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SC2015
[[ $dryrun ]] && echo "Would delete file" || rm fileif [[ $dryrun ]]
then
echo "Would delete file"
else
rm file
fiIt's common to use A && B to run B when A is true, and A || C to run C when A is false.
However, combining them into A && B || C is not the same as if A then B else C.
In this case, if A is true but B is false, C will run.
For the code sample above, if the script was run with stdout closed for any reason (such as explicitly running script --dryrun >&-), echo would fail and the file would be deleted, even though $dryrun was set!
If an if clause is used instead, this problem is avoided.
We can think of the example above as
((([[ $dryrun ]]) && echo "Would delete file") || rm file)expressing the left-associativity of the && || operators.
Whenever a command (strictly, a pipeline) succeeds or fails, the execution proceeds following the next && (for success) or || (for failure). (More strictly, the parentheses should be replaced with { command; } to avoid making a subshell, but that's ugly and boring.)
Ignore this warning when you actually do intend to run C when either A or B fails.