In a bash script, using the conditional "or" in an "if" statement

If you want to say OR use double pipe (||).

if [ "$fname" = "a.txt" ] || [ "$fname" = "c.txt" ]

(The original OP code using | was simply piping the output of the left side to the right side, in the same way any ordinary pipe works.)


After many years of comments and misunderstanding, allow me to clarify.

To do OR you use ||.

Whether you use [ or [[ or test or (( all depends on what you need on a case by case basis. It's wrong to say that one of those is preferred in all cases. Sometimes [ is right and [[ is wrong. But that's not what the question was. OP asked why | didn't work. The answer is because it should be || instead.


The accepted answer is good but since you're using bash I'll add the bash solution:

if [[ "$fname" == "a.txt" || "$fname" == "c.txt" ]]; then

This is documented in the bash reference manual 3.2.4.2 Conditional Constructs

expression1 && expression2

True if both expression1 and expression2 are true.

expression1 || expression2

True if either expression1 or expression2 is true.

The && and || operators do not evaluate expression2 if the value of expression1 is sufficient to determine the return value of the entire conditional expression.