The Bourne shell read command reads a line of one or more words from the keyboard (or standard input) [5] and stores the words in one or more shell variables. This is usually what you use to read an answer from the keyboard. For example:
[5] Some early versions of read don't handle
<redirection ( 13.1 ) ; they can only read from the terminal.
echo -n "Type the filename: " read filename
If you give the name of one shell variable, read stores everything from the line into that variable:
readvarname
If you name more than one variable, the first word typed goes into the first variable, the second word into the second variable, and so on... all leftover words go into the last variable. So, for example, with these commands:
echo -n "Enter first and last name: " read fn ln
If a user types 
John
 
Smith
, the word 
John
 would be available from 
$fn
 and 
Smith
 would be in 
$ln
. If the user types 
Jane
 
de
 
Boes
, then 
Jane
 would be in 
$fn
 and the two words 
de Boes
 are in 
$ln
.
Some Bourne shells have a built-in function named line that reads a line from standard input and writes it to standard output. Use it this way:
value=`line`
The grabchars ( 45.32 ) program lets you read from the keyboard without needing to press RETURN.
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