From: jdashiel AT eagle1 DOT eaglenet DOT com Date: Tue, 25 Feb 1997 21:43:00 -0500 (EST) To: mharris AT blackwidow DOT saultc DOT on DOT ca Cc: Kurt Weiske , opendos AT mail DOT tacoma DOT net Subject: Re: ~OD: Re: [opendos] [OpenDOS] Wishlist part 2 In-Reply-To: Message-Id: Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII Sender: owner-opendos AT mail DOT tacoma DOT net Precedence: bulk The research was simple, that took the last few years of downloading; trying out, and erasing shareware from my hard drive since it ultimately wasn't compatible with my speech synthesizer. The little files shareware packages left behind and their character combinations would blow your mind. Only way I got them off was I use cweep.exe which points at a file and then you type the command that affects it. Fortunately cweep doesn't require file names to be typed for deletion. On Tue, 25 Feb 1997 mharris AT blackwidow DOT saultc DOT on DOT ca wrote: > On Sun, 23 Feb 1997, Kurt Weiske wrote: > > > I'd LOVE to hear how you researched this. Care to clarify your point? > > > > At 03:01 PM 2/23/97 -0500, you wrote: > > >The only people likely to use '[' and ']' and other similar > > >characters in file names are usually virus writers and others who want > > >to put files on people's hard drives that are intended to remain on the > > >hard drive until the next format. > > > > > >jude > > > > --Kurt Weiske (pfortran AT crl DOT com) > > I think that the point was very clear. I have yet to run into a > single file that has a "[" as a character in the filename. Keep > in mind that even if there was one, it would still work in the > OS, just the command interpreter would have trouble with it. > Besides considering the number of files that have those > characters in them, and considering the gains, I'd rather have > the new special wildcard chars added to the command interpreter. > > Also, since you can temporarily disable command globbing with > noglob or something like that (when it is implemented) it is a > very "moot" point. > > I've seen lots of "warez D00d" filenames that contain greek > letters and other funny characters and viruses usually follow in > the same vain. I've got about 1000 different viruses zipped up > for antivirus scanner testing purposes, and I just checked them > out. A lot of files have strange names, but I couldn't find any > with a "[" or a "]". Either way, the point is still moot. > > > Mike A. Harris | http://blackwidow.saultc.on.ca/~mharris > Computer Consultant | My webpage has moved and my address has changed. > My dynamic address: http://blackwidow.saultc.on.ca/~mharris/ip-address.html > mailto:mharris AT blackwidow DOT saultc DOT on DOT ca > > LINUX: The ONLY bulletproof 32-bit operating system that has it all. > > jude