On Mon, Jan 27, 2003 at 09:53:29PM -0600, Nathan E Norman wrote: > On Mon, Jan 27, 2003 at 08:38:12AM +0100, Lukas Ruf wrote: > > * Vineet Kumar <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2003-01-26 08:29]: > > > * David Z Maze ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) [030125 20:14]: > > > > So while bash and zsh have aliases, you can't actually do much with > > > > them. > > > > > What's the problem with tcsh? > > > > alias ls '/bin/ls --color=auto --classify -F \!*' > > > > works perfectly. > > yeah, but then you're still stuck with csh. > > I wonder why the sh vs. csh battle isn't mentioned a often as the vi > vs. emacs battle; it seems to be hust as much of a religious issue. > :-)
less of us use csh, i'd bet. and we're happy with it (and pretty quiet, too). i'm trying to get along with bash but i keep getting my forehead bashed in with that syntax. it's just me, i know... -- I use Debian/GNU Linux version 3.0; Linux server 2.4.20-k6 #1 Mon Jan 13 23:49:14 EST 2003 i586 unknown DEBIAN NEWBIE TIP #53 from Will Trillich <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> : Tired of MESSING WITH THREE APACHE CONFIG FILES? Put everything into your /etc/apache/httpd.conf file, and add these two lines: ResourceConfig /dev/null AccessConfig /dev/null Now it's all together. Of course, you can break it into smaller pieces, too -- try: Include /this/important/config/file.here Also see http://newbieDoc.sourceForge.net/ ... -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]