
How do I set a variable to a command's output in csh?
Jan 16, 2018 · How do I set a variable to a command's output in csh? Ask Question Asked 7 years, 10 months ago Modified 7 years, 10 months ago
command line - No csh or tcsh? - Ask Ubuntu
In /bin, I see bash, but no csh or tcsh. When I created a ".cshrc" file in my home directory, it had no effect; that's how I discovered this problem. So the question is this: how do I switch to ...
How do I check which shell I am using? - Ask Ubuntu
Feb 28, 2015 · 690 I read that terminal is nothing but shell, and Unix provides different flavors of shells: Bourne shell (sh) C shell (csh) TC shell (tcsh) Korn shell (ksh) Bourne Again shell (bash) Questions: …
apt - Unable to locate package "csh" - Ask Ubuntu
I tried installing csh, but it throws me the error: unable to locate package csh My Ubuntu version is 12.04.
How do I change the color for directories with ls in the console?
May 15, 2014 · On my console the color for directories is such a blue, that it is hard to read on a dark background. How can I change the color definitions for ls?
command line - How to redirect stderr to a file - Ask Ubuntu
May 18, 2015 · In case of csh and its derivatives, the stderr redirection doesn't quite work there. Let's come back to 2> part. Two key things to notice: > means redirection operator, where we open a file …
How can I fix “setenv command not found - Ask Ubuntu
You'll need to complete a few actions and gain 15 reputation points before being able to upvote. Upvoting indicates when questions and answers are useful. What's reputation and how do I get it? …
how to source csh script from bash environment? - Ask Ubuntu
Dec 10, 2015 · I am using bash shell but some of the scripts that I need to source are in csh format. Can somebody tell how I can source csh scripts from bash shell? By sourcing I mean the sourced csh …
How can I change directory text color in C shell? - Ask Ubuntu
May 9, 2022 · They are file tests (or file enquiries if you're using the BSD implementation of csh): -r means the file exists and is readable; -x means it exists and is executable, the same as their bash …
Error running a script: ?#!/bin/csh: No such file or directory
2 You most likely have one or more non-printing characters at the start of the script, which are invisible when you look at the script in an editor (or via 'cat') but are preventing the correct csh interpreter …