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Vidar Holen edited this page Jul 20, 2019 · 1 revision

Escape \< to prevent it redirecting (or switch to [[ .. ]]).

Problematic code:

if [ "aardvark" < "zebra" ]
then
  echo "Alphabetical!"
fi

Correct code:

if [ "aardvark" \< "zebra" ]
then
  echo "Alphabetical!"
fi

or optionally in Bash/Ksh:

if [[ "aardvark" < "zebra" ]]
then
  echo "Alphabetical!"
fi

Rationale:

You are using the operator < or > in a [ test expression.

In this context, it will be considered a file redirection operator instead, so [ "aardvark" < "zebra" ] is equivalent to [ "aardvark" ] < ./zebra, which is true if there exists a readable file zebra in the current directory.

If you wanted to compare two strings lexicographically (alphabetically), escape the < or > with a backslash as in the correct example.

If you want to compare two numbers numerically, use -lt or -ge instead.

Exceptions:

None.

Related resources:

  • Help by adding links to BashFAQ, StackOverflow, man pages, POSIX, etc!

ShellCheck

Each individual ShellCheck warning has its own wiki page like SC1000. Use GitHub Wiki's "Pages" feature guerraart8 to find a specific , or see Checks.

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