On Tue, 2005-10-18 at 15:49 -0700, Freddy Freeloader wrote: > Thanks for answering. Sorry it's taken so long to answer. I've just > been too busy to get back to this. I've inserted my comments in line. > > michael wrote: > > >On Thu, 2005-10-13 at 08:18 -0700, Freddy Freeloader wrote: > > > > > >>Hi all, > >> > >>I downloaded the Advanced Bash Scripting Guide the other day an have > >>started to work my way through it. I'm fairly new to bash so I get more > >>than a little confused when the output I get is nothing similar to what > >>the ABS Guide says it should be. > >> > >>Here is what has me confused at the moment. > >> > >>b=${a/23/BB} > >> > >>echo "b = $b" > >> > >>Now the ABS guide says that where I'm setting b it should be > >>substituting BB for 23. It also says that the output of 'echo "b - $b"' > >>should be: b = BB35 > >> > >>However, what I get as output is as follows: > >> > >>[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ echo "b = $b" > >>b = > >> > >> > > > >if a is unset then that is correct...
i take it you're agreeing with me that it is printing what you expect > >>total 520716 > >>drwxr-sr-x 2 ffreeloader ftp 48 2005-10-13 07:50 script > >>-rw-r--r-- 1 ffreeloader ftp 532692172 2005-10-12 09:38 server_2003.zip > >> > >> > > > >this is a listing of your current directory... > > > > > > > Well, actually I have no one directory that has that exact structure and > content. It looks as if the output shows a couple of sub directories > from my /home directory and a file from another directory that that is > the default directory for an ftp server. > > >>Now in my playing around this morning I've been using some command > >>substitution from the bash prompt that included cd'ing into a directory > >>that has the files in it that are listed above. I assume that somehow > >>setting $b to the value I set it to is calling the history command in > >>the bash shell and that's how I'm getting this output. However, I don't > >>know why or how it works. > >> > >> > > > >if you have not editted your .bash* files, re-login afresh and try > >again. the preceeding para implies you may have (inadvertedly) done > >something to, say, .bashrc so it executes something on certain > >conditions and this is where the `ls` output is from. > > > > > > > The only editing I have done to any of my .bash* files is to add a > directory, ~/scripts, to the PATH so I can store all my script writing > attempts in one directory and execute them without cd'ing there. That's > the sum total of my editing. The ls output is defintely not from that > directory. okay, please let us know your PATH and the contents of said ~/scripts ta -- Michael Bane Atmospheric Science University of Manchester -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]