and 1 (or any other non-zero value) means false.



In shell, a test that is true (or a program which completes successfully), exits with code 0. The test [[ -z "$VAR" ]] returns code zero (true) if $VAR is empty or one (false) if it is not empty:



$ var=""; [[ -z "$var" ]]; echo $?
0
$ var="NOT EMPTY"; [[ -z "$var" ]]; echo $?
1


In sum, if $VAR is non-empty, then [[ -z "$VAR" ]] is false (returns 1) and the then statement does not execute.



Did you intend for the test to return true if the variable was non-empty? If so, replace -z with -n:



$ var=""; [[ -n "$var" ]]; echo $?
1
$ var="NOT EMPTY"; [[ -n "$var" ]]; echo $?
0


For brevity, the same test is performed if -n is omitted:



$ var=""; [[ "$var" ]]; echo $?
1
$ var="NOT EMPTY"; [[ "$var" ]]; echo $?
0





share|improve this answer


























  • I just posted my real code. I cannot, for the life of me, get that to work. I'm literally going fucking nuts.

    – StevieD
    yesterday






  • 1





    @StevieD Run set -x and then run your code. This will show you how every step is evaluated.

    – John1024
    yesterday













  • Ah, shit. Forgot about that setting. I'll try it.

    – StevieD
    yesterday












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1 Answer
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active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

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active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









7














The key is that 0 means true and 1 (or any other non-zero value) means false.



In shell, a test that is true (or a program which completes successfully), exits with code 0. The test [[ -z "$VAR" ]] returns code zero (true) if $VAR is empty or one (false) if it is not empty:



$ var=""; [[ -z "$var" ]]; echo $?
0
$ var="NOT EMPTY"; [[ -z "$var" ]]; echo $?
1


In sum, if $VAR is non-empty, then [[ -z "$VAR" ]] is false (returns 1) and the then statement does not execute.



Did you intend for the test to return true if the variable was non-empty? If so, replace -z with -n:



$ var=""; [[ -n "$var" ]]; echo $?
1
$ var="NOT EMPTY"; [[ -n "$var" ]]; echo $?
0


For brevity, the same test is performed if -n is omitted:



$ var=""; [[ "$var" ]]; echo $?
1
$ var="NOT EMPTY"; [[ "$var" ]]; echo $?
0





share|improve this answer


























  • I just posted my real code. I cannot, for the life of me, get that to work. I'm literally going fucking nuts.

    – StevieD
    yesterday






  • 1





    @StevieD Run set -x and then run your code. This will show you how every step is evaluated.

    – John1024
    yesterday













  • Ah, shit. Forgot about that setting. I'll try it.

    – StevieD
    yesterday
















7














The key is that 0 means true and 1 (or any other non-zero value) means false.



In shell, a test that is true (or a program which completes successfully), exits with code 0. The test [[ -z "$VAR" ]] returns code zero (true) if $VAR is empty or one (false) if it is not empty:



$ var=""; [[ -z "$var" ]]; echo $?
0
$ var="NOT EMPTY"; [[ -z "$var" ]]; echo $?
1


In sum, if $VAR is non-empty, then [[ -z "$VAR" ]] is false (returns 1) and the then statement does not execute.



Did you intend for the test to return true if the variable was non-empty? If so, replace -z with -n:



$ var=""; [[ -n "$var" ]]; echo $?
1
$ var="NOT EMPTY"; [[ -n "$var" ]]; echo $?
0


For brevity, the same test is performed if -n is omitted:



$ var=""; [[ "$var" ]]; echo $?
1
$ var="NOT EMPTY"; [[ "$var" ]]; echo $?
0





share|improve this answer


























  • I just posted my real code. I cannot, for the life of me, get that to work. I'm literally going fucking nuts.

    – StevieD
    yesterday






  • 1





    @StevieD Run set -x and then run your code. This will show you how every step is evaluated.

    – John1024
    yesterday













  • Ah, shit. Forgot about that setting. I'll try it.

    – StevieD
    yesterday














7












7








7







The key is that 0 means true and 1 (or any other non-zero value) means false.



In shell, a test that is true (or a program which completes successfully), exits with code 0. The test [[ -z "$VAR" ]] returns code zero (true) if $VAR is empty or one (false) if it is not empty:



$ var=""; [[ -z "$var" ]]; echo $?
0
$ var="NOT EMPTY"; [[ -z "$var" ]]; echo $?
1


In sum, if $VAR is non-empty, then [[ -z "$VAR" ]] is false (returns 1) and the then statement does not execute.



Did you intend for the test to return true if the variable was non-empty? If so, replace -z with -n:



$ var=""; [[ -n "$var" ]]; echo $?
1
$ var="NOT EMPTY"; [[ -n "$var" ]]; echo $?
0


For brevity, the same test is performed if -n is omitted:



$ var=""; [[ "$var" ]]; echo $?
1
$ var="NOT EMPTY"; [[ "$var" ]]; echo $?
0





share|improve this answer















The key is that 0 means true and 1 (or any other non-zero value) means false.



In shell, a test that is true (or a program which completes successfully), exits with code 0. The test [[ -z "$VAR" ]] returns code zero (true) if $VAR is empty or one (false) if it is not empty:



$ var=""; [[ -z "$var" ]]; echo $?
0
$ var="NOT EMPTY"; [[ -z "$var" ]]; echo $?
1


In sum, if $VAR is non-empty, then [[ -z "$VAR" ]] is false (returns 1) and the then statement does not execute.



Did you intend for the test to return true if the variable was non-empty? If so, replace -z with -n:



$ var=""; [[ -n "$var" ]]; echo $?
1
$ var="NOT EMPTY"; [[ -n "$var" ]]; echo $?
0


For brevity, the same test is performed if -n is omitted:



$ var=""; [[ "$var" ]]; echo $?
1
$ var="NOT EMPTY"; [[ "$var" ]]; echo $?
0






share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited yesterday

























answered yesterday









John1024John1024

48.5k5113128




48.5k5113128













  • I just posted my real code. I cannot, for the life of me, get that to work. I'm literally going fucking nuts.

    – StevieD
    yesterday






  • 1





    @StevieD Run set -x and then run your code. This will show you how every step is evaluated.

    – John1024
    yesterday













  • Ah, shit. Forgot about that setting. I'll try it.

    – StevieD
    yesterday



















  • I just posted my real code. I cannot, for the life of me, get that to work. I'm literally going fucking nuts.

    – StevieD
    yesterday






  • 1





    @StevieD Run set -x and then run your code. This will show you how every step is evaluated.

    – John1024
    yesterday













  • Ah, shit. Forgot about that setting. I'll try it.

    – StevieD
    yesterday

















I just posted my real code. I cannot, for the life of me, get that to work. I'm literally going fucking nuts.

– StevieD
yesterday





I just posted my real code. I cannot, for the life of me, get that to work. I'm literally going fucking nuts.

– StevieD
yesterday




1




1





@StevieD Run set -x and then run your code. This will show you how every step is evaluated.

– John1024
yesterday







@StevieD Run set -x and then run your code. This will show you how every step is evaluated.

– John1024
yesterday















Ah, shit. Forgot about that setting. I'll try it.

– StevieD
yesterday





Ah, shit. Forgot about that setting. I'll try it.

– StevieD
yesterday


















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Старые Смолеговицы Содержание История | География | Демография | Достопримечательности | Примечания | НавигацияHGЯOLHGЯOL41 206 832 01641 606 406 141Административно-территориальное деление Ленинградской области«Переписная оброчная книга Водской пятины 1500 года», С. 793«Карта Ингерманландии: Ивангорода, Яма, Копорья, Нотеборга», по материалам 1676 г.«Генеральная карта провинции Ингерманландии» Э. Белинга и А. Андерсина, 1704 г., составлена по материалам 1678 г.«Географический чертёж над Ижорскою землей со своими городами» Адриана Шонбека 1705 г.Новая и достоверная всей Ингерманландии ланткарта. Грав. А. Ростовцев. СПб., 1727 г.Топографическая карта Санкт-Петербургской губернии. 5-и верстка. Шуберт. 1834 г.Описание Санкт-Петербургской губернии по уездам и станамСпецкарта западной части России Ф. Ф. Шуберта. 1844 г.Алфавитный список селений по уездам и станам С.-Петербургской губернииСписки населённых мест Российской Империи, составленные и издаваемые центральным статистическим комитетом министерства внутренних дел. XXXVII. Санкт-Петербургская губерния. По состоянию на 1862 год. СПб. 1864. С. 203Материалы по статистике народного хозяйства в С.-Петербургской губернии. Вып. IX. Частновладельческое хозяйство в Ямбургском уезде. СПб, 1888, С. 146, С. 2, 7, 54Положение о гербе муниципального образования Курское сельское поселениеСправочник истории административно-территориального деления Ленинградской области.Топографическая карта Ленинградской области, квадрат О-35-23-В (Хотыницы), 1930 г.АрхивированоАдминистративно-территориальное деление Ленинградской области. — Л., 1933, С. 27, 198АрхивированоАдминистративно-экономический справочник по Ленинградской области. — Л., 1936, с. 219АрхивированоАдминистративно-территориальное деление Ленинградской области. — Л., 1966, с. 175АрхивированоАдминистративно-территориальное деление Ленинградской области. — Лениздат, 1973, С. 180АрхивированоАдминистративно-территориальное деление Ленинградской области. — Лениздат, 1990, ISBN 5-289-00612-5, С. 38АрхивированоАдминистративно-территориальное деление Ленинградской области. — СПб., 2007, с. 60АрхивированоКоряков Юрий База данных «Этно-языковой состав населённых пунктов России». Ленинградская область.Административно-территориальное деление Ленинградской области. — СПб, 1997, ISBN 5-86153-055-6, С. 41АрхивированоКультовый комплекс Старые Смолеговицы // Электронная энциклопедия ЭрмитажаПроблемы выявления, изучения и сохранения культовых комплексов с каменными крестами: по материалам работ 2016-2017 гг. в Ленинградской области