# The declare builtin command ## Synopsis declare [-aAfFgilrtux] [-p] [NAME[=VALUE] ...] # obsolete typeset synonym typeset [-aAfFgilrtux] [-p] [NAME[=VALUE] ...] ## Description `declare` is used to display or set variables along with variable attributes. When used to display variables/functions and their value, the output is re-usable as input for the shell. If no `NAME` is given, it displays the values of all variables or functions when restricted by the `-f` option. If `NAME` is followed by `=VALUE`, `declare` also sets the value for a variable. When used in a function, `declare` makes `NAMEs` local variables, unless used with the `-g` option. Don't use it's synonym `typeset` when coding for Bash, since it's tagged as obsolete. ### Options Below, `[-+]X` indicates an attribute, use `-X` to set the attribute, `+X` to remove it. | Option | Description | |:--------|:---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------| | `[-+]a` | make NAMEs indexed arrays (removing with `+a` is valid syntax, but leads to an error message) | | `[-+]A` | make NAMEs associative arrays | | `[-+]c` | **Undocumented** convert NAMEs to "capcase" on assignment (makes the first letter upper-case and the rest lower). Requires Bash built with `-DCASEMOD_CAPCASE` | | `-f` | restrict action or display to function names and definitions (removing with `+f` is valid syntax, but leads to an error message) | | `-F` | restrict display to function names only (plus line number and source file when debugging) | | `-g` | create global variables when used in a shell function; otherwise ignored (by default, `declare` declares local scope variables when used in shell functions) | | `[-+]i` | make NAMEs have the "integer" attribute | | `[-+]l` | convert NAMEs to lower case on assignment (makes sure the variable contains only lower case letters) | | `[-+]n` | make NAME a reference to the variable named by its value. Introduced in Bash 4.3-alpha | | `-p` | display the attributes and value of each NAME | | `[-+]r` | make NAMEs readonly (removing with `+r` is valid syntax, but not possible) | | `[-+]t` | make NAMEs have the "trace" attribute (effective only for functions) | | `[-+]u` | convert NAMEs to upper case on assignment (makes sure the variable contains only upper case letters) | | `[-+]x` | make NAMEs exported | ### Return status | Status | Reason | |:-------|:---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------| | 0 | no error | | != 0 | invalid option | | != 0 | invalid variable name given | | != 0 | attempt to **define** a function using `-f` | | != 0 | assignment to a readonly variable | | != 0 | removing the readonly-attribute from a readonly variable | | != 0 | assignment to an array variable without the compound assignment syntax (`array=(...)`) | | != 0 | attempt to use `+a` to "destroy" an array | | != 0 | attemt to display a non-existent function with `-f` | ## Notes Unix shells offer very few datatypes. Bash and some other shells extend this by allowing "attributes" to be set on variable names. The only attributes specified by POSIX are `export` and `readonly`, which are set by their own dedicated builtins. Datatypes in bash have a few other interesting capabilities such as the ability to modify data on assignment. ## Examples ### Display defined functions `declare -f` can be used to display all defined functions... $ declare -f foo () { echo "FOO is BAR" } world () { echo "Hello World!" } ...or just a specific defined function. $ declare -f foo foo () { echo "FOO is BAR" } ### Nameref Bash 4.3 adds a new way to indirectly reference variables. `typeset -n` can be used to make a variable indirectly refer to another. In Bash, the lvalue of the assignment given to `typeset -n` will refer to the variable whose name is expanded on the RHS. # Sum a set of arrays and assign the result indirectly, also printing each intermediary result (without portability workarounds) # sum name arrname [ arrname ... ] function sum { typeset -n _result=$1 _arr typeset IFS=+ _result=0 for _arr in "${@:2}"; do # Demonstrate the special property of "for" on a nameref. (( _result += ${_arr[*]} )) printf '%s = %d\n' "${!_result}" "$_result" # Demonstrate the special property of ${!ref} on a nameref. done } a=(1 2 3) b=(6 5 4) c=(2 4 6) sum total a b c printf 'Final value of "total" is: %d\n' "$total" \
function sum { typeset -n _result=$1 shift typeset IFS=+ _arrx _result=0 for _arrx in "$@"; do # Demonstrate the special property of "for" on a nameref. typeset -n _arr=$_arrx (( _result += ${_arr[*]} )) printf '%s = %d\n' "${!_result}" "$_result" # Demonstrate the special property of ${!ref} on a nameref. done } a=(1 2 3); b=(6 5 4); c=(2 4 6) sum total a b c printf 'Final value of "total" is: %d\n' "\$total" \ `typeset -n` is currently implemented in ksh93, mksh, and Bash 4.3. Bash and mksh's implementations are quite similar, but much different from ksh93's. See [Portability considerations](#portability_considerations) for details. ksh93 namerefs are much more powerful than Bash's. ## Portability considerations - `declare` is not specified by POSIX(r) - `declare` is unique to Bash and totally non-portable with the possible exception of Zsh in Bash compatibility mode. Bash marks the synonym `typeset` as obsolete, which in Bash behaves identically to `declare`. All other Korn-like shells use `typeset`, so it probably isn't going away any time soon. Unfortunately, being a non-standard builtin, `typeset` differs significantly between shells. ksh93 also considers `typeset` a special builtin, while Bash does not - even in POSIX mode. If you use `typeset`, you should attempt to only use it in portable ways. - **todo** nameref portability... ## See also - [arrays](/syntax/arrays.md) - [readonly](/commands/builtin/read.mdonly) - [unset](/commands/builtin/unset.md)