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Date:      Mon, 9 Nov 1998 23:24:10 +0100
From:      Eivind Eklund <eivind@yes.no>
To:        Sue Blake <sue@welearn.com.au>
Cc:        freebsd-chat@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: X desktop contest? + Desktop Env
Message-ID:  <19981109232410.01531@follo.net>
In-Reply-To: <19981110090436.07651@welearn.com.au>; from Sue Blake on Tue, Nov 10, 1998 at 09:04:36AM %2B1100
References:  <Pine.BSF.3.96.981109094722.19667A-100000@andrsn.stanford.edu> <Pine.BSF.4.05.9811092120310.7784-100000@gamefish.pcola.gulf.net> <19981110090436.07651@welearn.com.au>

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On Tue, Nov 10, 1998 at 09:04:36AM +1100, Sue Blake wrote:
> On Mon, Nov 09, 1998 at 09:22:25PM +0000, Phillip Salzman wrote:
> > 
> > 	The default shells are because of an attempt to keep ``standard''.
> > Although, I believe we should also include tcsh or bash... but I think
> > they are under GPL license.  Well, I think bash is.
> 
> There's a few newbies and 386 users who have discovered the virtues of
> the plain old sh with 'set -o emacs' turned on. The one and only
> essential is the up arrow for command history, and I reckon that's the
> real reason why many of new installers wish it had bash. All the other
> shell features can go jump for the first few months, but command
> history is essential and csh doesn't cut it, not by a long shot.
> 
> When it's time to learn more, it's also time to learn about scripts and
> what better way than to be able to use the same syntax on the command
> line. Why would I ever need more than sh? After nearly a year it still
> serves every purpose I know of, *and* the man page is more digestable.

It lacks completion.  That's the most important part.  That's IMHO
essential.  Apart from that, I like the ability of zsh to do more
advanced pattern matching, but that isn't as essential as as the lack
of completion (and every shell I know of except zsh lack full
completion - zsh can complete _everything_ - globs, shell escapes,
history escapes, cvs <xxx> - you name it, zsh can complete it :-)

Eivind.

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