value
Function
The value
function provides a way for you to use the value of a
variable without having it expanded. Please note that this
does not undo expansions which have already occurred; for example if
you create a simply expanded variable its value is expanded during the
definition; in that case the value
function will return the
same result as using the variable directly.
The syntax of the value
function is:
$(value variable)
Note that variable is the name of a variable; not a reference to that variable. Therefore you would not normally use a ‘$’ or parentheses when writing it. (You can, however, use a variable reference in the name if you want the name not to be a constant.)
The result of this function is a string containing the value of variable, without any expansion occurring. For example, in this makefile:
FOO = $PATH all: @echo $(FOO) @echo $(value FOO)
The first output line would be ATH
, since the “$P” would be
expanded as a make
variable, while the second output line would
be the current value of your $PATH
environment variable, since
the value
function avoided the expansion.
The value
function is most often used in conjunction with the
eval
function (see Eval Function).