• ClemaX@lemm.ee
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    1 day ago

    It all makes sense when you think about the way it will be parsed. I prefer to use newlines instead of semicolons to show the blocks more clearly.

    for file in *.txt
    do
        cat "$file"
    done
    

    The do and done serve as the loop block delimiters. Such as { and } in many other languages. The shell parser couldn’t know where stuff starts/ends.

    Edit: I agree that the then/fi, do/done case/esac are very inconsistent.

    Also to fail early and raise errors on uninitialized variables, I recommend to add this to the beginning of your bash scripts:

    set -euo pipefail
    

    Or only this for regular sh scripts:

    set -eu
    

    -e: Exit on error

    -u: Error on access to undefined variable

    -o pipefail: Abort pipeline early if any part of it fails.

    There is also -x that can be very useful for debugging as it shows a trace of every command and result as it is executed.