try x() first then alias On Wed, Jun 18, 2025, 7:30 PM Stan Marsh <gaze...@xmission.com> wrote:
> This is a "Doctor, it hurts when I do this" type thing. > > The short answer is that alias substitution occurs very early, so when you > type: > > alias x='this and that' > x() { ... } > > you are for all practical purposes, typing: > > 'this and that'() { ... } > > At which point, anything can happen. I'm not surprised that you can get > to a seg > fault if you try hard enough. > > Incidentally, I get caught on this from time to time, if I have something > defined as > an alias and then decide to change it to a function. If I forget to do: > unalias foo > first, before sourcing the file containing a function definition for foo, > I get weird, > unexplainable error messages. > > The real lesson here is: Don't use aliases. You will eventually rue the > day. > But they are so seductive - I have lots of them, even though I know the > "real lesson" > stated above. I think if you've come to bash from csh (as I have), it is > hard to > resist the temptation. > > > ================================================================================= > Please do not send me replies to my posts on the list. > I always read the replies via the web archive, so CC'ing to me is > unnecessary. > > Note that they always end up in my Spam file anyway, so it is annoying to > have to > periodically clean that out. > >