This is to give you a quick overview if you come from bash (or to a lesser extent other shells zsh or ksh) and want to know how fish differs. Fish is intentionally not POSIX-compatible and as such some of the things you are used to work differently.
Many things are similar - they both fundamentally expand commandlines to execute commands, have pipes, redirections, variables, globs, use command output in various ways. This document is there to quickly show you the differences.
Fish spells command substitutions as ``(command)`` instead of ``$(command)`` (or ```command```).
In addition, it only splits them on newlines instead of $IFS. If you want to split on something else, use :ref:`string split <cmd-string-split>`, :ref:`string split0 <cmd-string-split>` or :ref:`string collect <cmd-string-collect>`. If those are used as the last command in a command substitution the splits they create are carried over. So::
for i in (find . -print0 | string split0)
will correctly handle all possible filenames.
Variables
---------
Fish sets and erases variables with :ref:`set <cmd-set>` instead of ``VAR=VAL`` and ``declare`` and ``unset`` and ``export``. ``set`` takes options to determine the scope and exportedness of a variable::
Fish does not perform word splitting. Once a variable has been set to a value, that value stays as it is, so double-quoting variable expansions isn't the necessity it is in bash. [#]_
For instance, here's bash
..code-block:: sh
> foo="bar baz"
> printf '"%s"\n' $foo # will print two lines, because we didn't double-quote, so the variable is split
"bar"
"baz"
And here is fish::
> set foo "bar baz"
> printf '"%s"\n' $foo # foo was set as one element, so it will be passed as one element, so this is one line
All variables are "arrays" (we use the term "lists"), and expanding a variable expands to all its elements, with each element as its own argument (like bash's ``"${var[@]}"``::
Fish only supports the ``*`` and ``**`` glob (and the deprecated ``?`` glob). If a glob doesn't match it fails the command (like with bash's ``failglob``) unless the command is ``for``, ``set`` or ``count`` or the glob is used with an environment override (``VAR=* command``), in which case it expands to nothing (like with bash's ``nullglob`` option).
Globbing doesn't happen on expanded variables, so::
set foo "*"
echo $foo
will not match any files.
There are no options to control globbing so it always behaves like that.
Quoting
-------
Fish has two quoting styles: ``""`` and ``''``. Variables are expanded in double-quotes, nothing is expanded in single-quotes.
There is no ``$''``, instead the sequences that would transform are transformed *when unquoted*::
> echo a\nb
a
b
String manipulation
-------------------
Fish does not have ``${foo%bar}``, ``${foo#bar}`` and ``${foo/bar/baz}``. Instead string manipulation is done by the :ref:`string <cmd-string>` builtin.
Special variables
-----------------
Some bash variables and their closest fish equivalent:
Fish does not have ``<<EOF`` "heredocs". Instead of::
cat <<EOF
some string
some more string
EOF
use::
printf %s\n "some string" "some more string"
or::
echo "some string
some more string"
Quotes are followed across newlines.
Test (``test``, ``[``, ``[[``)
------------------------------
Fish has a POSIX-compatible ``test`` or ``[`` builtin. There is no ``[[`` and ``test`` does not accept ``==`` as a synonym for ``=``. It can compare floating point numbers, however.
``set -q`` can be used to determine if a variable exists or has a certain number of elements (``set -q foo[2]``).
Arithmetic Expansion
---------------------
Fish does not have ``$((i+1))`` arithmetic expansion, computation is handled by :ref:`math <cmd-math>`::
math $i + 1
It can handle floating point numbers::
> math 5 / 2
2.5
Prompts
-------
Fish does not use the ``$PS1``, ``$PS2`` and so on variables. Instead the prompt is the output of the ``fish_prompt`` function, plus the ``fish_mode_prompt`` function if vi-mode is enabled and the ``fish_right_prompt`` function for the right prompt.
Blocks and loops
----------------
Fish's blocking constructs look a little different. They all start with a word, end in ``end`` and don't have a second starting word::
for i in 1 2 3; do
echo $i
done
# becomes
for i in 1 2 3
echo $i
end
while true; do
echo Weeee
done
# becomes
while true
echo Weeeeeee
end
{
echo Hello
}
# becomes
begin
echo Hello
end
if true; then
echo Yes I am true
else
echo "How is true not true?"
fi
# becomes
if true
echo Yes I am true
else
echo "How is true not true?"
end
foo() {
echo foo
}
# becomes
function foo
echo foo
end
# (note that bash specifically allows the word "function" as an extension, but POSIX only specifies the form without, so it's more compatible to just use the form without)
Fish does not have an ``until``. Use ``while not`` or ``while !``.
By now it has become apparent that fish puts much more of a focus on its builtins and external commands rather than its syntax. So here are some helpful builtins and their rough equivalent in bash:
-:ref:`string <cmd-string>` - this replaces most of the string transformation (``${i%foo}`` et al) and can also be used instead of ``grep`` and ``sed`` and such.
-:ref:`math <cmd-math>` - this replaces ``$((i + 1))`` arithmetic and can also do floats and some simple functions (sine and friends).
-:ref:`argparse <cmd-argparse>` - this can handle a script's option parsing, for which bash would probably use ``getopt`` (zsh provides ``zparseopts``).
-:ref:`count <cmd-count>` can be used to count things and therefore replaces ``$#`` and can be used instead of ``wc``.
-:ref:`status <cmd-status>` provides information about the shell status, e.g. if it's interactive or what the current linenumber is. This replaces ``$-`` and ``$BASH_LINENO`` and other variables.