Alexey Orishko wrote:
On Wed, Oct 15, 2014 at 11:38 PM, Bruce Dubbs wrote:
Yes, it was done intentionally. A bash login shell by default calls
/etc/profile and and then ~/.bash_profile. If those don't source other
files, then PS1 need to be set there.
For a non-login invocation of bash, PS1 i
On Wed, Oct 15, 2014 at 11:38 PM, Bruce Dubbs wrote:
> Yes, it was done intentionally. A bash login shell by default calls
> /etc/profile and and then ~/.bash_profile. If those don't source other
> files, then PS1 need to be set there.
>
> For a non-login invocation of bash, PS1 is removed and ha
Alexey Orishko wrote:
Hi guys,
I've tried to customize PS1 prompt by editing /etc/profile, but it didn't help.
After further checking I've found that PS1 is set twice in the scripts
described in Ch.3 "The Bash Shell Startup Files": in /etc/profile and
/etc/bashrc.
Was it done by intention? If s
Hi guys,
I've tried to customize PS1 prompt by editing /etc/profile, but it didn't help.
After further checking I've found that PS1 is set twice in the scripts
described in Ch.3 "The Bash Shell Startup Files": in /etc/profile and
/etc/bashrc.
Was it done by intention? If so, could someone, please
On Oct 15, 2014, at 1:28 PM, Ken Moffat wrote:
> On Tue, Oct 14, 2014 at 10:32:47PM -0500, Dan McGhee wrote:
>>
>> On Oct 14, 2014, at 9:52 PM, Ken Moffat wrote:
>>
>
>> The only trackpad I’ve used is on the iMac that I bought six days ago. I
>> don’t know if they all work the same or not.
On Tue, Oct 14, 2014 at 10:32:47PM -0500, Dan McGhee wrote:
>
> On Oct 14, 2014, at 9:52 PM, Ken Moffat wrote:
>
> The only trackpad I’ve used is on the iMac that I bought six days ago. I
> don’t know if they all work the same or not. All I have to do is depress the
> pad with one finger an
On Tue, 2014-10-14 at 20:16 +0100, Ken Moffat wrote:
> Odd, I thought that syntax highlighting came for free, the problem
> I had had (a few years ago) was sorting out colours - I prefer a
> black background in my terms. The only thing I can see in either
> /etc/vimrc or ~/.vimrc which seems at a