Greetings, Could someone give a ruling on a mild ambiguity in the AC_SUBST documentation? The documentation says: This value of variable should not contain literal newlines. Now, the point of that remark (and part of my question is: is this the only point?) is because the variable will be substituted within ./configure, in one of the s,@variable@,$variable, sed substitutions. However, do escaped newlines count in this prohibition? Writing AC_SUBST(variable) variable="blah\\ " does work (ie, it does include the newline in the substituted output file). Escaping newlines in this fashion is blessed by the sed documentation in the Single-Unix spec, and in all the sed man pages I have ready access to (including Digital Unix, which I've always found reliably primitive); furthermore I haven't come across problems with this in the (admittedly small) range of machines I've worked on, and this is not mentioned as a portability issue of seds in the `Portable Shell Programming' section of the autoconf documentation. Would anyone here counsel _against_ doing this, either * because the substituted variables are used elsewhere within autoconf in some _extremely_ obscure place that I haven't found yet; * because they _might_ in principle be so used; * or just on grounds of good taste? If so, then I'd suggest changing the AC_SUBST documentation to say `no, not even escaped newlines: don't do "..."'; if not, then I'd suggest changing it to something like `not contain unescaped newlines: thus you may do: "...", but not "..."'. I know about AC_SUBST_FILE, which potentially avoids this issue altogether, but in my particular case I'd rather avoid extra files; and also I'm curious about this! Thanks for any pointers. All the best, Norman -- --------------------------------------------------------------------------- Norman Gray http://www.astro.gla.ac.uk/users/norman/ Physics and Astronomy, University of Glasgow, UK norman@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx