Date: Tue, 15 Feb 2000 20:34:10 +0200 From: Giorgos Keramidas <keramida@ceid.upatras.gr> To: David Wiard <dave@srn.com> Cc: jimmy martin <hate00@hotmail.com>, freebsd-questions@freebsd.org Subject: Re: alias's Message-ID: <20000215203410.A13013@hades.hell.gr> In-Reply-To: <3.0.5.32.20000211143912.009715d0@paladin.srn.com>; from dave@srn.com on Fri, Feb 11, 2000 at 02:39:12PM -0800 References: <20000211045849.3263.qmail@hotmail.com> <20000211045849.3263.qmail@hotmail.com> <20000212000440.A15261@hades.hell.gr> <3.0.5.32.20000211143912.009715d0@paladin.srn.com>
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On Fri, Feb 11, 2000 at 02:39:12PM -0800, David Wiard wrote:
> >Oh, and another thing. You can always put the aliases in .bashrc, where
> >they will be seen by all interactive invocations of Bash. If they are
> >put into .bash_profile, they're only valid for login shells :>
>
> or, if all your shells are interactive, like me, make .bash_profile a
> symlink to .bashrc so all shells are login shells. :)
Actually, this might not work if your .bashrc does stuff like:
PATH="$HOME/bin:$PATH"
since you'll end up with $HOME/bin twice in your PATH. I have my
.bash_profile set to:
[ -f ~/.bashrc ] && . ~/.bashrc
exit 0
ever since I found this out.
RCS file: /usr/home/cvs/charon/.bash_profile,v
----------------------------
revision 1.10
date: 2000/01/06 01:59:54; author: charon; state: Exp; lines: +3 -31
Moved most of the code to the ~/.bashrc script.
----------------------------
--
Giorgos Keramidas, < keramida @ ceid . upatras . gr >
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