[Stray prompts can cause trouble for many commands that start a noninteractive shell. This problem may have been fixed in your C shell. The point Chris makes about speeding up your .cshrc still applies, though. -JP]
If you set prompt in your
.cshrc file
without carefully checking first whether or not
prompt was already set (2.9),
many versions of the C shell will cheerfully
print prompts into the pipe vi uses to expand glob characters
[
filename wildcards (*, ?, []) (1.16)
and the
tilde (~) (14.11)
-JP ].
When you type :r abc*, vi opens a pipe to the C shell
and writes the command echo abc* down the pipe, then reads
the response. If the response contains spaces or newlines, vi
gets confused. If you set your prompt to (n) in your
.cshrc [i.e., if you show the history number in parentheses as
the prompt-TOR ], vi tends to get:
(1) abc.file (2)
back from the C shell, instead of just abc.file.
The solution is to kludge your .cshrc (2.9) like this:
if $?prompt |
if ($?prompt) then
# things to do for an interactive shell, like:
set prompt='(\!) '
endif |
|---|
This works because a noninteractive shell has no initial prompt,
while an interactive shell has it set to % .
If you have a large .cshrc, this can speed things up quite a bit
when programs run other programs with
csh -c 'command', if you
put all of it inside that test.
- in net.unix-wizards on Usenet, 22 April 1984