> Do you mix your C and C++ projects' source code together like that? I > wouldn't.
Me, I use *.cc for C++. But, as the creator of DJGPP, I have to deal with all the users who run GCC HELLO.C and can't figure out why it doesn't work right. > > "cvs" is a program > > "CVS" is a subdirectory for source control > > And that will still work unless they are both within the same parent > directory. If they are, then give the program a different name or > an extension. Yes, and the cvs source repository (used to build cvs itself) needed a hack to get around this. > But if it's case insensitive, why shouldn't it preserve whatever you > type in? I use case to make names more readable, but like the > convenience of not having to type it in camel-hump case for a > quick-and-dirty script. Most of the problems we've seen revolve around wildcards and findfirst/findnext type functionality. When you're case insensitive, software and users get lazy about case, then wildcards stop working right when you *do* care about case. _______________________________________________ geda-user mailing list geda-user@moria.seul.org http://www.seul.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/geda-user