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  1. linux - What does $@ mean in a shell script? - Stack Overflow

    Apr 3, 2012 · What does a dollar sign followed by an at-sign (@) mean in a shell script? For example: umbrella_corp_options $@

  2. regex - Meaning of "=~" operator in shell script - Stack Overflow

    Sep 17, 2012 · Meaning of "=~" operator in shell script [duplicate] Asked 13 years, 2 months ago Modified 12 years, 4 months ago Viewed 96k times

  3. Meaning of $? (dollar question mark) in shell scripts

    Aug 1, 2019 · What does echo $? mean in shell programming?true echo $? # echoes 0 false echo $? # echoes 1 From the manual: (acessible by calling man bash in your shell) ? Expands to …

  4. What is the meaning of $? in a shell script? - Unix & Linux Stack …

    Feb 20, 2011 · When going through one shell script, I saw the term "$?". What is the significance of this term?

  5. What is the $? (dollar question mark) variable in shell scripting?

    I'm trying to learn shell scripting, and I need to understand someone else's code. What is the $? variable hold? I can't Google search the answer because they block punctuation characters.

  6. Difference between ${} and $() in a shell script - Super User

    $(command) is “command substitution”. As you seem to understand, it runs the command, captures its output, and inserts that into the command line that contains the $(…); e.g., $ ls -ld …

  7. bash - Shell equality operators (=, ==, -eq) - Stack Overflow

    Shell equality operators (=, ==, -eq) Asked 12 years ago Modified 3 years, 6 months ago Viewed 649k times

  8. What does $# mean in shell? - Unix & Linux Stack Exchange

    What does $# mean in shell? I have code such as if [ $# -eq 0 ] then I want to understand what $# means, but Google search is very bad for searching these kinds of things.

  9. What is the difference between $@ and $* in shell scripts?

    Jul 22, 2018 · In shell scripts, what is the difference between $@ and $*? Which one is the preferred way to get the script arguments? Are there differences between the different shell …

  10. bash - What does <<< mean? - Unix & Linux Stack Exchange

    it seems < is for passing file (or directory), << @ for passing multiple lines (similar to the banner command in cisco switches; as terminated by a custom string @ in this case), and <<< to pass …