`read` reads from standard input and either writes the result back to the terminal for use in command substitution or stores the result in one or more shell variables. By default, one line (terminated by a newline) is read into each variable. Alternatively, a null character or a maximum number of characters can be used to terminate the input. Unlike other shells, there is no default variable (such as `REPLY`) for storing the result.
- `-i` or `--silent` makes the characters typed obfuscated. This is useful for reading things like passwords or other sensitive information. Note that in bash the short flag is `-s`. We can't use that due to the existing use as an alias for `--shell`.
- `-p PROMPT_CMD` or `--prompt=PROMPT_CMD` uses the output of the shell command `PROMPT_CMD` as the prompt for the interactive mode. The default prompt command is <code>set_color green; echo read; set_color normal; echo "> "</code>.
- `-P PROMPT_STR` or `--prompt-str=PROMPT_STR` uses the string as the prompt for the interactive mode. It is equivalent to <code>echo PROMPT_STR</code> and is provided solely to avoid the need to frame the prompt as a command. All special characters in the string are automatically escaped before being passed to the <code>echo</code> command.
- `-R RIGHT_PROMPT_CMD` or `--right-prompt=RIGHT_PROMPT_CMD` uses the output of the shell command `RIGHT_PROMPT_CMD` as the right prompt for the interactive mode. There is no default right prompt command.
- `-s` or `--shell` enables syntax highlighting, tab completions and command termination suitable for entering shellscript code in the interactive mode.
- `-u` or `--unexport` prevents the variables from being exported to child processes (default behaviour).
- `-U` or `--universal` causes the specified shell variable to be made universal.
- `-x` or `--export` exports the variables to child processes.
`read` reads a single line of input from stdin, breaks it into tokens based on the delimiter set via `-d`/`--delimiter` as a complete string (like `string split` or, if that has not been given the (deprecated) `IFS` shell variable as a set of characters, and then assigns one token to each variable specified in `VARIABLES`. If there are more tokens than variables, the complete remainder is assigned to the last variable. As a special case, if `IFS` is set to the empty string, each character of the input is considered a separate token.
If no parameters are provided, `read` enters a special case that simply provides redirection from `stdin` to `stdout`, useful for command substitution. For instance, the fish shell command below can be used to read data that should be provided via a command line argument from the console instead of hardcoding it in the command itself, allowing the command to both be reused as-is in various contexts with different input values and preventing possibly sensitive text from being included in the shell history:
`mysql -uuser -p(read)`
When running in stdout redirect mode, `read` does not split the input in any way and text is redirected to standard output without any further processing or manipulation.
The `read` command supported the `-m` and `--mode-name` flags in fish versions prior to 2.7.0 to specify an alternative read history file. Those flags are now deprecated and ignored. Instead, set the `fish_history` variable to specify a history session ID. That will affect both the `read` history file and the fish command history file. You can set it to an empty string to specify that no history should be read or written. This is useful for presentations where you do not want possibly private or sensitive history to be exposed to the audience but do want history relevant to the presentation to be available.