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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting complex if statement syntax without using 'if ..' keyword in ksh. Post 302504839 by kchinnam on Tuesday 15th of March 2011 02:51:28 PM
Old 03-15-2011
Thaks hergp, that is what I am looking for.. I was wondering what makes my code fail, now I found answer for it.

Short-cut syntax for 'if' construct is really very un-safe and does not replace standard structure. God forbid a un-expected issue makes your last statement in if condition fail, it would cause control go into else part. If its doing a critical work in Production, you will go nuts as to what hit this logic :-)!

Does any one dispute my conclusions? If not stop using short-cut 'if' construct in business critical programs..
 

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vc(1)							      General Commands Manual							     vc(1)

NAME
vc - substitutes assigned values in place of identification keywords. SYNOPSIS
char] [keyword=value ... keyword=value] DESCRIPTION
The or version control command copies lines from the standard input to the standard output under control of command line arguments and con- trol statements encountered in the standard input. In the process of performing the copy operation, user declared keywords can be replaced by their string value when they appear in plain text and/or control statements. The copying of lines from the standard input to the stan- dard output is conditional, based on tests of keyword values specified in control statements or on command arguments. Replacement of keywords by values is done whenever a keyword surrounded by control characters is encountered on a version control state- ment. The option forces replacement of keywords in all lines of text. An uninterpreted control character can be included in a value by preceding it with If a literal is desired, it too must be preceded by The command is part of the SCCS (Source Code Control System) command suite. Options recognizes the following options and arguments: Replace keywords surrounded by control characters with their assigned value in all text lines and not just in statements. Ignore all characters from the beginning of a line up to and including the first tab character for the purpose of detecting a control statement. If one is found, all char- acters up to and including the tab are discarded. Specify a control character to be used in place of Silence warning messages (not errors) that are normally printed on the diagnostic output. Control Statements A control statement is a single line beginning with a control character, and the default control character is colon (Unless the and options are used [See above]). Input lines beginning with a backslash followed by the control character are not control lines, and are copied to the standard output with the backslash removed. Lines beginning with a backslash followed by a non-control character are copied in their entirety. A keyword is composed of 9 or fewer alphanumeric characters of which the first character is alphabetic. A value is any ASCII string that can be created using (see ed(1)); a numeric value is an unsigned string of digits. Keyword values must not contain spaces or tabs. Version control statements occur in the following forms: :dcl keyword[, ..., keyword] Used to declare keywords. All keywords must be declared. :asg keyword=value Used to assign values to keywords. An statement overrides the assignment for the corresponding keyword on the command line and all previous for that keyword. Keywords declared, but not assigned values have null values. Used to skip lines of the standard input. If the condition is true, all lines between the if statement and the matching end statement are copied to the standard output. If the condition is false, all intervening lines are discarded, including control statements. Note that intervening if statements and matching end statements are recognized solely for the purpose of maintain- ing the proper if-end matching. The syntax of a condition may include the following: <cond> ::= [ "not" ] <or> <or> ::= <and> | <and> "|" <or> <and> ::= <exp> | <exp> "&" <and> <exp> ::= "(" <or> ")" | <value> <op> <value> <op> ::= "=" | "!=" | "<" | ">" <value> ::= <arbitrary ASCII string> | <numeric string> The following are available operators and their meanings: equal not equal and or greater than less than used for logical groupings allowed only immediately after the if, and when present, inverts the value of the entire condition The and operate only on unsigned integer values (such as is false). All other operators take strings as arguments (for example, is true). The precedence of the operators (from highest to lowest) is as follows: all of equal precedence Parentheses can be used to alter the order of precedence. Values must be separated from operators or parentheses by at least one space or tab. Used for keyword replacement on lines that are copied to the standard output. The two leading control characters are removed, and keywords surrounded by control characters in text are replaced by their value before the line is copied to the output file. This action is independent of the option. Turn on or off keyword replacement on all lines. Change the control character to char. Prints the given message on the diagnostic output. Prints the given message followed by: on the diagnostic output. halts execution and returns an exit code of 1. EXTERNAL INFLUENCES
Environment Variables determines the interpretation of keywords, values, the control character assigned through and within text as single- and/or multi-byte characters. determines the language in which messages are displayed. If is not specified in the environment or is set to the empty string, the value of is used as a default for each unspecified or empty vari- able. If is not specified or is set to the empty string, a default of "C" (see lang(5)) is used instead of If any internationalization variable contains an invalid setting, behaves as if all internationalization variables are set to "C". See environ(5). RETURN VALUE
returns 0 on normal completion; 1 if an error occurs. DIAGNOSTICS
Use sccshelp(1) for explanations. SEE ALSO
ed(1), sccshelp(1). vc(1)
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