Well I had the job interview, and it would seem that "CASE tool" is the
answer to my query. The company is migrating from a WinNT environment
to a UNIX environment and using Teamsite by Interwoven as the process
control environment-- that would be the CASE tool.
Thanks for all your suggestions; they helped me be a bit better prepared
for the interview; which went well--now to see whether a job offer
follows :-)
--
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dennis "Bass Dude" Fox | [EMAIL PROTECTED] OR
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Bureaucracy is the art of making the possible impossible
-Javier Pascual Salcedo
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
SunDog wrote:
>
> Hi Dennis,
>
> the case construct is too obvious ...
>
> more than likely they have some Computer Assisted System Engineering
>
> i.e. C.A.S.E. too in mind that needs to have PERL integrate with some
>
> objects / domains / etc ...
>
> That's my guess..
>
> regards
>
> SunDog
>
> At 05:37 PM 4/24/01 -0600, you wrote:
> >Might be a phonetic thing... perhaps they are referring to the ksh (K
> >Shell)?
> >
> >-----Original Message-----
> >From: Dennis Fox [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
> >Sent: Tuesday, April 24, 2001 5:38 PM
> >To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> >Subject: What is a "case shell"?
> >
> >
> >Here is a line from a job description that has me baffled: "·Perl
> >scripting (must know how to Perl well enough to script inside a case
> >shell)"
> >
> >Leaving aside the use of "Perl" as a verb for another discusssion, is
> >this just a typo (common in job advertisements), or is there a "case
> >shell" that I have not heard of yet? The company with this ad uses
> >Solaris (does not say which version).
> >
> >If it is just about using "case" in a shell script, I already know how
> >to do that.
> >
> >Thanks for any light y'all can shed.
> >
> >--
> >-------------------------------------------------------------------------
> >Dennis "Bass Dude" Fox | [EMAIL PROTECTED] OR
> >[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> >Bureaucracy is the art of making the possible impossible
> > -Javier Pascual Salcedo
> >-------------------------------------------------------------------------