Re: md5(1) and cal(1)

2010-05-12 Thread Fredrik Henbjork
On 05/11/2010 06:47 AM, Warren Block wrote: cal on FreeBSD 8 does highlight the current date. And then we have ncal(1), which, besides highlighting of the current day, also has the following nice features: It starts the weeks on Monday. It can print the number of the week below each week

Re: md5(1) and cal(1)

2010-05-11 Thread Robert Huff
Warren Block writes: 1. Why doesn't cal(1) hilight the current day? cal on FreeBSD 8 does highlight the current date. Confirmed for both xterm and whatever the console driver is using. Robert Huff ___

Re: md5(1) and cal(1)

2010-05-11 Thread Robert Bonomi
From owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org Mon May 10 22:25:31 2010 Date: Mon, 10 May 2010 17:35:45 -0800 From: David Allen the.real.david.al...@gmail.com To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org Subject: md5(1) and cal(1) 1. Why doesn't cal(1) hilight the current day? Because we're waitng

Re: md5(1) and cal(1)

2010-05-11 Thread Roland Smith
On Tue, May 11, 2010 at 12:26:35PM -0500, Robert Bonomi wrote: From owner-freebsd-questi...@freebsd.org Mon May 10 22:25:31 2010 Date: Mon, 10 May 2010 17:35:45 -0800 From: David Allen the.real.david.al...@gmail.com To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org Subject: md5(1) and cal(1) 1

Re: md5(1) and cal(1)

2010-05-11 Thread Karl Vogel
On Mon, 10 May 2010 17:35:45 -0800, David Allen the.real.david.al...@gmail.com said: D 1. Why doesn't cal(1) hilight the current day? I'm not sure, but it's easy enough to script. See below the signature. If you don't have /bin/ksh, change the first line to #!/bin/sh. You

Re: md5(1) and cal(1)

2010-05-11 Thread Eitan Adler
D 2. Why doesn't md5(1) have a check option? Seems to me requiring a D manual inspection is error-prone at best, and makes scripting D unecessarily complicated. Would something like the attached patch be good? It adds a -c option for a string to check against. It prints [failed] if the

md5(1) and cal(1)

2010-05-10 Thread David Allen
1. Why doesn't cal(1) hilight the current day? Hell, some days I'm not even sure what day or week it is, so after typing 'cal', I have to type in 'date', and then sit there for a few seconds to interpret what I'm looking at. Of course, that isn't always successful, so I typically end up

Re: md5(1) and cal(1)

2010-05-10 Thread Chad Perrin
On Mon, May 10, 2010 at 05:35:45PM -0800, David Allen wrote: 1. Why doesn't cal(1) hilight the current day? Hell, some days I'm not even sure what day or week it is, so after typing 'cal', I have to type in 'date', and then sit there for a few seconds to interpret what I'm looking at. Of

Re: md5(1) and cal(1)

2010-05-10 Thread andrew clarke
On Mon 2010-05-10 17:35:45 UTC-0800, David Allen (the.real.david.al...@gmail.com) wrote: 1. Why doesn't cal(1) hilight the current day? Hell, some days I'm not even sure what day or week it is, so after typing 'cal', I have to type in 'date', and then sit there for a few seconds to

Re: md5(1) and cal(1)

2010-05-10 Thread Warren Block
On Tue, 11 May 2010, andrew clarke wrote: On Mon 2010-05-10 17:35:45 UTC-0800, David Allen (the.real.david.al...@gmail.com) wrote: 1. Why doesn't cal(1) hilight the current day? Hell, some days I'm not even sure what day or week it is, so after typing 'cal', I have to type in 'date', and