"which" is more suitable for shell scripts than "type" ( ex.
I can just say "ls `which ls`" ). "which" is often cited
in manuals and is probably more known in the UNIX user
community.

"which" is also a UNIX command, while "type" is just in the
shell ( bash, maybe others ).

The additions look good, "fuser" is indispensable ;)



Thanks,
Rob Helmer
Namodn

On Tue, Feb 27, 2001 at 08:13:19AM -0800, Daniel Quinlan wrote:
> I propose making the following changes to the included commands list
> in the LSB database.
> 
> remove:
> 
>   compress ("gzip" instead)
>   uncompress ("gunzip" instead)
>   uudecode (not needed)
>   uuencode (not needed)
>   which ("type" instead, not standardized)
> 
> add:
>   
>   awk
>   basename
>   batch
>   cal
>   cksum
>   dd
>   expand
>   fuser
>   logname
>   nice
>   nl
>   nohup
>   od
>   pathchk
>   pr
>   sendmail
>   sort
>   time
>   tty
>   wc
>   zcat (gzip)
> 
> 
> -- 
> 
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