I'm sorry. "shift" used in "for...do...done" is not correct. "$1" between "for" and "do" can only be processed at first time. 2006/10/11, 赵方杰 <fuziok@xxxxxxxxx>:
You can use $@ instead of $1, or you can use "shift" command: for eachfile in "$1"; do [ x"$eachfile" = x ] && break; ...... ; shift; done 2006/10/11, Kim Lux <lux@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>: > On Tue, 2006-10-10 at 13:44 -0400, Steven W. Orr wrote: > > On Tuesday, Oct 10th 2006 at 18:20 +0100, quoth Paul Howarth: > > That could be a loss of functionality for what kim might have intended. If > > the intent was to specify that the globbing needs to happen in the script > > then > > > > for eachFile in $1 > > do > > ... > > done > > This doesn't work either. Calling myscript with "myscript *" results > in $1 being file1 and then "for eachFile in $1" is "for file1" and then > only the first file gets processed. > > > would do it but the invocation would require single quotes. > > Please explain this. You lost me here. > > > > -- > Kim Lux, Diesel Research Inc. > > > -- > fedora-list mailing list > fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx > To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list >
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