Gerard, > Thanks to all. I guess I misunderstood the first post regarding .bash.profile. Just to make sure I understand, are you saying I should try replacing the .profile with .bash_profile? The shell is bash by default. > That's correct. Bash use .bash_profile for user specific changes and /etc/profile for system wide configurations
William > -Gerard > > On Feb 18, 2013, at 1:50 AM, Hal Wigoda wrote: > > > I said that long time ago. > > > > > > On Mon, Feb 18, 2013 at 1:40 AM, Paul Anderson <wackyvor...@me.com> wrote: > >> Odds are good that the original poster needs to use .bash_profile instead. > >> > >> Sent from my iPhone > >> > >> On 2013-02-18, at 2:24 AM, Luca Ferrari <fluca1...@infinito.it> wrote: > >> > >>> I suspect this has something to do with the PATH variable and alike. > >>> And it could have been set up at system wide level, for instance on > >>> /etc/profile. > >>> > >>> Luca > >>> > >>> -- > >>> To unsubscribe, e-mail: beginners-unsubscr...@perl.org > >>> For additional commands, e-mail: beginners-h...@perl.org > >>> http://learn.perl.org/ > >>> > >>> > >> > >> -- > >> To unsubscribe, e-mail: beginners-unsubscr...@perl.org > >> For additional commands, e-mail: beginners-h...@perl.org > >> http://learn.perl.org/ > >> > >> > > > > > > > > -- > > ----------------- > > Chicago > > Hal Wigoda > > > -- > To unsubscribe, e-mail: beginners-unsubscr...@perl.org > For additional commands, e-mail: beginners-h...@perl.org > http://learn.perl.org/ > >