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276 lines
8.9 KiB
ReStructuredText
276 lines
8.9 KiB
ReStructuredText
.. _fish_for_bash_users:
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Fish for bash users
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###################
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This is to give you a quick overview if you come from bash (or to a lesser extent other shells like 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.
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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.
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Command substitutions
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---------------------
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Fish spells command substitutions as ``(command)`` instead of ``$(command)`` (or ```command```).
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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::
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for i in (find . -print0 | string split0)
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will correctly handle all possible filenames.
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Variables
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---------
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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::
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# Define $PAGER global and exported, so this is like ``export PAGER=less``
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set -gx PAGER less
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# Define $alocalvariable only locally - like ``local alocalvariable=foo``
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set -l alocalvariable foo
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or to erase variables::
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set -e PAGER
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``VAR=VAL`` statements are available as environment overrides::
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PAGER=cat git log
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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. [#]_
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For instance, here's bash
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.. code-block:: sh
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> foo="bar baz"
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> printf '"%s"\n' $foo # will print two lines, because we didn't double-quote, so the variable is split
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"bar"
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"baz"
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And here is fish::
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> set foo "bar baz"
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> printf '"%s"\n' $foo # foo was set as one element, so it will be passed as one element, so this is one line
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"bar baz"
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All variables are "arrays" (we use the term "lists"), and expanding a variable expands to all its elements, with each element as its own argument (like bash's ``"${var[@]}"``::
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> set var "foo bar" banana
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> printf %s\n $var
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foo bar
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banana
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Specific elements of a list can be selected::
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echo $list[5..7]
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.. [#] zsh also does not perform word splitting by default (the SH_WORD_SPLIT option controls this)
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Wildcards (globs)
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-----------------
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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).
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Globbing doesn't happen on expanded variables, so::
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set foo "*"
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echo $foo
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will not match any files.
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There are no options to control globbing so it always behaves like that.
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Quoting
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-------
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Fish has two quoting styles: ``""`` and ``''``. Variables are expanded in double-quotes, nothing is expanded in single-quotes.
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There is no ``$''``, instead the sequences that would transform are transformed *when unquoted*::
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> echo a\nb
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a
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b
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String manipulation
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-------------------
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Fish does not have ``${foo%bar}``, ``${foo#bar}`` and ``${foo/bar/baz}``. Instead string manipulation is done by the :ref:`string <cmd-string>` builtin.
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Special variables
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-----------------
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Some bash variables and their closest fish equivalent:
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- ``$*``, ``$@``, ``$1`` and so on: ``$argv``
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- ``$?``: ``$status``
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- ``$$``: ``$fish_pid``
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- ``$#``: No variable, instead use ``count $argv``
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- ``$!``: ``$last_pid``
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- ``$0``: ``status filename``
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- ``$-``: Mostly ``status is-interactive`` and ``status is-login``
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Process substitution
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----------------------
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Instead of ``<(command)`` fish uses ``(command | psub)``. There is no equivalent to ``>(command)``.
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Note that both of these are bashisms, and most things can easily be expressed without. E.g. instead of::
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source (command | psub)
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just use::
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command | source
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as fish's :ref:`source <cmd-source>` can read from stdin.
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Heredocs
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--------
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Fish does not have ``<<EOF`` "heredocs". Instead of::
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cat <<EOF
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some string
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some more string
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EOF
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use::
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printf %s\n "some string" "some more string"
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or::
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echo "some string
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some more string"
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Quotes are followed across newlines.
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Test (``test``, ``[``, ``[[``)
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------------------------------
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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.
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``set -q`` can be used to determine if a variable exists or has a certain number of elements (``set -q foo[2]``).
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Arithmetic Expansion
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---------------------
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Fish does not have ``$((i+1))`` arithmetic expansion, computation is handled by :ref:`math <cmd-math>`::
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math $i + 1
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It can handle floating point numbers::
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> math 5 / 2
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2.5
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Prompts
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-------
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Fish does not use the ``$PS1``, ``$PS2`` and so on variables. Instead the prompt is the output of the :ref:`fish_prompt <cmd-fish_prompt>` function, plus the :ref:`fish_mode_prompt <cmd-fish_mode_prompt>` function if vi-mode is enabled and the :ref:`fish_right_prompt <cmd-fish_right_prompt>` function for the right prompt.
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As an example, here's a relatively simple bash prompt:
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.. code-block:: sh
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# <$HOSTNAME> <$PWD in blue> <Prompt Sign in Yellow> <Rest in default light white>
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export PS1='\h\[\e[1;34m\]\w\[\e[m\] \[\e[1;32m\]\$\[\e[m\] '
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and a rough fish equivalent::
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function fish_prompt
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set -l prompt_symbol '$'
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fish_is_root_user; and set prompt_symbol '#'
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echo -s $hostname (set_color blue) (prompt_pwd) \
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(set_color yellow) $prompt_symbol (set_color normal)
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end
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This shows a few differences:
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- Fish provides :ref:`set_color <cmd-set_color>` to color text. It can use the 16 named colors and also RGB sequences (so you could also use ``set_color 5555FF``)
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- Instead of introducing specific escapes like ``\h`` for the hostname, the prompt is simply a function, so you can use variables like ``$hostname``.
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- Fish offers helper functions for adding things to the prompt, like :ref:`fish_vcs_prompt <cmd-fish_vcs_prompt>` for adding a display for common version control systems (git, mercurial, svn) and :ref:`prompt_pwd <cmd-prompt_pwd>` for showing a shortened $PWD (the user's home directory becomes ``~`` and any path component is shortened).
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The default prompt is reasonably full-featured and its code can be read via ``type fish_prompt``.
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Fish does not have ``$PS2`` for continuation lines, instead it leaves the lines indented to show that the commandline isn't complete yet.
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Blocks and loops
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----------------
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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::
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for i in 1 2 3; do
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echo $i
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done
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# becomes
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for i in 1 2 3
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echo $i
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end
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while true; do
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echo Weeee
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done
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# becomes
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while true
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echo Weeeeeee
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end
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{
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echo Hello
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}
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# becomes
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begin
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echo Hello
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end
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if true; then
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echo Yes I am true
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else
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echo "How is true not true?"
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fi
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# becomes
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if true
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echo Yes I am true
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else
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echo "How is true not true?"
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end
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foo() {
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echo foo
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}
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# becomes
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function foo
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echo foo
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end
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# (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)
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Fish does not have an ``until``. Use ``while not`` or ``while !``.
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Builtins and other commands
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---------------------------
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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:
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- :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.
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- :ref:`math <cmd-math>` - this replaces ``$((i + 1))`` arithmetic and can also do floats and some simple functions (sine and friends).
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- :ref:`argparse <cmd-argparse>` - this can handle a script's option parsing, for which bash would probably use ``getopt`` (zsh provides ``zparseopts``).
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- :ref:`count <cmd-count>` can be used to count things and therefore replaces ``$#`` and can be used instead of ``wc``.
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- :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.
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- ``seq(1)`` can be used as a replacement for ``{1..10}`` range expansion. If your OS doesn't ship a ``seq`` fish includes a replacement function.
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