[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
Re: shell command output question
From: |
Noel Yap |
Subject: |
Re: shell command output question |
Date: |
Fri, 26 Apr 2002 12:26:36 -0700 (PDT) |
--- G Anna <drguruolai@eth.net> wrote:
>
> > Date: Thu, 25 Apr 2002 11:50:27 -0500
> > From: "Bingham, Jay" <Jay.Bingham@compaq.com>
> > Subj: RE: shell command output question
>
> (snip)
>
> > From what you are trying to do I assume that "your
> command" will be
> > something like "echo $PATH". You can access
> environment variables
> > with the command getenv
>
> That is exactly the kind of question one should ask.
> What are you
> trying to achieve? (This question is to the OP.)
> Instead of asking
> something related to what you want, just ask what
> you want. You would
> probably get a more elegant solution.
OK. Here it is.
I am running Cygwin on NT and I want to be able to use
the same .emacs on NT as on Unix. Since emacs on NT
doesn't grok Cygwin paths, I need to convert the paths
passed into load-path into native paths. So, I've
created a script on both Unix and NT that'll take a
path and convert it into a native path (on Unix, this
is just an echo; on NT it's just a cygpath -w).
Ideally, I would have an emacs on NT that groks Cygwin
but I don't think that'll happen any time soon (last I
tried, emacs didn't build under Cygwin -- maybe it's
time to try again).
If anyone can suggest a better way to do this, I would
very much appreciate it.
Thanks,
Noel
__________________________________________________
Do You Yahoo!?
Yahoo! Games - play chess, backgammon, pool and more
http://games.yahoo.com/