Unix must have been delivered told then. John Love-Jensen wrote: > > As far as I am aware, Unix only looked in the current working directory 30 > years ago if you told it to. > Using the bash shell, put this in your ~/.bashrc file: > PATH=.:$PATH > I did a cat .bashrc and looked at the file. How do I see it's presence with ls? More importantly, how do I use the bash shell to put the current working directory directory on the front of the path. Why is it not an editor job? What command do I use to see the current path? Where is it stored? Sorry to be so Ignorant. -- View this message in context: http://www.nabble.com/installed%2C-compiled%2C-how-to-link--tf4006142.html#a11385510 Sent from the gcc - Help mailing list archive at Nabble.com.