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Date:      Mon, 15 Jan 2007 14:29:26 -0800
From:      Gary Kline <kline@tao.thought.org>
To:        Giorgos Keramidas <keramida@ceid.upatras.gr>
Cc:        Gary Kline <kline@tao.thought.org>, freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: perl substitution question
Message-ID:  <20070115222925.GA39166@thought.org>
In-Reply-To: <20070115220422.GA2250@kobe.laptop>
References:  <20070114024551.GA21847@thought.org> <20070114034148.GC2734@kobe.laptop> <20070114201546.GA28048@thought.org> <20070114203104.GB3404@kobe.laptop> <20070114214410.GB24039@thought.org> <E284B392-C672-452A-816F-9CCB166C755D@mac.com> <20070115220422.GA2250@kobe.laptop>

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On Tue, Jan 16, 2007 at 12:04:23AM +0200, Giorgos Keramidas wrote:
> On 2007-01-15 10:21, Chuck Swiger <cswiger@mac.com> wrote:
> > On Jan 14, 2007, at 1:44 PM, Gary Kline wrote:
> > >	Man!  truer words, (&c)... .  One o the very few suggestions
> > >	left for improving shells [ and/or subshells ] is a flag,
> > >	say '-N' which would have *nothing* to be escaped.  In other
> > >	words a '$' or '"' would be interpreted literally.    But I'm
> > >	sure there are reasons for not escaping some bytes.
> >
> > ZSH has the "noglob" keyword which can be quite useful...
> 
> OMG!  I managed to break a new shell war :)
> 
> /me ducks and runs very far away
> 

	No! no, cometh backeth, Giorgos!  No war, just peace, love
	anf flowers:-)   Actually, I do use zsh, just have no clue how to
	set noglob.  I was going to ask, but didn't want to show my
	ignorance.  [[ been using zsh for 16, 17 years... ]]

	Anyway, NOT to get into any kind of war--there being enuf
	stupidity in the world--but I'm thinking of having essentially
	a bare-threaded program loader.  A trivial shell (tsh?) that 
	does little more than take any ISO.8859-[1-2] character and 
	do a fork-exec.  Even "[" which is really /usr/bin/test, 
	would be sucked in as a plain "[".   I do a  lot of regex
	stuff that meaning finding obscure patterns in text files or
	marked-up files.  I've got the regex book and a cheatsheet
	several K lines long.  (****)

	Chuck, exactly what does noglob do? How to set/unset,  please?

	gary


-- 
  Gary Kline  kline@thought.org   www.thought.org  Public Service Unix




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