When David S. Zelinsky wrote, I replied: I can't help with what causes it, but I can tell you that it's no big deal. /usr/local/bin//foo is equivalent to /usr/local/bin/foo (i.e. the double (or triple or whatever) slashes are the same as one slash). > > When I type (in bash): > > % type foo > > it returns > > foo is /usr/local/bin//foo > > with two /'s before `foo'. (I get the same effect with `csh' and `which'.) > Has anyone else seen this behavior? Anyone know what's causing it? Or how to > fix it? > > I'm using Debian 2.0 (hamm); kernel version 2.0.34 > > Thanks. > > David Zelinsky > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > -- > Unsubscribe? mail -s unsubscribe [EMAIL PROTECTED] < /dev/null
-- ----------------------------------------- Ralph Winslow [EMAIL PROTECTED] The IQ of the group is that of the member whose IQ is lowest divided by the number of members.