Larry Hall wrote:
At 11:05 AM 8/6/2004, you wrote:
$ cygcheck -s -v -r | grep home
HOME = `C:\cygwin\home\Ken Dibble'
PWD = `/home/kdibble'
OLDPWD = `/home/kdibble'
$ echo $HOME
/home/kdibble
So obviously there is something weird going on, any idea why cygcheck
says home is one thing, but bash
At 11:05 AM 8/6/2004, you wrote:
>$ cygcheck -s -v -r | grep home
>HOME = `C:\cygwin\home\Ken Dibble'
>PWD = `/home/kdibble'
>OLDPWD = `/home/kdibble'
>
>$ echo $HOME
>/home/kdibble
>
>
>So obviously there is something weird going on, any idea why cygcheck
>says home is one thing, but bash says it
Responding to both of Gerrit's posts below
Gerrit P. Haase wrote:
Ken wrote:
I googled and couldn't find anything (or didn't use the correct words).
I looked on cpan and perl.org and didn't see anything similiar.
This doesn't happen on my debian woody machine (perl 5.6.1), so I d
Ken wrote:
> I googled and couldn't find anything (or didn't use the correct words).
> I looked on cpan and perl.org and didn't see anything similiar.
> This doesn't happen on my debian woody machine (perl 5.6.1), so I don't know
> if it a perl thing or a cygwin-perl thing.
> This is my first g
Ken wrote:
> I googled and couldn't find anything (or didn't use the correct words).
> I looked on cpan and perl.org and didn't see anything similiar.
> This doesn't happen on my debian woody machine (perl 5.6.1), so I don't know
> if it a perl thing or a cygwin-perl thing.
> This is my first g
5 matches
Mail list logo