python 2.7.12 on Linux behaving differently than on Windows
Gregory Ewing
greg.ewing at canterbury.ac.nz
Thu Dec 8 16:25:52 EST 2016
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Thu Dec 8 16:25:52 EST 2016
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Grant Edwards wrote: > But _paths_ can, and Windows command-line apps and shells choke on > paths when written with "/" separators because way-back when the > MS-DOS "designers" decided to use "/" as the default option character. To be fair to them, the use of "/" for options can be traced back to earlier systems such as CP/M and RT-11, which didn't even have hierarchial file systems, so choice of path separators wasn't an issue. The "/" made a kind of sense in those systems, because options were thought of as annotations attached to an argument rather than as arguments in their own right. They were typically written straight after the argument they applied to without any space between, or after the command name itself if they didn't apply to any particular argument. -- Greg
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