Thanks Bob and others who responded.  FWIW, sh on Linux accepts -e and -n at
the same time, which is how we managed to run into our trouble (we do
concurrent builds on Linux and Windows).  But i'll be changing
our -e -n references to use -e and \c.

Thanks!
John

-----Original Message-----
From: Bob McGowan [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Thursday, October 19, 2000 4:18 PM
To: John Pollock
Subject: Re: echo with sh.exe doesn't understand multiple parameters


These are mutually exclusive options.  The -n makes echo emulate the old
Bourne shell behavior, -e the new.

   echo -n test
and
   echo -e 'test\c'

Are equivalent.  The other backslash sequences recognized when -e is used
had no equivalent in older shells.  You had to embed litteral characters,
where possible.

Hope this helps.

John Pollock wrote:
>
> With the echo command, using -n or -e alone with sh works fine:
>
> $ echo -e blah
> blah
> $ echo -n blah
> blah$
>
> but when you try to use both flags at once, sh seems to get confused:
>
> blah$ echo -n -e blah
> -e blah$
>
> Is there a workaround?
>
> John
>
> --
> Want to unsubscribe from this list?
> Send a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

--
Bob McGowan
Staff Software Quality Engineer
VERITAS Software
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


--
Want to unsubscribe from this list?
Send a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Reply via email to