On 2001-08-20-22:32, Hubert Figuiere wrote:
> According to Paul Rohr <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> > 
> > I thought that single-dashes *were* a longstanding Unix convention, and that 
> > more verbose double-dash equivalents are a more recent GNU augmentation that 
> > not everyone likes.  But hey, what do I know. 
> 
> Signle dashes are for short and combinable option.
> think
> 
> tar -zxvf 
> or 
> ps -auxwf
> 
> Double dashes are for long option
> Think
> ./configure --enable-debug
> 
> That is the GNU standard, it is consistant and  works.
> BTW, Win users expect /option

Just to clarify the above:
by `combinable options', one means that:
tar -zxvf abi.tar
is equivalent to:
tar -z -x -v -f abi.tar

Thus, programs such as xterm that use
xterm -bg blue
to mean something
different from
xterm -b -g blue
are inconsistent.

-- 
  -nils

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