${10}.echo "Ninth parameter: $9"
echo "Tenth parameter: $10"echo "Ninth parameter: $9"
echo "Tenth parameter: ${10}"For legacy reasons, $10 is interpreted as the variable
$1 followed by the literal string 0.
Curly braces are needed to tell the shell that both digits are part of the parameter expansion.
If you wanted the trailing digits to be literal, ${1}0
will make this clear to both humans and ShellCheck.
In dash, $10 is (wrongly)
interpreted as ${10}, so some 'reversed' care should also
be taken:
bash -c 'set a b c d e f g h i j; echo $10 ${1}0' # POSIX: a0 a0
dash -c 'set a b c d e f g h i j; echo $10 ${1}0' # WRONG: j a0ShellCheck is a static analysis tool for shell scripts. This page is part of its documentation.