| Advanced Bash-Scripting Guide: An in-depth exploration of the art of shell scripting | ||
|---|---|---|
| Prev | Chapter 23. Functions | Next | 
What makes a variable "local"?
A variable declared as local is one that is visible only within the block of code in which it appears. It has local "scope". In a function, a local variable has meaning only within that function block.
Example 23-8. Local variable visibility
   1 #!/bin/bash
   2 # Global and local variables inside a function.
   3 
   4 func ()
   5 {
   6   local loc_var=23       # Declared as local variable.
   7   echo                   # Uses the 'local' builtin.
   8   echo "\"loc_var\" in function = $loc_var"
   9   global_var=999         # Not declared as local.
  10                          # Defaults to global. 
  11   echo "\"global_var\" in function = $global_var"
  12 }  
  13 
  14 func
  15 
  16 # Now, to see if local variable "loc_var" exists outside function.
  17 
  18 echo
  19 echo "\"loc_var\" outside function = $loc_var"
  20                                       # $loc_var outside function = 
  21                                       # No, $loc_var not visible globally.
  22 echo "\"global_var\" outside function = $global_var"
  23                                       # $global_var outside function = 999
  24                                       # $global_var is visible globally.
  25 echo				      
  26 
  27 exit 0
  28 #  In contrast to C, a Bash variable declared inside a function
  29 #+ is local *only* if declared as such. | 
![]()  | Before a function is called, all variables declared within the function are invisible outside the body of the function, not just those explicitly declared as local. 
  | 
Local variables permit recursion, [1] but this practice generally involves much computational overhead and is definitely not recommended in a shell script. [2]
Example 23-9. Recursion, using a local variable
   1 #!/bin/bash
   2 
   3 #               factorial
   4 #               ---------
   5 
   6 
   7 # Does bash permit recursion?
   8 # Well, yes, but...
   9 # You gotta have rocks in your head to try it.
  10 
  11 
  12 MAX_ARG=5
  13 E_WRONG_ARGS=65
  14 E_RANGE_ERR=66
  15 
  16 
  17 if [ -z "$1" ]
  18 then
  19   echo "Usage: `basename $0` number"
  20   exit $E_WRONG_ARGS
  21 fi
  22 
  23 if [ "$1" -gt $MAX_ARG ]
  24 then
  25   echo "Out of range (5 is maximum)."
  26   # Let's get real now.
  27   # If you want greater range than this,
  28   # rewrite it in a real programming language.
  29   exit $E_RANGE_ERR
  30 fi  
  31 
  32 fact ()
  33 {
  34   local number=$1
  35   # Variable "number" must be declared as local,
  36   # otherwise this doesn't work.
  37   if [ "$number" -eq 0 ]
  38   then
  39     factorial=1    # Factorial of 0 = 1.
  40   else
  41     let "decrnum = number - 1"
  42     fact $decrnum  # Recursive function call.
  43     let "factorial = $number * $?"
  44   fi
  45 
  46   return $factorial
  47 }
  48 
  49 fact $1
  50 echo "Factorial of $1 is $?."
  51 
  52 exit 0 | 
See also Example A-17 for an example of recursion in a script. Be aware that recursion is resource-intensive and executes slowly, and is therefore generally not appropriate to use in a script.
| [1] | Herbert Mayer defines recursion as "...expressing an algorithm by using a simpler version of that same algorithm..." A recursive function is one that calls itself.  | |
| [2] | Too many levels of recursion may crash a script with a segfault. 
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