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by cosmos0072
487 days ago
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That's true. In shells, "test" and "[" are often used after "if", as for example if test -f "some_file"
do_something
fi
if [ "$FOO" != "" ]
do_something_else
fi
Schemesh does not have a shell builtin "if", you switch to Scheme for that: (if (file-regular? "some_file')
(sh-run {do_something}))
Thus the need for "test" and its alias "[" is reduced.Also, "test" implements a mini-language full of one-letter operators: `-f FILE` `COND1 -a COND2` `COND1 -o COND2` etc. I really don't miss it, as I find the equivalent in Scheme to be more readable - and of course more general (file-regular? "FILE")
(and COND1 COND2)
(or COND1 COND2)
etc. |
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