On Sat, Feb 19, 2011 at 9:20 PM, d...@ucore.info wrote:
>
> I can script in Bash quite well, but I've never did anything that
> fancy with completion and I don't know how to plug my function to
> handle this. I understand that I should register something (function
> named like _bookmarkcomp) to h
On 02/22/2011 07:24 PM, Peng Yu wrote:
> Suppose that I have a variable $x, I want to test if the content of $x
> match the pattern 'abc*'. If yes, then do something. (The operator ==
> doesn't match patterns, if I understand it correctly.)
>
> Is there such a build-in feature in bash? Or I have t
On 02/22/2011 08:24 PM, Peng Yu wrote:
> Suppose that I have a variable $x, I want to test if the content of $x
> match the pattern 'abc*'. If yes, then do something. (The operator ==
> doesn't match patterns, if I understand it correctly.)
>
> Is there such a build-in feature in bash? Or I have t
On Wed, Feb 23, 2011 at 11:24 AM, Peng Yu wrote:
> Suppose that I have a variable $x, I want to test if the content of $x
> match the pattern 'abc*'. If yes, then do something. (The operator ==
> doesn't match patterns, if I understand it correctly.)
>
>
Reread the bash manual about [[ == ]].
>
Suppose that I have a variable $x, I want to test if the content of $x
match the pattern 'abc*'. If yes, then do something. (The operator ==
doesn't match patterns, if I understand it correctly.)
Is there such a build-in feature in bash? Or I have to rely on some
external program such as perl to t
2011/2/22 Micah Cowan :
> This bug affects both readline and bash (however, it is expected that
> this bug is far more likely to affect bash than other typical
> readline-using applications). It was experienced on bash 4.1-2ubuntu4
> (on Ubuntu 10.10, "Maverick Meercat"), but I checked the sources
This bug affects both readline and bash (however, it is expected that
this bug is far more likely to affect bash than other typical
readline-using applications). It was experienced on bash 4.1-2ubuntu4
(on Ubuntu 10.10, "Maverick Meercat"), but I checked the sources for
readline 6.2 and bash 4.2, a
On Mon, 21 Feb 2011 10:13:54 +0100, Marcel de Reuver wrote:
> In a bash script I use: $[`date --date='this week' +'%V'`%2] to see if
> the week number is even.
> Only in week 08 the error is: bash: 08: value too great for base (error
> token is "08") the same in week 09, all others are Ok...
>
>
The 'select' documentation should also document the perhaps complex way
$LINES
$COLUMNS
the number of items
the length of the longest item
interact to determine if the items will be displayed in rows/columns, etc.
On Mon, Feb 21, 2011 at 04:13:54AM EST, Marcel de Reuver wrote:
> In a bash script I use: $[`date --date='this week' +'%V'`%2] to see if
> the week number is even.
> Only in week 08 the error is: bash: 08: value too great for base
> (error token is "08") the same in week 09, all others are ok...
On 2/21/11 11:11 PM, Steven W. Orr wrote:
> It has been an exciting weekend for me. I studied the dynamic vs static
> scoping rules and I think I have a better handle on things, but I have a
> few questions.
>
> It seems that there's no reason why we are not allowed to write nested
> functions. Ne
On Tue, Feb 22, 2011 at 9:53 PM, Greg Wooledge wrote:
> On Mon, Feb 21, 2011 at 04:05:34PM +0800, jida...@jidanni.org wrote:
> > There is no way to give the 'select' command a default value, so all the
> > user does is need to hit return.
> > $ help select
> > ... If the line is empty, WORDS
On Tue, Feb 22, 2011 at 3:46 PM, Greg Wooledge wrote:
> On Fri, Feb 18, 2011 at 04:36:06PM +0100, Steffen Daode Nurpmeso wrote:
> > I am not a sophisticated shell programmer, but i really think this
> > time it's a shell fault.
>
> You think *what* is the shell's fault?
>
> > You may invoke the c
On 02/21/2011 02:13 AM, Marcel de Reuver wrote:
> In a bash script I use: $[`date --date='this week' +'%V'`%2] to see if
> the week number is even.
> Only in week 08 the error is: bash: 08: value too great for base
> (error token is "08") the same in week 09, all others are Ok...
08 is an invalid
On Mon, Feb 21, 2011 at 04:05:34PM +0800, jida...@jidanni.org wrote:
> There is no way to give the 'select' command a default value, so all the
> user does is need to hit return.
> $ help select
> ... If the line is empty, WORDS and the prompt are redisplayed.
`select' is extremely limited. I
On Mon, Feb 21, 2011 at 11:13 AM, Marcel de Reuver wrote:
> In a bash script I use: $[`date --date='this week' +'%V'`%2] to see if
> the week number is even.
> Only in week 08 the error is: bash: 08: value too great for base
> (error token is "08") the same in week 09, all others are Ok...
>
> GNU
On Fri, Feb 18, 2011 at 5:36 PM, Steffen Daode Nurpmeso <
sdao...@googlemail.com> wrote:
>
> Configuration Information [Automatically generated, do not change]:
> Machine: i386
> OS: darwin10.0
> Compiler: gcc
> Compilation CFLAGS: -DPROGRAM='bash' -DCONF_HOSTTYPE='i386'
> -DCONF_OSTYPE='darwin10
On Fri, Feb 18, 2011 at 04:36:06PM +0100, Steffen Daode Nurpmeso wrote:
> I am not a sophisticated shell programmer, but i really think this
> time it's a shell fault.
You think *what* is the shell's fault?
> You may invoke the code snippet via 'script test1 test3' or so.
>
> #!/bin/sh
>
On Monday 21 Feb 2011 09:13:54 Marcel de Reuver wrote:
> In a bash script I use: $[`date --date='this week' +'%V'`%2] to see if
> the week number is even.
> Only in week 08 the error is: bash: 08: value too great for base
> (error token is "08") the same in week 09, all others are Ok...
It's not a
In a bash script I use: $[`date --date='this week' +'%V'`%2] to see if
the week number is even.
Only in week 08 the error is: bash: 08: value too great for base
(error token is "08") the same in week 09, all others are Ok...
GNU bash, version 3.2.39(1)-release (i486-pc-linux-gnu)
Copyright (C) 200
Hi,
I'm not subscribed to this list so please make sure to CC me if you
want me to receive the reply.
I'd like to hack some solution based on:
http://www.huyng.com/bashmarks-directory-bookmarks-for-the-shell/
but to be able to use saved bookmarks in other commands (explanation below).
So if I h
Configuration Information [Automatically generated, do not change]:
Machine: i386
OS: darwin10.0
Compiler: gcc
Compilation CFLAGS: -DPROGRAM='bash' -DCONF_HOSTTYPE='i386'
-DCONF_OSTYPE='darwin10.0' -DCONF_MACHTYPE='i386-apple-darwin10.0'
-DCONF_VENDOR='apple' -DLOCALEDIR='/usr/share/locale' -D
22 matches
Mail list logo