On Tue, 2016-11-08 at 15:04 -0500, Greg Wooledge wrote:
> On Tue, Nov 08, 2016 at 02:37:34PM -0500, Henning wrote:
> > Put your aliases into .bash_ptofile
>
> No, don't do that. Make your login shell profile source or dot in
> ~/.bashrc instead.
>
Ok, now I have to ask the queston, maybe a tange
On Tue, Nov 08, 2016 at 02:37:34PM -0500, Henning wrote:
> Put your aliases into .bash_ptofile
No, don't do that. Make your login shell profile source or dot in
~/.bashrc instead.
> On Nov 8, 2016, at 2:01 PM, S. P. Molnar wrote:
>
> I am running Debian v-8.5.0 with the bash shell and a number of alias's
> defined.
>
> For example alias l='ls -l --color'
>
> When I boot the system none of the definitions of alias in .bashrc are
> active. That is until I open a termi
On 11/08/2016 02:01 PM, S. P. Molnar wrote:
I am running Debian v-8.5.0 with the bash shell and a number of
alias's defined.
For example alias l='ls -l --color'
When I boot the system none of the definitions of alias in .bashrc are
active. That is until I open a terminal and input source .b
I am running Debian v-8.5.0 with the bash shell and a number of alias's
defined.
For example alias l='ls -l --color'
When I boot the system none of the definitions of alias in .bashrc are
active. That is until I open a terminal and input source .bashrc. So
far, so good alias works - in that
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