According to Dean Sinclair: While burning my CPU.
>
> The way that I know of doing it is to edit your .bash_profile in your
> home directory and add/delete portions of the path etc there. One
> usefull addition to the path (if you don't already have it) is ./ so
> that you can exectute a file in the directory you are surrently in at
> any one time.
This explanation is "system spesific" possably Redhat, if the person who
asked the question tryed this and he has slackware then he wont find any
file either .bash_profile or bashrc.
Anyway a normal linux installation always used to have /usr/local/bin as
part of the enviroment path be it slackware redhat of whatever.
Type echo $PATH first to see just what is included.
Like Frank said, export the path after any changes, or log out or make the
system reread the file with a . before the name of the file or use the
'source command'.
>
> Hope it helped.
> //--------------------------------------
> Dean Sinclair
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> _______________________________________________________________
> http://www.webmail.co.za the South-African free email service
>
--
Regards Richard.
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