On Wednesday 31 August 2005 06:57, Chetan S wrote:
> execute it with ./
>
> subshell. Not all changes in subshell reflect to parent shell.
> Try referring Advanced Bash Scripting guide for more answers.

IMHO, #!/bin/bash doesn't mean that the script will run in a sub shell. 
It just tells the shell which interpreter to use while executing the 
script.

-- 
Dinesh A. Joshi

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