On 11/13/06, Sebastian Reitenbach <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
just a guess, but I would say: man test
;)
this one might be catched by the PATH environent settings before it finds the
test in your
directory.
 
Also, generally "." is not in anyone's PATH!  I've seen very few distributions where this is true and is regarded to be generally unsafe... to run a tool in the current directory you should always use ./.  Not to mention "test" is a Bash built-in.

 
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