On 06/03/2018 02:54 PM, Brad Gilbert wrote:
You can use q[./] instead of \'./\'
(especially useful so that it will work on both Windows and Unix
But in this case it is even better to use -I and -M
p6 -I. -MRunNoShell -e '( my $a, my $b ) =
RunNoShell::RunNoShell("ls *.pm6"); say $a;'
On Sun, Jun 3, 2018 at 4:47 PM, ToddAndMargo <toddandma...@zoho.com> wrote:
On Sun, Jun 3, 2018 at 5:28 PM ToddAndMargo <toddandma...@zoho.com
<mailto:toddandma...@zoho.com>> wrote:
Hi All,
What am I doing wrong here?
$ p6 'lib \'./\'; use RunNoShell; ( my $a, my $b ) =
RunNoShell::RunNoShell("ls *.pm6"); say $a;'
bash: syntax error near unexpected token `='
Huh ???
This is RunNoShell.pm6
sub RunNoShell ( $RunString ) is export {
...
return ( $ReturnStr, $RtnCode );
}
Many thanks,
-T
On 06/03/2018 02:36 PM, Brandon Allbery wrote:
bash doesn't like nested single quotes, even with escapes. So the first \'
gave you a literal backslash and ended the quoted part, then the second \'
gave you a literal ' and continued without quoting. The final ' would then
open a new quoted string, but bash doesn't get that far because it sees the
(now unquoted) parentheses and tries to parse them as a command expansion.
allbery@pyanfar ~/Downloads $ echo 'x\'y\'z'
> ^C
Note that it thinks it's still in a quoted string and wants me to
continue.
p6 does not like `lib ./`, meaning use the current directory
without the single quotes. Any work around?
It needs the path, which is ./
$ perl6 -I -MRunNoShell '( my $a, my $b ) = RunNoShell::RunNoShell("ls
\*.pm6"); say $a;'
Could not open ( my $a, my $b ) = RunNoShell::RunNoShell("ls \*.pm6");
say $a;. Failed to stat file: no such file or directory