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read(1)

HP-UX 11i Version 3: February 2007
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NAME

read — read a line from standard input

SYNOPSIS

read [-r] var ...

DESCRIPTION

read reads a single line from standard input. The line is split into fields as when processed by the shell (refer to shells in SEE ALSO); the first field is assigned to the first variable var, the second field to the second variable var, and so forth. If there are more fields than there are specified var operands, the remaining fields and their intervening separators are assigned to the last var. If there are more vars than fields, the remaining vars are set to empty strings.

The setting of variables specified by the var operands affect the current shell execution environment.

Standard input to read can be redirected from a text file.

Since read affects the current shell execution environment, it is usually provided as a normal shell special (built-in) command. Thus, if it is called in a subshell or separate utility execution environment similar to the following, it does not affect the shell variables in the caller's environment:

(read foo) nohup read ... find . -exec read ... ;

Options

read recognizes the following options:

-r

Do not treat a backslash character in any special way. Consider each backslash to be part of the input line.

Opperands

read recognizes the following operands:

var

The name of an existing or nonexisting shell variable.

EXTERNAL INFLUENCES

Environment Variables

IFS determines the internal field separators used to delimit fields.

RETURN VALUE

read exits with one of the following values:

0

Successful completion.

>0

End-of-file was detected or an error occurred.

EXAMPLES

Print a file with the first field of each line moved to the end of the line.

while read -r xx yy do printf "%s %s \n" "$yy" "$xx" done < input_file

STANDARDS CONFORMANCE

read: SVID2, XPG2, XPG3, XPG4, POSIX.2 FIPS

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