Hi, readlink -m <file> displays the absolute path of a <file> The bug is that it displays, even if the file is non-existent.
This does not solve the purpose and I see it creates more ambiguity in showing a non-existent file. thanks, PK
Hi, readlink -m <file> displays the absolute path of a <file> The bug is that it displays, even if the file is non-existent.
This does not solve the purpose and I see it creates more ambiguity in showing a non-existent file. thanks, PK