> I'm willing to try the CVS versions of autoconf later on, but
> can't promise when I'll get to it. I can confirm, though, that
> the bug I'm running into only happened when I rebuilt bash and
> specified the --enable_xpg_default option.
You would have seen the same results had you specified the `-e' option
to echo. The behavior is consistent, and will remain so.
> It might be "late" to change the requirement to "\0" is required as
> the leading for all numeric constants, but as has been stated here, no
> application should be relying on "\1" being interpreted as "^A" if it
> is desired that it be portable.
I don't believe it's "too late", considering that you had to compile bash
with a non-default set of configuration options to encounter the problem.
However, I like consistency, and I believe that it's important to have
-e and the xpg_echo option produce identical output.
I don't favor being deliberately incompatible, though, unless there's a
compelling reason. This doesn't seem to measure up to that standard.
The remaining consideration is whether or not there's a significant
body of scripts out there that rely on the current behavior. If there
isn't, I would strongly consider the change to require a leading `0'
in octal constants. I don't think that \x introducing hex constants
is as big a problem (it may not be a problem at all).
Chet
--
``The lyf so short, the craft so long to lerne.'' - Chaucer
( ``Discere est Dolere'' -- chet )
Live Strong. No day but today.
Chet Ramey, ITS, CWRU [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://cnswww.cns.cwru.edu/~chet/
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