On Thu, Nov 11, 2004 at 04:37:06PM -0600, Kevin Lyons wrote: > I have (re)discovered that tcsh is not csh although the tcsh man page > falsely asserts backward compatibility. Trying to do a simple read of > multiword variables in tcsh fails yet works find on csh. The tcsh man page > admits as much when one gets to the $< part. > > The point is, csh should be the basic backward compatibly lowest common > denominator between systems. This is a real problem. I humbly suggest that > those that want the bang of tcsh can do a pkg_add just like the morons that > want bash instead of sh. > > If you want to try an example, do the following on csh, and then on tcsh. > #!/bin/csh > echo enter some words > set line = $< > set words = ($line) > echo line is $line > echo word1 is $word[1] > echo word2 is $word[2] > echo word3 is $word[3]
Please raise tcsh compatibility bugs with the tcsh developers. > ------ > The fact that tcsh can not do this in default mode is beyond pathetic. What > is worse is that freebsd didn't notice or care. Try to relax, it's only a shell and not worth this level of emotion. Kris -- In God we Trust -- all others must submit an X.509 certificate. -- Charles Forsythe <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> _______________________________________________ [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-hackers To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"