I want to create an alias for cd -
which should be just a dash (-
).
I tried without success:
alias -='cd -' # bash: alias: -=: Invalid option
alias \-='cd -' # bash: alias: -=: Invalid option
alias '-'='cd -' # bash: alias: -=: Invalid option
alias '\-'='cd -' # bash: alias: `\-': Invalid alias name.
The former three are the same (only different input, but bash turns all of them into the same command alias
with a single argument -=cd -
), so it's no surprise the error message is the same. I'd guess that if the argument starts with a dash, it's parsed as a flag rather than the alias name.
Is it even possible to use -
as an alias name?
With most commands, you can pass
--
as an argument, and all subsequent arguments are treated as operands and not options, even if they begin with a dash. Thealias
builtin in bash recognizes--
.