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#21218
ls -d
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Ah yes -do is the same as -d -o, overlooked that. Looks like most the
alphabet is already taken, o is taken, n is taken, l is taken, is y still
available? (Am I seeing this right, only -e and -y are still unused?)
On Mon, Aug 10, 2015 at 1:47 PM, Eric Blake <eblake <at> redhat.com> wrote:
> On 08/10/2015 01:09 PM, Sneeh, Eddie wrote:
>
> > Since these switches are already taken to do other things, what do you
> > think about this:
> > % ls -fo (list files only)
> > % ls -lo (list links only)
> > % ls -do (list directories only)
>
> Won't work. 'ls -o' is already a valid command, so 'ls -fo' is the same
> as 'ls -o -f' or 'ls -f -o'. You can't start a long-option name with a
> single dash; at least, not in coreutils which uses getopt_long() (there
> are some exceptions, like gcc, which use getopt_long_only() for
> historical reasons, and which therefore can spell long options with a
> single dash if there is no ambiguity, but use of getopt_long_only() is
> not recommended in new programs).
>
> --
> Eric Blake eblake redhat com +1-919-301-3266
> Libvirt virtualization library http://libvirt.org
>
>
--
Best Regards,
*Eddie Sneeh*
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This bug report was last modified 9 years and 289 days ago.
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