Hi, FWIW the reason why you see it in your Ubuntu setup is most likely rooted in the `/etc/skel/.bashrc` file that contains this: # don't put duplicate lines or lines starting with space in the history. # See bash(1) for more options HISTCONTROL=ignoreboth Ciao, Johannes On Sun, 19 Mar 2023, sang.tts.designer@xxxxxxxxx wrote: > Dear Martin, > What a very quick response! > I just tried your recommendation, and it works. > There is no word that can explain my appreciation, to be honest! > Thanks a million. > > -- > Thanks and Best Regards! > --------------------------------------------------- > Sang Truong Tan > > Department of Electronics > HCMC University of Technology > Phone: (+84) 977 600 563 or (+84) 908 983 574 > Email: mailto:sang.tts.designer@xxxxxxxxx > > From: Martin Ågren <mailto:martin.agren@xxxxxxxxx> > Sent: Sunday, March 19, 2023 7:28 PM > To: mailto:sang.tts.designer@xxxxxxxxx > Cc: mailto:git@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > Subject: Re: Bug Report with Git Bash > > Hi, > > On Sunday, 19 March 2023, <mailto:sang.tts.designer@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > This is a relatively simple bug. when we double-type a command, like 'ls'. > However, in the Ubuntu environment, the command only occurs once when we > press the top arrow to use the prior command. > It is identical when using git bash. > Repeat these steps: > Type "ls: in git bash. > 2. Type "ls" once more. > 3. To return to the previous command, use the top arrow. > As you can see, the number of times we type the can command 'ls' does not > matter; it only needs to occur once. > > This depends on how your shell is configured. > > Look into HISTCONTROL and ignoredups. > > You might want something like > > export HISTCONTROL=ignoredups > > in ~/.bashrc. > > Martin > >