Both about -a and -e options in Bash documentation is said:
-a file
    True if file exists.
-e file
    True if file exists. 
Trying to get what the difference is I ran the following script:
resin_dir=/Test/Resin_wheleph/Results
if [ -e ${resin_dir} ] ; then
    echo "-e ";
fi
if [ ! -e ${resin_dir} ] ; then
    echo "! -e";
fi
if [ -a ${resin_dir} ] ; then
    echo "-a";
fi
if [ ! -a ${resin_dir} ] ; then
    echo "! -a";
fi
/Test/Resin_wheleph/Results exists and is a directory. And this is what I get:
-e
-a
! -a
which seems to be a little strange (notice -a and  ! -a). But when I use double brackets (e. g. if [[ -e ${resin_dir} ]]) in the similar script it gives reasonable output:
-e
-a
So:
- What is a difference between -aand-eoptions?
- Why -aproduces a strange result when used inside single brackets?
 
     
     
     
    