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Mail Archives: cygwin/2001/09/17/19:03:56

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Date: Mon, 17 Sep 2001 16:02:45 -0700
To: anoop AT alumni DOT duke DOT edu, Robert Collins <robert DOT collins AT itdomain DOT com DOT au>,
anoop AT alumni DOT duke DOT edu
From: Randall R Schulz <rrschulz AT cris DOT com>
Subject: Re: using aliases for cygwin commands on win2k
Cc: cygwin AT cygwin DOT com
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References: <1000766517 DOT 1643 DOT 11 DOT camel AT lifelesswks>
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Anoop,

Here's a kind of a solution to that problem:

open ()
{
     for doc in "$@";
     do
         if [ ! -f "$doc" ]; then
             echo "open: \"$doc\" does not exist." 1>&2;
         else
             docFileWin="$(cygpath -w "$doc")";
             cmd /q /c start /b "$docFileWin";
         fi;
     done
}


If you were rather more ambitious, you could even write your own command 
processing loop to make this transparent.

Randall Schulz
Mountain View, CA USA


At 15:54 2001-09-17, Anoop Ghanwani wrote:
>--- Robert Collins <robert DOT collins AT itdomain DOT com DOT au> wrote:
> > On Tue, 2001-09-18 at 08:37, Anoop Ghanwani wrote:
> > > I wanted to find out how to use aliases for cygwin commands
> > > on win2k.  The cygwin commands are located at c:\cygwin\bin.
> > > I don't run bash, but I still use commands such as ls, grep, rm, mv.
> > > I would like to create aliases for these commands such as
> > > alias ls 'ls -lF' and so on.  How do I do something like this?
> >
> > Run bash/tcsh/ksh. Do not run cmd.exe.
>
>Thanks for the response.
>
>If I do that, I lose the ability to start applications
>automatically by simply typing the file name.  For example,
>if I have a file try.doc, and I type try.doc at the Windows
>2000 command prompt, it brings up Word with that document.
>
>-Anoop


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