On Fri, Feb 22, 2002 at 04:01:24PM -0500, Greg A. Woods wrote:
> You can't use "-d ." -- you must specify a directory name other than '.'
> 
> (you can't use ".." in the name either, and I don't believe a
> sub-directory is legal either -- i.e. no relative pathnames, just a
> basic simple directory name)

Actually, this works fine:

foo -d fred/barney my/module/path

Or is that not whay you meant "relative pathname"?

Steve

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