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Thanasis wrote: |
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> on 03/27/2009 07:32 AM Dale wrote the following: |
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> |
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>> Thanasis wrote: |
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>> |
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>> |
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>>> You can also use the unalias command, eg: |
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>>> $ alias ls='ls -la' |
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>>> $ unalias ls |
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>>> (then it stays unaliased for the session until you alias it again, |
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>>> source .bashrc, etc...). |
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>>> |
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>>> |
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>> It doesn't like that command here. It may be that I have the alias set |
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>> up in my profile instead of using the command alias. Does that matter? |
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>> |
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>> |
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>> |
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> I don't think it matters. |
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> What does it say? |
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> |
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> |
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Well, I tried it again so I could paste the output here and it worked. |
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I dunno. At least it works now. I guess you could do a source |
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/etc/profile to make it work again too. May have to test that next. |
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I'm sort of working on my car right now. It not crank anymore. :-( |
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Thanks for the info. Very neat. |
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Dale |
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:-) :-) |