%% Joachim Fahnenmüller <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: jf> It should read:
jf> if [ ... ]; jf> then command; jf> else other_command; jf> fi jf> (mind the semicolons!) Actually, you don't need ANY of those semicolons. Bourne syntax is very regular, so it's pretty easy to know when you need a semicolon and when you don't. Put overly simply, semicolons replace newlines. In your example you have newlines so you don't need semicolons. All of these are equivalent in Bourne shell syntax (and that includes sh, ksh, bash, and zsh): if [ ... ]; then command; else other_command; fi ----- if [ ... ] then command else other_command fi ----- if [ ... ]; then command else other_command fi ----- if [ ... ]; then command else other_command; fi ----- if [ ... ]; then command; else other_command; fi -- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Paul D. Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> HASMAT--HA Software Mthds & Tools "Please remain calm...I may be mad, but I am a professional." --Mad Scientist ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- These are my opinions--Nortel takes no responsibility for them.