On Nov 11, 2012, at 9:10 AM, Marc Hohl wrote: > Message: 1 > Date: Sun, 11 Nov 2012 09:10:44 +0100 > From: Marc Hohl <m...@hohlart.de> > To: lilypond-user@gnu.org > Subject: Re: helper function that should take a list argument doesn't > do anything > Message-ID: <509f5d84.7050...@hohlart.de> > Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8; format=flowed > > Am 10.11.2012 14:49, schrieb David Kastrup: >> [...] >>> -i isn't an option of touch. It is an option of rm. The touch places >>> a file -i in the directory. At least with POSIX sort order, this is >>> bound to come rather early in a directory listing, so if you have >>> files a, b, c in the directory, rm * .o expands into rm -i a b c .o >>> It does not help much if you have a sort order where - gets ignored, >>> obviously. > Hey, that's clever! > > Marc
Indeed, it is clever. However, it doesn't seem to work on a mac running OSX 10.7.5. I find that the command "touch .\-i" creates a file called ".-i", which doesn't look like the "-i" option to the rm command. I can get it to work with any of these commands: touch "-i" touch -- -i echo > -i Pat _______________________________________________ lilypond-user mailing list lilypond-user@gnu.org https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/lilypond-user