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When in Rome .. well you know the saying.
Having a limitation "installation directory may not contain spaces" is a bug. There are simply no excuses. Paths contains spaces on Windows. Almost always. That limitation essentially means it can't be installed at all, except in some places that are off-limits like "C:\".
How would you like it if people "ported" things from windows to linux and kept all the windows-quirks?
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vl2 wrote: Why is it "supposed to work", to start with?
You do in fact understand what OS Cygwin runs on right?
You also understand that even when Cygwin was introduced the concept of dual booting already existed so if someone did in fact want to run Linux/unix then they had that option already. Thus the point of Cygwin is to add to the windows environment,not replace it - and you also understand that?
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Point of Cygwin is to make Windows at least a little bit usable, because without the normal scripting tools it was just a shell for running Word (which is itself pretty useless too). Removing spaces from the "standard" paths is a tiny price for such a huge value.
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vl2 wrote: Point of Cygwin is to make Windows at least a little bit usable
Nonsense.
vl2 wrote: because without the normal scripting tools it was just a shell for running Word
Not sure what you are referring to but I was running scripts in windows before cygwin existed.
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You just confessed that you do not understand scripting at all. How were you "running scripts" then?
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vl2 wrote: You just confessed that you do not understand scripting at all
The fact that you can't read doesn't mean that your fantasy life is now reality.
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vl2 wrote: Just not the way windows-minded folk expects it to.
That is similar to claiming that OSX works on Macs but because it doesn't work on a windows machine that the windows machine is broken.
And presumably you would also claim that Linux is broken since it provides methods that allow spaces in paths as well.
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You're free to use spaces in paths, of course. Just never expect any scripts with string escaping work with them. No matter what your OS is. Something is terribly broken in the heads of those who allows spaces in the paths - they're making it nearly impossible to deal with their infrastructure with any scripting environment. COMMAND.COM chokes on spaces too, by the way.
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vl2 wrote: COMMAND.COM chokes on spaces too, by the way.
Command.com?
Perhaps you were referring to cmd.exe. I use spaces in paths in the batch scripts that I write for windows and nothing "chokes" so other than that I have no idea what you are referring to.
vl2 wrote: they're making it nearly impossible to deal with their infrastructure with any
scripting environment.
Actually rather trivial in my experience. At least once one is aware of it and handles it properly. Much harder for example, in my experience, to track down different types of syntax for different script languages.
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Pass a path from one .bat script to another - I bet you'll be lost in escaping in no time.
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vl2 wrote: Pass a path from one .bat script to anothe
I bet I would be lost in complexity in no time so paths have nothing to do with it.
Script languages for OS shells are quick convenience only. For complex solutions I write applications in real languages.
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Funny, how windows-minded people are struggling to comprehend such a simple thing as Unix Way. That's why automation is something nearly unheard of in the windows world.
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vl2 wrote: Funny, how windows-minded people are struggling to comprehend such a simple
thing as Unix Way
There is no struggle for me given that I use both OSes and have delivered products intended to be run on both, sometimes the same product. But given that I do in fact deliver products and must deal with support issues I understand that the target is not my own preconceived biases but rather what the target OSes use and what customers expect.
vl2 wrote: That's why automation is something nearly unheard of in the windows world.
Maybe in your world.
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Brisingr Aerowing wrote: How many have no clue what I am talking about?
Cygwin? Maybe I'm getting too old now but I never heard of it until I saw you write about it.
If there is one thing more dangerous than getting between a bear and her cubs it's getting between my wife and her chocolate.
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Unless you have a use for it you probably wouldn't hear about it - I used it a few years ago to enable SSH on my Win box - works very well and reasonably light on resources.
We can’t stop here, this is bat country - Hunter S Thompson RIP
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Question to ask myself later: what is SSH?
If there is one thing more dangerous than getting between a bear and her cubs it's getting between my wife and her chocolate.
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If you don't know what it is you don't need it
We can’t stop here, this is bat country - Hunter S Thompson RIP
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SeptimusHedgehog 151576 wrote: what is SSH?
Some Serious Hashish.
“I believe that there is an equality to all humanity. We all suck.” Bill Hicks
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Tried using it a few years ago for something but couldn't get it to work so found another way.
“I believe that there is an equality to all humanity. We all suck.” Bill Hicks
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Have you tried rebasing it first?
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A multinational team of researchers led by psychologist and American expat Jason Rentfrow of the University of Cambridge in the U.K. has sought to draw the regional lines more clearly, literally mapping the American mood, with state-by-state ratings of personality and temperament.
America’s Mood Map: An Interactive Guide to the United States of Attitude[^]
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TTFN - Kent
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Veni, vidi, vici.
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Danged hippy!
--------------
TTFN - Kent
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Veni, vidi, vici.
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It said I should be in Oregon...well, I'm close...950 miles south of Oregon
Steve
_________________
I C(++) therefore I am
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