Re: This is a cool shell prompt question

2004-12-07 Thread Giorgos Keramidas
On 2004-12-07 17:30, Danny MacMillan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On Wed, Nov 24, 2004 at 02:24:51AM -0700, Mark Jayson Alvarez wrote: > > I'm just wondrin if its possible for me to run applications at boot > > time but on another terminal. I find it cool to have a huge digital > > clock (grdc) run

Re: This is a cool shell prompt question

2004-12-07 Thread Danny MacMillan
On Wed, Nov 24, 2004 at 02:24:51AM -0700, Mark Jayson Alvarez wrote: > Good day! > I'm just wondrin if its possible for me to run > applications at boot time but on another terminal. I > find it cool to have a huge digital clock (grdc) > running on background so that I can just shift to > another

Re: This is a cool shell prompt question

2004-11-27 Thread Александр Деревянко
May be, you can use some small shell script to run as getty replacement ? It must open tty and start the clocks on it. It even will be automatically restarted if needed by init process. Best regards, Alexander Derevianko Mark Jayson Alvarez wrote: Good day! I'm just wondrin if its possible for me

Re: This is a cool shell prompt question

2004-11-24 Thread Conrad J. Sabatier
On Wed, 24 Nov 2004 01:24:51 -0800 (PST), Mark Jayson Alvarez <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Good day! > I'm just wondrin if its possible for me to run > applications at boot time but on another terminal. I > find it cool to have a huge digital clock (grdc) > running on background so that I can jus

This is a cool shell prompt question

2004-11-24 Thread Mark Jayson Alvarez
Good day! I'm just wondrin if its possible for me to run applications at boot time but on another terminal. I find it cool to have a huge digital clock (grdc) running on background so that I can just shift to another terminal whenever I want to know the time. Actually, all I really want is a cloc

Re: shell prompt question

2003-02-17 Thread Anti
On Mon, 17 Feb 2003 18:40:36 +0200 Giorgos Keramidas <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On 2003-02-17 10:46, David Banning <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > The way that the shell prompt is set depends on the particular shell. > > > What shell does your `david' user have? What shell does `root' have? >

Re: shell prompt question

2003-02-17 Thread Giorgos Keramidas
On 2003-02-17 10:46, David Banning <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > The way that the shell prompt is set depends on the particular shell. > > What shell does your `david' user have? What shell does `root' have? > > they both use bash. > > > > > > How do I get the super-user prompt when I just use th

Re: shell prompt question

2003-02-17 Thread Thomas Spreng
Hi, On Mon, Feb 17, 2003 at 10:46:24AM -0500, David Banning wrote: > > The way that the shell prompt is set depends on the particular shell. > > What shell does your `david' user have? What shell does `root' have? > > they both use bash. > > > > > > How do I get the super-user prompt when I jus

Re: shell prompt question

2003-02-17 Thread David Banning
> The way that the shell prompt is set depends on the particular shell. > What shell does your `david' user have? What shell does `root' have? they both use bash. > > > How do I get the super-user prompt when I just use the "su" command > > rather than the full "su -" command? > > The default

Re: shell prompt question

2003-02-16 Thread Giorgos Keramidas
On 2003-02-16 15:25, David Banning <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > My normal prompt is; > > david $ > > and my superuser prompt is; > > # The way that the shell prompt is set depends on the particular shell. What shell does your `david' user have? What shell does `root' have? > How do I get the sup

Re: shell prompt question

2003-02-16 Thread Kjell Midtseter
On Sunday, 16 February 2003 at 15:25:24 -0500, David Banning wrote: > My normal prompt is; > > david $ > > and my superuser prompt is; > > # > > How do I get the super-user prompt when I just use the "su" command > rather than the full "su -" command? > > I want to stay in the same directory I

shell prompt question

2003-02-16 Thread David Banning
My normal prompt is; david $ and my superuser prompt is; # How do I get the super-user prompt when I just use the "su" command rather than the full "su -" command? I want to stay in the same directory I am in sometimes but have su authority. The problem is that my prompt doesn't change, so I f