What is the 'IFS'?
IFS
isn't directly related to looping, it's related to word splitting. IFS
indirectly determines how the output from the command is broken up into pieces that the loop iterates over.
When you have an unprotected variable substitution $foo
or command substitution $(foo)
, there are two cases:
- If the context expects a single word, e.g. when the substitution is between double quotes
"$foo"
, or in a variable assignmentx=$foo
, then the string resulting from the substitution is used as-is. - If the context expects multiple words, which is the case most of the times, then two further expansions are performed on the resulting string:
- The string is split into words. Any character that appears in
$IFS
is considered a word separator. For exampleIFS=":"; foo="12:34::78"; echo $foo
prints12 34 78
(with two spaces between34
and78
, since there's an empty word). - Each word is treated as a glob pattern and expanded into a list of file names. For example,
foo="*"; echo $foo
prints the list of files in the current directory.
- The string is split into words. Any character that appears in
For loops, like many other contexts, expect a list of words. So
for x in $(foo); do …
breaks $(foo)
into words, and treats each word as a glob pattern. The default value of IFS
is space, tab and newline, so if foo
prints out two lines hello world
and howdy
then the loop body is executed with x=hello
, then x=world
and x=howdy
. If IFS
is explicitly changed to contain a newline only, then the loop is executed for hello world
and howdy
. If IFS
is changed to be o
, then the loop is executed for hell
, w
, rldh
(where 
is a newline character) and wdy
.
IFS
stands for Input
Internal Field Separator
- it's a character that separates fields. In the example you posted, it is set to new line character (\n
); so after you set it, for
will process text line by line. In that example, you could change the value of IFS
(to some letter that you have in your input file) and check how text will be split.
BTW, from the answer you posted the second solution is that recommended...
As @jasonwryan noticed, it's not Input
but Internal
. Name Input
came from awk
in which there is also OFS
- Output Field Separator
.
From man bash
IFS The Internal Field Separator that is used for word splitting after expansion and to split lines into words with the read builtin command. The default value is "<space><tab><newline>".
This is one of Bash's internal variables. It determines how Bash recognizes fields, or word boundaries, when it interprets character strings.
While it defaults to whitespace (space, tab, and newline), it may be changed, for example, to parse a comma-separated data file.
http://tldp.org/LDP/abs/html/internalvariables.html