On Mon, Jan 15, 2007 at 02:45:57PM -0800, Chuck Swiger wrote: > On Jan 15, 2007, at 2:29 PM, Gary Kline wrote: > >>OMG! I managed to break a new shell war :) > >> > >>/me ducks and runs very far away > > > > No! no, cometh backeth, Giorgos! No war, just peace, love > > and flowers:-) > > % cd /usr/ports/mail/imap-uw/ && make extract && cd work/imap-2004g > % tail -3 Makefile > # A monument to a hack of long ago and far away... > love: > @echo not war?
This was from *mumble* years ago, but if you do a make love in most Makefiles, you'll get "make: don't know how to make love. Stop"; now is that old or what? Oh-well. > > > Actually, I do use zsh, just have no clue how to > > set noglob. I was going to ask, but didn't want to show my > > ignorance. [[ been using zsh for 16, 17 years... ]] > [ ... ] > > Chuck, exactly what does noglob do? How to set/unset, please? > > noglob is a keyword (a "precommand modifier", specifically) that > disables wildcard filename globbing: > > % cd /tmp > % touch 'a*' > % touch 'ab' > % ls a* > a* ab > % noglob ls a* > a* > > This trivial case isn't too useful, but consider wanting to copy > all .jpg files from your home directory on another machine to the > local machine via scp or rsync: > > noglob scp [EMAIL PROTECTED]:*.jpg . > > It's also amazingly handy in conjunction with the "find" command: > > noglob find /usr/obj -name *.a > > ...so much so that I do: > > alias find='noglob find' > > ...in my ZSH environment. > Yes, indeed, thank you. After playing around for some minutes, your alias (or 'noglob find') finds much more easily. Live and learn....obviously. gary > -- > -Chuck > > _______________________________________________ > freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list > http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions > To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" -- Gary Kline [EMAIL PROTECTED] www.thought.org Public Service Unix _______________________________________________ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"