Summary of bash Features
bash is a backward-compatible evolutionary
successor to the Bourne shell that includes most of the C
shell's major advantages as well as features from
the Korn shell and a few new features of its own. Features
appropriated from the
C shell include:
Directory manipulation, with the pushd, popd,
and dirs commands. Job control, including the fg and
bg commands and the ability to stop
jobs with CTRL-Z. Brace expansion, for generating arbitrary strings. Tilde expansion, a shorthand way to refer to directories. Aliases, which allow you to define shorthand names for commands or
command lines. Command history, which lets you recall previously entered commands.
bash's major new features
include:
Command-line editing, allowing you to use vi- or
emacs-style editing commands on your command
lines. Key bindings that allow you to set up customized editing key
sequences. Integrated programming features: the functionality of several
external UNIX commands, including test,
expr, getopt, and
echo, has been integrated into the shell itself,
enabling common programming tasks to be done more cleanly and
efficiently. Control structures, especially the select construct, which enables easy menu
generation. New options and variables that give you more ways to customize your
environment. One dimensional arrays that allow easy referencing and manipulation
of lists of data. Dynamic loading of built-ins, plus the ability to write your own and
load them into the running shell.
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