How to insert an environment variable inside the bash prompt
I can set an environment variable inside the bash prompt like this:
export PS1="[\u@\H/$FOO \W]\$ "
The prompt does not change when I change the environment variable: $FOO
because the $FOO
variable is not interpreted.
I can work around it by doing the following, exporting PS1 again. But I would like to be able to do it 开发者_StackOverflow中文版on one line:
[user@server ]$ echo $FOO
foo
[user@server ]$ export PS1="[$FOO]$ "
[foo]$ export FOO=bla
[bla]$
Can this be done in one line?
you need to add backslash to get it evaluated not in the time of FOO assigment but during evaluating the PS1, so do:
export PS1="[\$FOO]$ "
instead of:
export PS1="[$FOO]$ "
Note the \
before the $FOO
.
Try setting the PROMPT_COMMAND variable:
prompt() {
PS1="[$FOO]$ "
}
PROMPT_COMMAND=prompt
From http://tldp.org/HOWTO/Bash-Prompt-HOWTO/x264.html:
Bash provides an environment variable called PROMPT_COMMAND. The contents of this variable are executed as a regular Bash command just before Bash displays a prompt.
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