On 3/15/2019 7:59 PM, Brian Inglis wrote: > On 2019-03-15 04:03, Soegtrop, Michael wrote: > >> you are mixing a DOS echo which will produce a \r\n line ending with a >> Cygwin sed which expects \n line endings. The second . matches the \r. >> Either work in bash and use Cygwin echo or use a MinGW compile of sed or >> strip the \r e.g. with tr or maybe match it more explicitly with a \r. >> > > Or use Cygwin printf "%s\n" "Hey" to avoid differing echo output. > Or when in cygwin, make sure your cygwin paths are first.
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