title: Useful Bash variables
date: 2020-11-12 1
layout: post
lang: en
ref: useful-bash-variables
eu_categories: shell
GNU Bash has a few two letter variables that may be useful when typing on the terminal.
!!
: the text of the last command
The !!
variable refers to the previous command, and I find
useful when following chains for symlinks:
$ which git
/run/current-system/sw/bin/git
$ readlink $(!!)
readlink $(which git)
/nix/store/5bgr1xpm4m0r72h9049jbbhagxdyrnyb-git-2.28.0/bin/git
It is also useful when you forget to prefix sudo
to a command that requires
it:
$ requires-sudo.sh
requires-sudo.sh: Permission denied
$ sudo !!
sudo ./requires-sudo.sh
# all good
Bash prints the command expansion before executing it, so it is better for you to follow along what it is doing.
$_
: most recent parameter
The $_
variable will give you the most recent parameter
you provided to a previous argument, which can save you typing sometimes:
# instead of...
$ mkdir -p a/b/c/d/
$ cd a/b/c/d/
# ...you can:
$ mkdir -p a/b/c/d/
$ cd $_
Conclusion
I wouldn't use those in a script, as it would make the script terser to read, I find those useful shortcut that are handy when writing at the interactive terminal.