Detect if homebrew package is installed

You can use

brew ls --versions myformula

to output the installed versions of the respective formula. If the formula is not installed, the output will be empty.

When using a recent versions of homebrew, which you can get with brew update, you can just run this (thanks Slaven):

if brew ls --versions myformula > /dev/null; then
  # The package is installed
else
  # The package is not installed
fi

That said, it is probably a good idea to check for the existence of the tool at all and not just checking for the respective homebrew package (e.g. by searching for the executable in the $PATH). People tend to install tools in a rather large amount of ways in practice, with homebrew being just one of them.


What about?

for pkg in macvim ngrep other needed packages; do
    if brew list -1 | grep -q "^${pkg}\$"; then
        echo "Package '$pkg' is installed"
    else
        echo "Package '$pkg' is not installed"
    fi
done

# install if we haven't installed any version
brew ls --versions $lib || brew install $lib
# install if we haven't installed latest version
brew outdated $lib || brew install $lib