fish-shell/doc_src/read.txt
Mark Griffiths 0e5ddfd9f5 Merge branch 'master' into documentation-update
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	doc_src/design.hdr
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\section read read - read line of input into variables
\subsection read-synopsis Synopsis
\fish{synopsis}
read [OPTIONS] [VARIABLES...]
\endfish
\subsection read-description Description
`read` reads one line from standard input and stores the result in one or more shell variables.
The following options are available:
- `-c CMD` or `--command=CMD` sets the initial string in the interactive mode command buffer to `CMD`.
- `-g` or `--global` makes the variables global.
- `-l` or `--local` makes the variables local.
- `-m NAME` or `--mode-name=NAME` specifies that the name NAME should be used to save/load the history file. If NAME is fish, the regular fish history will be available.
- `-n NCHARS` or `--nchars=NCHARS` causes `read` to return after reading NCHARS characters rather than waiting for a complete line of input.
- `-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>.
- `-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.
- `-a` or `--array` stores the result as an array.
`read` reads a single line of input from stdin, breaks it into tokens based on the `IFS` shell variable, 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 `-a` or `--array` is provided, only one variable name is allowed and the tokens are stored as an array in this variable.
See the documentation for `set` for more details on the scoping rules for variables.
\subsection read-example Example
The following code stores the value 'hello' in the shell variable `$foo`.
\fish
echo hello|read foo
\endfish