On Fri, Oct 12, 2018 at 9:16 PM <jf...@ms4.hinet.net> wrote: > > Chris Angelico於 2018年10月12日星期五 UTC+8下午4時39分37秒寫道: > > On Fri, Oct 12, 2018 at 6:26 PM <jf...@ms4.hinet.net> wrote: > > > > > > I saw a directory where all its filenames are something like this: > > > ... > > > 1a PSG (Entry and PopUp).py > > > 1b PSG (Format).py > > > 1c PSG (persistent form and bind key).py > > > ... > > > > > > Just wondering how these file can run and debugged under Windows? > > > > > > > Put the file name inside double quotes. You can probably do this by > > tab-completing the name - type 1c and then hit the tab key - your > > shell should fill out the rest of the name with whatever quoting is > > necessary. > > > > ChrisA > > After using Windows so many years, I don't know this trick the double quotes > and tab can do in the shell. It really embarrass me:-( Thanks you, Chris. >
No need to feel bad. Windows isn't as shell-heavy as Unix systems (including Linux) tend to be, and Windows users are almost never as shell-heavy as Unix users are. There are a lot of really cool tricks and features available that aren't heavily used, and that applies on ALL systems (seriously, have you ever met ANYONE who uses the entire power of bash??); it's awesome to learn new ways to work more efficiently, but there's no shame in not having used those methods already :) ChrisA -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list