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\section read read - read line of input into variables

\subsection read-synopsis Synopsis
<tt>read [OPTIONS] [VARIABLES...]</tt>

\subsection read-description Description

<tt>read</tt> reads one line from standard
input and stores the result in one or more shell variables.

The following options are available:

- <tt>-c CMD</tt> or <tt>--command=CMD</tt> sets the initial string in the interactive mode command buffer to <tt>CMD</tt>.
- <tt>-g</tt> or <tt>--global</tt> makes the variables global.
- <tt>-l</tt> or <tt>--local</tt> makes the variables local.
- <tt>-m NAME</tt> or <tt>--mode-name=NAME</tt> specifies that the name NAME should be used to save/load the history file. If NAME is fish, the regular fish history will be available.
- <tt>-p PROMPT_CMD</tt> or <tt>--prompt=PROMPT_CMD</tt> uses the output of the shell command \c PROMPT_CMD as the prompt for the interactive mode. The default prompt command is <tt>set_color green; echo read; set_color normal; echo "> "</tt>.
- <code>-s</code> or <code>--shell</code> enables syntax highlighting, tab completions and command termination suitable for entering shellscript code in the interactive mode.
- <code>-u</code> or <code>--unexport</code> prevents the variables from being exported to child processes (default behaviour).
- <code>-U</code> or <code>--universal</code> causes the specified shell variable to be made universal.
- <code>-x</code> or <code>--export</code> exports the variables to child processes.

\c read reads a single line of input from stdin, breaks it into tokens
based on the <tt>IFS</tt> shell variable, and then assigns one
token to each variable specified in <tt>VARIABLES</tt>. If there are more
tokens than variables, the complete remainder is assigned to the last variable.

See the documentation for \c set for more details on the scoping rules for
variables.

\subsection read-example Example

The following code stores the value 'hello' in the shell variable
<tt>$foo</tt>.

<tt>echo hello|read foo</tt>