How to use an environment variable inside a quoted string in Bash
Note that COLUMNS
is:
- NOT an environment variable. It is an ordinary bash parameter that is set by bash itself.
- Set automatically upon receipt of a
SIGWINCH
signal.
That second point usually means that your COLUMNS
variable will only be set in your interactive shell, not in a bash script.
If your script's stdin
is connected to your terminal you can manually look up the width of your terminal by asking your terminal:
tput cols
And to use this in your SVN command:
svn diff "$@" --diff-cmd /usr/bin/diff -x "-y -w -p -W $(tput cols)"
(Note: you should quote "$@"
and stay away from eval
;-))
Just a quick note/summary for any who came here via Google looking for the answer to the general question asked in the title (as I was). Any of the following should work for getting access to shell variables inside quotes:
echo "$VARIABLE"
echo "${VARIABLE}"
Use of single quotes is the main issue. According to the Bash Reference Manual:
Enclosing characters in single quotes (
'
) preserves the literal value of each character within the quotes. A single quote may not occur between single quotes, even when preceded by a backslash. [...] Enclosing characters in double quotes ("
) preserves the literal value of all characters within the quotes, with the exception of$
,`
,\
, and, when history expansion is enabled,!
. The characters$
and ` retain their special meaning within double quotes (see Shell Expansions). The backslash retains its special meaning only when followed by one of the following characters:$
,`
,"
,\
, or newline. Within double quotes, backslashes that are followed by one of these characters are removed. Backslashes preceding characters without a special meaning are left unmodified. A double quote may be quoted within double quotes by preceding it with a backslash. If enabled, history expansion will be performed unless an!
appearing in double quotes is escaped using a backslash. The backslash preceding the!
is not removed. The special parameters*
and@
have special meaning when in double quotes (see Shell Parameter Expansion).
In the specific case asked in the question, $COLUMNS is a special variable which has nonstandard properties (see lhunath's answer above).
The following script works for me for multiple values of $COLUMNS
. I wonder if you are not setting COLUMNS
prior to this call?
#!/bin/bash
COLUMNS=30
svn diff $@ --diff-cmd /usr/bin/diff -x "-y -w -p -W $COLUMNS"
Can you echo $COLUMNS
inside your script to see if it set correctly?
If unsure, you might use the 'cols' request on the terminal, and forget COLUMNS:
COLS=$(tput cols)