When do we need curly braces around shell variables?
Variables are declared and assigned without $
and without {}
. You have to use
var=10
to assign. In order to read from the variable (in other words, 'expand' the variable), you must use $
.
$var # use the variable
${var} # same as above
${var}bar # expand var, and append "bar" too
$varbar # same as ${varbar}, i.e expand a variable called varbar, if it exists.
This has confused me sometimes - in other languages we refer to the variable in the same way, regardless of whether it's on the left or right of an assignment. But shell-scripting is different, $var=10
doesn't do what you might think it does!
In this particular example, it makes no difference. However, the {}
in ${}
are useful if you want to expand the variable foo
in the string
"${foo}bar"
since "$foobar"
would instead expand the variable identified by foobar
.
Curly braces are also unconditionally required when:
- expanding array elements, as in
${array[42]}
- using parameter expansion operations, as in
${filename%.*}
(remove extension) - expanding positional parameters beyond 9:
"$8 $9 ${10} ${11}"
Doing this everywhere, instead of just in potentially ambiguous cases, can be considered good programming practice. This is both for consistency and to avoid surprises like $foo_$bar.jpg
, where it's not visually obvious that the underscore becomes part of the variable name.