On 8/6/20 10:29 PM, Dale R. Worley wrote:
> Klaas Vantournhout writes:
>> Recently I came across a surprising undocumented bash-feature
>>
>>$ for i in 1 2 3; { echo $i; };
>>
>> The usage of curly-braces instead of the well-documented do ... done
>> construct was a complete surprise to me and
On 8/6/20 5:50 PM, Klaas Vantournhout wrote:
> Dear Bash-developers,
>
> Recently I came across a surprising undocumented bash-feature
>
>$ for i in 1 2 3; { echo $i; };
>
> The usage of curly-braces instead of the well-documented do ... done
> construct was a complete surprise to me and eve
> On Aug 6, 2020, at 10:29 PM, Dale R. Worley wrote:
>
> Klaas Vantournhout writes:
>> Recently I came across a surprising undocumented bash-feature
>>
>> $ for i in 1 2 3; { echo $i; };
>>
>> The usage of curly-braces instead of the well-documented do ... done
>> construct was a complete su
Klaas Vantournhout writes:
> Recently I came across a surprising undocumented bash-feature
>
>$ for i in 1 2 3; { echo $i; };
>
> The usage of curly-braces instead of the well-documented do ... done
> construct was a complete surprise to me and even lead me to open the
> following question on