And if you ever want to use the unaliased version of an aliased command
once, you can also do

\command

in this case \ls

charles

On Fri, 31 Mar 2000, Steven W. Orr wrote:

>        By default, color is not  used  to  distinguish  types  of
>        files.   That  is equivalent to using --color=none.  Using
>        the --color option without the optional WHEN  argument  is
>        equivalent  to  using  --color=always.  With --color=auto,
>        color codes are output only if  standard  output  is  con<AD>
>        nected to a terminal (tty).
> 
> I suspect that you have an alias that is predefined. Look in /etc/bashrc.
> Delete the alias of just 
> unalias ls
> should fix you up.


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