I want my prompt to show the exit status of the last command, so I set my PS1 to this:
PS1="$? > "
But it always prints 0 >.
Even when I run false, for example, the prompt does not prints 1 > or whatever the exit status is.
Why does this occur?
EDIT:
I tried to use a function to set my prompt, testing whether the exit status was greater than 0, so it will not print 0 > always, only when the exit status is nonzero.
promptcmd() {
_EXIT=$?
test $_EXIT -gt 0 && printf "\e[1;31m [$_EXIT]"
printf "\e[0m ❯ "
unset _EXIT
}
PS1="$(promptcmd)"
But it also does not work.
$?was expanded when you definedPS1, because you used double quotes.You can use single quotes to defer expansion until
PS1is displayed:This kind of "double expansion" is not a property of parameters in general, but a result of how the shell uses the value of
PS1.echo "$PS1"will still show the literal string$? >, but when the shell displays the prompt, it will expand any parameter expansions found in the value.