/usr/bin is placed in your PATH by a system-level init file: /usr/share/init/tcsh/login if you are running tcsh, or something else for other shells.
On 2/20/02 10:30 AM, "Victor Eijkhout" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> You should leave "." out of your PATH environment variable. Or if you >> are used to have it, put it at the end or at least after /usr/bin. > > Now this is turning into a unix question: /usr/bin is in my path, but > I don't put it there in .login, .cshrc, or /sw/bin/init.csh. So where > does it come from? Somewhere system level? > -- Alexander K. Hansen Associate Research Scientist, Columbia University, LDX Collaboration MIT Plasma Science and Fusion Center, 175 Albany Street, NW17-219 Cambridge, MA 02139-4213 Phone: 617-252-1818 Fax: 208-988-4057 _______________________________________________ Fink-beginners mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/fink-beginners
