What is the 'function' keyword used in some bash scripts?
For example: Bash-Prog-Intro-HOWTO
function foo() {}
I make search queries in info bash
and look in releted chapters of POSIX for function keyword but nothing found.
What is function
keyword used in some bash scripts? Is that some deprecated syntax?
Solution 1:
The function
keyword is optional when defining a function in Bash, as documented in the manual:
Functions are declared using this syntax:
name () compound-command [ redirections ]
or
function name [()] compound-command [ redirections ]
The first form of the syntax is generally preferred because it's compatible with Bourne/Korn/POSIX scripts and so more portable.
That said, sometimes you might want to use the function
keyword to prevent Bash aliases from colliding with your function's name. Consider this example:
$ alias foo="echo hi"
$ foo() { :; }
bash: syntax error near unexpected token `('
Here, 'foo'
is replaced by the text of the alias of the same name because it's the first word of the command. With function
the alias is not expanded:
$ function foo() { :; }
Solution 2:
The function
keyword is necessary in rare cases when the function name is also an alias. Without it, Bash expands the alias before parsing the function definition -- probably not what you want:
alias mycd=cd
mycd() { cd; ls; } # Alias expansion turns this into cd() { cd; ls; }
mycd # Fails. bash: mycd: command not found
cd # Uh oh, infinite recursion.
With the function
keyword, things work as intended:
alias mycd=cd
function mycd() { cd; ls; } # Defines a function named mycd, as expected.
cd # OK, goes to $HOME.
mycd # OK, goes to $HOME.
\mycd # OK, goes to $HOME, lists directory contents.