Command grouping (&&, ||, ...)

Operator precedence for && and || is strictly left-to-right.

Thus:

pwd; (ls) || { cd .. && ls student/; }  && cd student || cd / && cd ;

...is equivalent to...

pwd; { { { (ls) || { cd .. && ls student/; }; } && cd student; } || cd /; } && cd ; }

...breaking that down graphically:

pwd; {                                      # 1
       {                                    # 2
         { (ls) ||                          # 3
                   { cd .. &&               # 4
                              ls student/;  # 5
                   };                       # 6
         } && cd student;                   # 7
       } || cd /;                           # 8
     } && cd ;                              # 9
  1. pwd happens unconditionally
  2. (Grouping only)
  3. ls happens (in a subshell) unconditionally.
  4. cd .. happens if (3) failed.
  5. ls student/ happens if (3) failed and (4) succeeded
  6. (Grouping only)
  7. cd student happens if either (3) succeeded or both (4) and (5) succeeded.
  8. cd / happens if either [both (3) and one of (4) or (5) failed], or [(7) failed].
  9. cd happens if (7) occurred and succeeded, or (8) occurred and succeeded.

Using explicit grouping operators is wise to avoid confusing yourself. Avoiding writing code as hard to read as this is even wiser.


(ls) is executed in a subshell, because the commands are separated with ";"

(ls) is executed in a subshell because of the parentheses. Parentheses introduce subshells.

But I have no idea why other commands are executed?

Unlike other programming languages you might be familiar with, bash does not give && higher precedence than ||. They have equal precedence and are evaluated from left to right.

If you had a || b && c, in other languages this would be read as a || { b && c; }. If a were true then neither b nor c would be evaluated.

In bash, though, it's parsed as { a || b; } && c (strict left-to-right precedence), so when a is true b is skipped but c is still evaluated.