> From: Paul Winalski
> So when were REs first designed and implemented? I would imagine that
> they came about as a way to extend the old '*' and '?' wildcard syntax,
> but that is only a guess.
I would suspect in the context of editors, not command file-naming. Don't
have time to research it, though. Try checking CTSS, early Multics, etc.
Noel
Doug McIlroy:
One curious fact is that from day one the word hase been pronounced glob,
not globe. (By contrast, creat has been variously pronounced cree-at
and create.)
=====
On the other hand, the UNIX Room pronunciation of `cron' rhymed with
bone, not with spawn.
Norman Wilson
Toronto ON
> From: Ron Minnich
> Why was it called glob? I always wondered.
Something about global expressions.
I recall reading about this somewhere; I tried looking in the man page:
http://minnie.tuhs.org/cgi-bin/utree.pl?file=V1/man/man7/glob.7
but it didn't go into any detail. I don't know where I could have seen it,
alas...
Noel
Probably no one here wants it, but I have a DR11-W UNIBUS board:
http://bitsavers.trailing-edge.com/pdf/dec/unibus/DR11W_UsersMan.pdf
It's basically a 16-bit DMA interface that can actually do 500Kw per
second (woo hoo! 1MB/sec!) to another DR11-W
Anyone need it? Want it?
Figured I'd try here first, in case we had some historic UNIX people
that were still running a UNIBUS PDP-11 (or VAX).
No takers in a few weeks, I'll try the museums next.
thanks
art k.
> From: Toby Thain
> Are we to infer that neither Noel and Clem are "good homes"?
Well, I said something like 'I don't have an immediate need for it, but I'd
be happy to take it', so I guess the question is 'does someone have an
actual, immediate use for it' (which I don't)?
Noel