Mailing-List: contact cygwin-help@cygwin.com; run by ezmlm
List-Subscribe: <mailto:cygwin-subscribe@cygwin.com>
List-Archive: <http://sources.redhat.com/ml/cygwin/>
List-Post: <mailto:cygwin@cygwin.com>
List-Help: <mailto:cygwin-help@cygwin.com>, <http://sources.redhat.com/ml/#faqs>
Sender: cygwin-owner@cygwin.com
Mail-Followup-To: cygwin@cygwin.com
Delivered-To: mailing list cygwin@cygwin.com
From: Philippe Fremy <phil@freehackers.org>
To: cygwin@cygwin.com
Subject: Re: Problem with tty
Date: Mon, 21 Jul 2003 18:44:32 +0200
User-Agent: KMail/1.5.2
References: <200307181147.34980.phil@freehackers.org> <3F184A76.6020009@cygwin.com>
In-Reply-To: <3F184A76.6020009@cygwin.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain;
  charset="iso-8859-1"
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
Content-Disposition: inline
Message-Id: <200307211844.32236.phil@freehackers.org>


> Setting 'tty' for Cygwin will not have any affect on Windows programs.
> Only Cygwin ones.  Running a Windows program from a Cygwin shell prompt
> can cause output from the Windows program to get "lost" since they don't
> understand ptys.  Use Cygwin's python and you won't have the particular
> problem you mentioned when run from a Cygwin shell prompt with 'tty' set.

Thank you for the information. I suppose there is no workaround for this ? 
Like launching vim inside a bash script ?

	regards,

	PHilippe


-- 
The box said it should run Windows 98 or better, so it should run Linux!


--
Unsubscribe info:      http://cygwin.com/ml/#unsubscribe-simple
Problem reports:       http://cygwin.com/problems.html
Documentation:         http://cygwin.com/docs.html
FAQ:                   http://cygwin.com/faq/

