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d:/foo to //d/foo to d:\foo to d:/foo
- To: cygwin at sourceware dot cygnus dot com
- Subject: d:/foo to //d/foo to d:\foo to d:/foo
- From: dkarr at tcsi dot com (David M. Karr)
- Date: 29 Jun 2000 11:15:44 -0700
I know this is a FAQ, but I'm having trouble combining everything I've
read about this into a concise statement.
I have a bash script that references the HOME variable, which in DOS
is set to "d:/dmk". In the script, I want to pass something like
"$HOME/subdir" to a non-cygwin program.
It appears that I have to emit the following each time I want
something like this:
echo $(cygpath -w $HOME | sed -e 's,\\,/,g')
If I just use "$(cygpath -w $HOME)", it produces "d:\dmk", which bash
processes and removes the "\".
Is there an easier way to do this, or do I just have to write the
script "dospathinbash" (which would do the filter described here) for
whenever I need to do this (which is quite often)? A shell function
would probably better than a script.
--
===============================================================================
David M. Karr ; dkarr@tcsi.com ; w:(425)487-8312 ; TCSI & Best Consulting
Software Engineer ; Unix/Java/C++/X ; BrainBench CJ12P (6/12/2000)
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