How to use an environment variable inside a quoted string in Bash

Jamie picture Jamie · May 8, 2009 · Viewed 172.3k times · Source

I've tried various forms of the following in a bash script:

#!/bin/bash
svn diff $@ --diff-cmd /usr/bin/diff -x "-y -w -p -W $COLUMNS"

But I can't get the syntax to correctly expand the COLUMNS environment variable.

I've tried various forms of the following:

svn diff $@ --diff-cmd /usr/bin/diff -x '-y -w -p -W $COLUMNS'

and

svn diff $@ --diff-cmd /usr/bin/diff -x '-y -w -p -W ${COLUMNS}'

and

eval svn diff $@ --diff-cmd /usr/bin/diff -x "-y -w -p -W $COLUMNS"

Suggestions?

Answer

RecursivelyIronic picture RecursivelyIronic · Feb 23, 2012

Just a quick note/summary for any who came here via Google looking for the answer to the general question asked in the title (as I was). Any of the following should work for getting access to shell variables inside quotes:

echo "$VARIABLE"
echo "${VARIABLE}"

Use of single quotes is the main issue. According to the Bash Reference Manual:

Enclosing characters in single quotes (') preserves the literal value of each character within the quotes. A single quote may not occur between single quotes, even when preceded by a backslash. [...] Enclosing characters in double quotes (") preserves the literal value of all characters within the quotes, with the exception of $, `, \, and, when history expansion is enabled, !. The characters $ and ` retain their special meaning within double quotes (see Shell Expansions). The backslash retains its special meaning only when followed by one of the following characters: $, `, ", \, or newline. Within double quotes, backslashes that are followed by one of these characters are removed. Backslashes preceding characters without a special meaning are left unmodified. A double quote may be quoted within double quotes by preceding it with a backslash. If enabled, history expansion will be performed unless an ! appearing in double quotes is escaped using a backslash. The backslash preceding the ! is not removed. The special parameters * and @ have special meaning when in double quotes (see Shell Parameter Expansion).

In the specific case asked in the question, $COLUMNS is a special variable which has nonstandard properties (see lhunath's answer above).