It is pretty clear that with shell scripting this sort of thing can be accomplished in a huge number of ways (more than most programming languages) because of all the different
I see several questions here.
“Can I write something that actually reflects this logic”
Yes. There are a few ways you can do it. Here's one:
if [[ "$1" != "" ]]; then
DIR="$1"
else
DIR=.
fi
“What is the difference between this and DIR=${1-.}
?”
The syntax ${1-.}
expands to .
if $1
is unset, but expands like $1
if $1
is set—even if $1
is set to the empty string.
The syntax ${1:-.}
expands to .
if $1
is unset or is set to the empty string. It expands like $1
only if $1
is set to something other than the empty string.
“Why can't I do this? DIR="$1" || '.'
”
Because this is bash, not perl or ruby or some other language. (Pardon my snideness.)
In bash, ||
separates entire commands (technically it separates pipelines). It doesn't separate expressions.
So DIR="$1" || '.'
means “execute DIR="$1"
, and if that exits with a non-zero exit code, execute '.'
”.