Until System V Release 2 (circa 1984), the Bourne shell had no way for users to set up their own built-in commands. If you have a Bourne shell with no functions (Section 29.11) or aliases (Section 29.2) and haven't yet turned the host machine into a wet bar, CD/DVD storage case, or some other pragmatic but fun use for a 30-year-old computer, you can do a lot of the same things with shell variables and the eval (Section 27.8) command.
Let's look at an example. First, here's a shell function named cps (copy safely). If the destination file exists and isn't empty, the function prints an error message instead of copying:
test Section 35.26
cps( ) { if test ! -s "$2" then cp "$1" "$2" else echo "cps: cannot copy $1: $2 exists" fi }
If you use the same cps twice, the first time you'll make bfile. The second time you try, you see the error:
$ cps afile bfile ... $ cps afile bfile cps: cannot copy afile: bfile exists
Here's the same cps -- stored in a shell variable instead of a function:
cps=' if test ! -s "$2" then cp "$1" "$2" else echo "cps: cannot copy $1: $2 exists" fi '
Because this fake function uses shell parameters, you have to add an extra step: setting the parameters. Simpler functions are easier to use:
set Section 35.25
$ set afile bfile $ eval "$cps" ... $ eval "$cps" cps: cannot copy afile: bfile exists
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