Date: Wed, 5 Jan 2011 22:15:38 +0000 From: RW <rwmaillists@googlemail.com> To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org Subject: Re: a perl question Message-ID: <20110105221538.26daeb0d@gumby.homeunix.com> In-Reply-To: <20110105160514.GA94459@libertas.local.camdensoftware.com> References: <117654.42578.qm@web121409.mail.ne1.yahoo.com> <AANLkTinEksoXQAA4ZAziE59h%2BLRTxSgSy2WZy6UaQne%2B@mail.gmail.com> <4D231CB7.2060902@teambox.fr> <86pqsc3774.fsf@red.stonehenge.com> <20110105062401.GB74123@guilt.hydra> <20110105160514.GA94459@libertas.local.camdensoftware.com>
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On Wed, 5 Jan 2011 08:05:14 -0800 Chip Camden <sterling@camdensoftware.com> wrote: > Quoth Chad Perrin on Tuesday, 04 January 2011: > > The weirdest thing about most useless uses of cat is that not using > > cat would actually be a little clearer and involve fewer keystrokes > > -- as in this case. > > > I blame OOP. Programmer thinks about the data stream before they > think about the process. It's a nouns-first orientation. You might easily get the same prejudice from data flow diagrams - or plumbing. Personally I find that using cat makes things simpler and less error prone when reusing pipelines in shell history. For example it's easier to edit cat file | foo into cat file | bar | foo or cat file? | foo than editing foo < file into bar < file | foo or cat file? | foo
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