See the section called HISTORY EXPANSION in man bash, particularly the Word Designators subsection. !#:3
refers to the third word of the pipe, which is (in your example) ~/bin/ack
. In order, the words of the command are curl
, 0; http://betterthangrep.com/ack-standalone
, 1; >
, 2; ~/bin/ack
, 3; &&
, 4; chmod
, 5; 0755
, 6; !#:3
, 7.
That is, !#:3
is a way to repeat the filename without using a separate variable or literal text.
Regarding the question about >
and whitespace, note that >
is a metacharacter, which man bash defines as a “character that, when unquoted, separates words. One of the following: | & ; ( ) < > space tab”. So whitespace does not affect whether >
counts as a token. But note that in the following example, the first 3
is quoted so that bash doesn't interpret it as part of a 3>
redirection. When the line was entered, bash echoed the expanded line and then executed it.
$ seq '3'>bbb;cat !#:3 !#:2 ccc; head !#:3 !#:8
seq '3'>bbb;cat bbb > ccc; head bbb ccc
==> bbb <==
1
2
3
==> ccc <==
1
2
3