Michael Veksler wrote:
>
> eric <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > both are not work on bash but work on csh on my mandrake 8.0, I also
> > webmail them (mandrakesoft) on tech support, but they said it in not in
> > the scope they want to support.
>
> I did not follow the thread up until now, so I may be off base here.
>
> Do your prompts in csh and in bash have "\r" at their beginning?
> If they do, then your little program works well, but your shell
> erases it (I think it is the default behavior of zsh).
> Do the following experiment:
> csh% printf "test" ; sleep 1
> or
> bash$ printf "test" ; sleep 1
>
> Does "test" appear on your screen for one second and then goes away?
>
Dear Michael:
at bash it stay one second then disappear
at csh it keep there.
for me I just like csh's style. Is that fixed rule of bash to swallow
out the printf without \n at the end of string? I just worried the
program written and compiled at other platform(redhat7.1,
debian-progeny1.0 then stay there, but I did not notice it is bash or
not-its default one) not compatible my mandrake8.0. That is if it is
not fixed rule, can I change my bash as csh's custom?
sincere eric, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Michael
>
> Stephano Mariani wrote:
> >
> > Here is what I mean:
> >
> > #include <stdio.h>
> >
> > int main(int argc,char*const*argv)
> > {
> > printf("Hello World"); /* No linefeed */
> > fflush(stdout); /* Likewise for any other stream(s) you use */
> > _exit(0);
> > }
> >
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