ZSH thinks unterminated quote if preceded by exclamation mark (!)












1















I have zsh 5.3 (through oh-my-zsh), if I run echo --message="foo!", I get unterminated quote prompt on the next line:



$ echo --message="foo!"
dquote>


This doesn' happen in bash.



When I drop the ! character from the argument, it works fine:



$ echo --message="foo"
--message=foo


What’s happening here?





I should also note that if I answer the unterminated quote prompt with " and hit return, I get this output, which totally drops the !:



$ echo --message="foo!"
dquote> "
--message=foo









share|improve this question



























    1















    I have zsh 5.3 (through oh-my-zsh), if I run echo --message="foo!", I get unterminated quote prompt on the next line:



    $ echo --message="foo!"
    dquote>


    This doesn' happen in bash.



    When I drop the ! character from the argument, it works fine:



    $ echo --message="foo"
    --message=foo


    What’s happening here?





    I should also note that if I answer the unterminated quote prompt with " and hit return, I get this output, which totally drops the !:



    $ echo --message="foo!"
    dquote> "
    --message=foo









    share|improve this question

























      1












      1








      1








      I have zsh 5.3 (through oh-my-zsh), if I run echo --message="foo!", I get unterminated quote prompt on the next line:



      $ echo --message="foo!"
      dquote>


      This doesn' happen in bash.



      When I drop the ! character from the argument, it works fine:



      $ echo --message="foo"
      --message=foo


      What’s happening here?





      I should also note that if I answer the unterminated quote prompt with " and hit return, I get this output, which totally drops the !:



      $ echo --message="foo!"
      dquote> "
      --message=foo









      share|improve this question














      I have zsh 5.3 (through oh-my-zsh), if I run echo --message="foo!", I get unterminated quote prompt on the next line:



      $ echo --message="foo!"
      dquote>


      This doesn' happen in bash.



      When I drop the ! character from the argument, it works fine:



      $ echo --message="foo"
      --message=foo


      What’s happening here?





      I should also note that if I answer the unterminated quote prompt with " and hit return, I get this output, which totally drops the !:



      $ echo --message="foo!"
      dquote> "
      --message=foo






      zsh






      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question











      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question










      asked 28 mins ago









      Ahmet Alp BalkanAhmet Alp Balkan

      1466




      1466






















          1 Answer
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          4














          That's the history expansion at work.



          This is what the zshexpn(1) manpage says about it:




          If the shell encounters the character sequence !" in the input, the
          history mechanism is temporarily disabled until the current list (see
          zshmisc(1)) is fully parsed. The !" is removed from the input, and
          any subsequent ! characters have no special significance.







          share|improve this answer
























          • So as either escape "foo!" or use single quotes 'foo!'. Or even "foo!"!", !" "foo!", etc..

            – Sparhawk
            10 mins ago











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          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          4














          That's the history expansion at work.



          This is what the zshexpn(1) manpage says about it:




          If the shell encounters the character sequence !" in the input, the
          history mechanism is temporarily disabled until the current list (see
          zshmisc(1)) is fully parsed. The !" is removed from the input, and
          any subsequent ! characters have no special significance.







          share|improve this answer
























          • So as either escape "foo!" or use single quotes 'foo!'. Or even "foo!"!", !" "foo!", etc..

            – Sparhawk
            10 mins ago
















          4














          That's the history expansion at work.



          This is what the zshexpn(1) manpage says about it:




          If the shell encounters the character sequence !" in the input, the
          history mechanism is temporarily disabled until the current list (see
          zshmisc(1)) is fully parsed. The !" is removed from the input, and
          any subsequent ! characters have no special significance.







          share|improve this answer
























          • So as either escape "foo!" or use single quotes 'foo!'. Or even "foo!"!", !" "foo!", etc..

            – Sparhawk
            10 mins ago














          4












          4








          4







          That's the history expansion at work.



          This is what the zshexpn(1) manpage says about it:




          If the shell encounters the character sequence !" in the input, the
          history mechanism is temporarily disabled until the current list (see
          zshmisc(1)) is fully parsed. The !" is removed from the input, and
          any subsequent ! characters have no special significance.







          share|improve this answer













          That's the history expansion at work.



          This is what the zshexpn(1) manpage says about it:




          If the shell encounters the character sequence !" in the input, the
          history mechanism is temporarily disabled until the current list (see
          zshmisc(1)) is fully parsed. The !" is removed from the input, and
          any subsequent ! characters have no special significance.








          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered 15 mins ago









          mosvymosvy

          6,9411427




          6,9411427













          • So as either escape "foo!" or use single quotes 'foo!'. Or even "foo!"!", !" "foo!", etc..

            – Sparhawk
            10 mins ago



















          • So as either escape "foo!" or use single quotes 'foo!'. Or even "foo!"!", !" "foo!", etc..

            – Sparhawk
            10 mins ago

















          So as either escape "foo!" or use single quotes 'foo!'. Or even "foo!"!", !" "foo!", etc..

          – Sparhawk
          10 mins ago





          So as either escape "foo!" or use single quotes 'foo!'. Or even "foo!"!", !" "foo!", etc..

          – Sparhawk
          10 mins ago


















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