Yes, as people have mentioned your options are:
-Run the scripts with Cygwin, which will ensure that most system
commands will be set up for you (if this is for general distribution,
you can make it a system requirement, although that's a pretty heave
system requirement to have).
-Rewrite the UNI
"John W. Krahn" schreef:
> [SFU]
> http://www.microsoft.com/windowsserversystem/sfu/
More details:
http://www.softpanorama.org/Unixification/SFU/
AFAIK, the download requires JavaScript and a "Passport".
--
Affijn, Ruud
"Gewoon is een tijger."
--
To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Hi all,
Hello,
> I've inherited a bunch of scripts that am spending lots of time debugging and
> tracing, changing etc. Part of the task also is to have the same modified in
> some way so that I can use it for both UNIX and Windows.
>
> Lots of these scripts have syste
-Original Message-
From: Ricky Zhou [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, May 25, 2006 5:30 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: beginners@perl.org; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: Perl OS system equivalence or Perl scripts for
UNIX-and-Windows
> On 5/25/06, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <
On 5/25/06, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Lots of these scripts have system "" on them which of course I
can't run on Windows. Can anyone suggest how to get around this? Or any white
papers on how to do this?
If you have sufficient access to the windows computers (and you want
abs
Do you have control over the Windows box you will be using for these
scripts, or are these for a general distribution?
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, May 25, 2006 4:21 PM
To: beginners@perl.org; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Perl OS s