Nah, bash is fine.
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As an admin this is madness. I'm good with bash,you know the shell I'll find on any running system.
yeah, consistency is way more important than whatever pet features people want.
also, bash slow? what? it's an interactive shell, the vast majority of time will be spent waiting for my input. unless you mean when you write scripts in bash? but surely nobody would do that when there's perl...
What is most likely to be standard on a base system image?
AFAIK all distributions ship with bash as default, except maybe Kali that use zsh.
Any shell will have to be installed, but zsh is probably the most popular shell after bash.
Depends on the OS.
Well some OS are more popular than others, eg top 6 here https://distrowatch.com/ what would be found over most base images?
No.
Bash is good and is standard. Have been experimenting with zsh but don't really see the appeal
If I need to write a script that is too complicated to do in bash I'll do it in python
I still default to bash, but nu
had some really cool features like a built in jq
and several other formatters and pagers.
I like bash, it's very standard. If you need better autocomplete I'd absolutely recommend ble.sh, which gives you an experience more similar to fish, without having to relearn the entire shell.
Look, I've been a fish user for years and still use it on some machines, but there are always cases where I cannot install fish, or fish is incompatible with a program I use (even via bass) or a feature I use in bash scripting works differently. Of course, I can always fix it, but it's always faster to just drop into a bash shell. I'm also much more familiar with configuring bash than zsh and therefore that's what I use. That's why bash is a staple on all my systems, even my BSD machines.
I think different shells are interesting and provide unique takes on what a shell can do, but telling people to stop using something that's so ubiquitous and useful to learn comes off as grandstanding to me.
Thabks OP. Ive heard of zsh but I basically havent heard of the concept of using different shells. Certainly never used one, but I'll try it tomorrow.
Still using bash occasionally while mainlining zsh, it's just one of the most ubiquitous shells out there.
I'd rephrase your post title to "Use whatever shell you like, but try not to write Bash scripts"
At least scripts you want others to use... and you are going to be very grateful in the future when you might switch shells