On Tue, Oct 02, 2001 at 03:49:31PM -0700, Paul Eggert wrote: > Yes, but Autoconf-based tools that run on EBCDIC mainframes (e.g. GNU > make) don't seem to need special Autoconf support. EBCDICness is > easily checked at compile-time already, so I don't offhand see why > this is an Autoconf issue.
1. Autoconf seems philosophically the Right Place for it, since it's where all the rest of that work is being done. 2. More practically, doing it once, right, in Autoconf means that everyone else doesn't have to reinvent the wheel (perhaps incorrectly). (Suppose that for some reason we can't imagine, the 'A'==0xXY test turns out to be insufficient; it'll only have to get fixed once.) Your C-based approach looks the right way to implement the test, given concerns about echo portability, but that test could live as easily in an Autoconf macro as in the application(s). Purely theoretical for me -- I don't expect to ever use an IBM mainframe again -- but it seems to be of practical import to some folks. -- | | /\ |-_|/ > Eric Siegerman, Toronto, Ont. [EMAIL PROTECTED] | | / The world has been attacked. The world must respond ... [but] we must be guided by a commitment to do what works in the long run, not by what makes us feel better in the short run. - Jean Chrétien, Prime Minister of Canada