Search code examples
bashif-statementsquare-bracket

When are square brackets required in a Bash if statement?


Usually, I use square brackets in the if statement:

if [ "$name" = 'Bob' ]; then ...

But, when I check if grep succeeded I don't use the square brackets:

if grep -q "$text" $file ; then ...

When are the square brackets necessary in the if statement?


Solution

  • The square brackets are a synonym for the test command. An if statement checks the exit status of a command in order to decide which branch to take. grep -q "$text" is a command, but "$name" = 'Bob' is not--it's just an expression. test is a command, which takes an expression and evaluates it:

    if test "$name" = 'Bob'; then ...
    

    Since square brackets are a synonym for the test command, you can then rewrite it as your original statement:

    if [ "$name" = 'Bob' ]; then ...