bash cli

Stuart Murray-Smith eight32 at gmail.com
Tue Aug 21 20:24:37 UTC 2007


> > > > Oh dear, I've forgotten what the bash cli is to see the output of a
> > > > command line input (it dumps  result to screen). Pretty much the same
> > > > bash functionality as Ctrl-R gives one a rolling history of entered
> > > > commands.
> > > >
> > > > Could someone please remind me :-)
> > > ----
> > > question not clear...default of cli commands in bash shell would output
> > > standard out and error out to screen so this should be the default
> > > behavior.
> >
> > Thanks Craig :-)
> >
> > Yes, it's difficult to describe, and that's prolly why I've struggled
> > to Google it. If one completed a bash script with 'exit 0' and all ran
> > well, nothing (or null) is sent to stdout. If a script passes a
> > variable on to another executable, this is may not necessarily be sent
> > to stdout, but there is something one can pass at cli time that does
> > copy this/these var(s) to stdout to see what same script produces.
> >
> > I hope this makes sense :-)
> >
>
>
> Are you looking for "$?" (Dollar sign followed by ?). in bash this
> holds the last exist status

Thanks Yonas, Todd

It's not in the script itself, but a keystroke sequence that one does
at the command prompt... same as Ctrl-R gets one a rolling history
stack :-)

TiA,

Stu@




More information about the users mailing list