Mail Archives: cygwin/2005/06/29/07:21:27
http://cygwin.com/acronyms/#PCYMTWLL PLEASE!
* Andreas Eibach (2005-06-28 14:14 +0100)
> Yes, this is the umpteenth time this gets asked, but also the umpteenth plead to fix this in cygwin (as it _definitely_ works in Linux, also with vfat and non-Linux partitions!!)
This is probably the umpteenth time said that this has absolutely
nothing to do with Cygwin, Linux or file systems.
> I have two files in ~, say they're
>
> CD0.dat
> CD1 - Multimedia (foo1).dat
> CD2 - Multimedia2 (foo2).dat
So you have THREE files, right?!
> +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
> Precondition: Imagine that the 'TAB' key doesn't function.
> +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
> (since if I want to write a script, it should be _portable_; and if
> it can be only be made work _with_ TAB, it is a kludge and
> should be fixed properly. Period.)
File name completion doesn't work in a script?! Really? Maybe because
completion is an interactive functionality?!
> But why?
> After the 'CD', what character is this in Cygwin?
Cygwin doesn't have file names.
> It seems, it's not a valid character at all!
> At least it does not seem to be a "real" space, since I've tried
> using option -b in LS and got nothing but also this '\ ' crap.
It's called "escaping". In this case the space character was escaped.
> Needless to say that scripts containing
>
> for i in `ls *.dat*`; do ....
Aaaaaaaaaarrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrggggggggggggggghhhhh.
> will NOT work, because Cygwin will interpret each sub-string between the \ ' s separately, making parsing files a nuisance.
> I scanned the archives and found something about using xargs. I've never used this command (except for finding strings); but if Cygwin is called a "win32 unix layer" shouldn't it behave like Unix and at least WORK with the above line?
>
> You can't deny at least one of these shown DO work in Unix and Linux.
> Without kludges, that is. So I'd say this is an issue and should at least be tackled.
Do yourself a BIG favour: get some basic knowledge about Shells (bash,
etc) and realise that none if this is even remotely related to Cygwin
or Linux/Unix. You're not even using Cugwin - you are using a shell
(bash or whatever).
If this weird stuff you're trying to do "works" in Linux than because
you're using a different shell there. Please try at least to know the
name of the application you are using.
Thorsten
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