On 4/2/2016 2:19 PM, Eliot Moss wrote: > Have you tried: '"arg"' ? bash should strip the ' ' and leave the " ". > Also, what about "\"foo\"" ? > > My experiments with this suggest that they work. I tried invoked a .bat > file that echoes its first argument, and it did show "\"foo\"", but I > suspect that is how echo renders "foo", i.e., it wraps it in quotes and > backslash protects the quotes. > > Here's a function I use for invoking acrobat from the bash command line: > > function acrobat () { > local ARG > [ -n "$1" ] && { ARG="$(cygpath -wa "$1")"; shift; } > command acrobat ${ARG:+"${ARG}"} "$@" > /dev/null & > } > > For it to work, acrobat needs to be on your path (I put a link in a > directory > that is on my path). Anyway, works fine for me to pop up acrobat > displaying > a file. I've not tired an incantation for printing ...
And there's always cygstart, no need to do anything special with the arguments, if the file has the .pdf extension, it will be opened by the default application, which usually is Acrobat. Regards. -- René Berber -- Problem reports: http://cygwin.com/problems.html FAQ: http://cygwin.com/faq/ Documentation: http://cygwin.com/docs.html Unsubscribe info: http://cygwin.com/ml/#unsubscribe-simple