\section set set - Handle environment variables. \subsection set-synopsis Synopsis set [OPTIONS] [VARIABLE_NAME [VALUES...]] The set builtin causes fish to assign the variable VARIABLE_NAME the values VALUES.... \subsection set-description Description - -e or --erase causes the specified environment variable to be erased - -g or --global causes the specified environment variable to be made global. If this option is not supplied, the specified variable will disappear when the current block ends - -l or --local forces the specified environment variable to be made local to the current block, even if the variable already exists and is non-local - -n or --names List only the names of all defined variables - -q or --query test if the specified variable names are defined. Does not output anything, but the builtins exit status is the number of variables specified that were not defined. - -u or --unexport causes the specified environment not to be exported to child processes - -U or --universal causes the specified environment variable to be made universal. If this option is supplied, the variable will be shared between all the current users fish instances on the current computer, and will be preserved across restarts of the shell. - -x or --export causes the specified environment variable to be exported to child processes If set is called with no arguments, the names and values of all environment variables are printed. If some of the scope or export flags have been given, only the variables matching the specified scope are printed. If the \c -e or \c --erase option is specified, the variable specified by the following arguments will be erased If a variable is set to more than one value, the variable will be an array with the specified elements. If a variable is set to zero elements, it will become an array with zero elements. If the variable name is one or more array elements, such as PATH[1 3 7], only those array elements specified will be changed. \subsection set-example Example set -xg will print all global, exported variables. set foo hi sets the value of the variable foo to be hi. set -e smurf removes the variable \c smurf. set PATH[4] ~/bin changes the fourth element of the \c PATH array to \c ~/bin