Previous tutorial warned about using certain nonalphanumeric  characters in your variable names. This is because those characters are  used in the names of special Unix variables. These variables are  reserved for specific functions.
For example, the $ character represents the process ID number, or  PID, of the current shell:
Above command would write PID of the current shell:
The following table shows a number of special variables that you can  use in your shell scripts:
 | Variable | Description | 
| $0 | The filename of the current script. | 
| $n | These variables correspond to the arguments  with which a script was invoked. Here n is a positive decimal number  corresponding to the position of an argument (the first argument is $1,  the second argument is $2, and so on). | 
| $# | The number of arguments supplied to a script. | 
| $* | All the arguments are double quoted. If a  script receives two arguments, $* is equivalent to $1 $2. | 
| $@ | All the arguments are individually double  quoted. If a script receives two arguments, $@ is equivalent to $1 $2. | 
| $? | The exit status of the last command executed. | 
| $$ | The process number of the current shell. For  shell scripts, this is the process ID under which they are executing. | 
| $! | The process number of the last background  command. | 
Command-Line Arguments:
The command-line arguments $1, $2, $3,...$9 are positional  parameters, with $0 pointing to the actual command, program, shell  script, or function and $1, $2, $3, ...$9 as the arguments to the  command.
Following script uses various special variables related to command  line:
| #!/bin/sh
echo "File Name: $0"
echo "First Parameter : $1"
echo "First Parameter : $2"
echo "Quoted Values: $@"
echo "Quoted Values: $*"
echo "Total Number of Paramers : $#" | 
Here is a sample run for the above script:
| [amrood]$./test.sh Zara Ali
File Name : ./test.sh
First Parameter : Zara
First Parameter : Ali
Quoted Values: Zara Ali
Quoted Values: Zara Ali
Total Number of Paramers : 2 | 
Special Parameters $* and $@:
There are special parameters that allow accessing all of the  command-line arguments at once. $* and $@ both will act the same unless  they are enclosed in double quotes, "".
Both the parameter specifies all command-line arguments but the "$*"  special parameter takes the entire list as one argument with spaces  between and the "$@" special parameter takes the entire list and  separates it into separate arguments.
We can write the shell script shown below to process an unknown  number of command-line arguments with either the $* or $@ special  parameters:
| #!/bin/sh
for TOKEN in $*
do
   echo $TOKEN
done | 
There is one sample run for the above script:
| [amrood]$./test.sh Zara Ali 10 Years Old
Zara
Ali
10
Years
Old | 
Note: Here 
do...
done is a kind of loop which we  would cover in subsequent tutorial.
Exit Status:
The 
$? variable represents the exit status of the previous  command.
Exit status is a numerical value returned by every command upon its  completion. As a rule, most commands return an exit status of 0 if they  were successful, and 1 if they were unsuccessful.
Some commands return additional exit statuses for particular reasons.  For example, some commands differentiate between kinds of errors and  will return various exit values depending on the specific type of  failure.
Following is the example of successful command:
[amrood]$./test.sh Zara Ali
File Name : ./test.sh
First Parameter : Zara
First Parameter : Ali
Quoted Values: Zara Ali
Quoted Values: Zara Ali
Total Number of Paramers : 2
[amrood]$echo $?
0
[amrood]$
 
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