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 -- http://mm.ilug-bom.org.in/mailman/listinfo/linuxers

