A Bash alias is essentially nothing
more than a keyboard shortcut, an abbreviation, a means of
avoiding typing a long command sequence. If, for example,
we include alias lm="ls -l | more" in
the
In a script, aliases have very limited usefulness. It would be quite nice if aliases could assume some of the functionality of the C preprocessor, such as macro expansion, but unfortunately Bash does not expand arguments within the alias body. [1] Moreover, a script fails to expand an alias itself within "compound constructs," such as if/then statements, loops, and functions. An added limitation is that an alias will not expand recursively. Almost invariably, whatever we would like an alias to do could be accomplished much more effectively with a function.
Example 24-1. Aliases within a script
#!/bin/bash
# alias.sh
shopt -s expand_aliases
# Must set this option, else script will not expand aliases.
# First, some fun.
alias Jesse_James='echo "\"Alias Jesse James\" was a 1959 comedy starring Bob Hope."'
Jesse_James
echo; echo; echo;
alias ll="ls -l"
# May use either single (') or double (") quotes to define an alias.
echo "Trying aliased \"ll\":"
ll /usr/X11R6/bin/mk* #* Alias works.
echo
directory=/usr/X11R6/bin/
prefix=mk* # See if wild card causes problems.
echo "Variables \"directory\" + \"prefix\" = $directory$prefix"
echo
alias lll="ls -l $directory$prefix"
echo "Trying aliased \"lll\":"
lll # Long listing of all files in /usr/X11R6/bin stating with mk.
# An alias can handle concatenated variables -- including wild card -- o.k.
TRUE=1
echo
if [ TRUE ]
then
alias rr="ls -l"
echo "Trying aliased \"rr\" within if/then statement:"
rr /usr/X11R6/bin/mk* #* Error message results!
# Aliases not expanded within compound statements.
echo "However, previously expanded alias still recognized:"
ll /usr/X11R6/bin/mk*
fi
echo
count=0
while [ $count -lt 3 ]
do
alias rrr="ls -l"
echo "Trying aliased \"rrr\" within \"while\" loop:"
rrr /usr/X11R6/bin/mk* #* Alias will not expand here either.
# alias.sh: line 57: rrr: command not found
let count+=1
done
echo; echo
alias xyz='cat $0' # Script lists itself.
# Note strong quotes.
xyz
# This seems to work,
#+ although the Bash documentation suggests that it shouldn't.
#
# However, as Steve Jacobson points out,
#+ the "$0" parameter expands immediately upon declaration of the alias.
exit 0 |
The unalias command removes a previously set alias.
Example 24-2. unalias: Setting and unsetting an alias
#!/bin/bash # unalias.sh shopt -s expand_aliases # Enables alias expansion. alias llm='ls -al | more' llm echo unalias llm # Unset alias. llm # Error message results, since 'llm' no longer recognized. exit 0 |
|
| [1] | However, aliases do seem to expand positional parameters. |