/usr/bin/tty is a program that tells you what tty you are using. For
example:
[nobody@nowhere /]$ tty
/dev/tty100
Obviously, these values are not real. Just run "tty". It's very simple.
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| Fenestrae delendae sunt. |
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| smilax@mindmeld.dyn.ml.org |
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On Thu, 16 Apr 1998, mike wrote:
> I know this is a bit off topic, but i wasn't sure where else to ask it.... Several progs i have dl'ed lately have been asking for
> the program wish (wish(8) to be precise) and i can't find it anywhere. I am running Slackware 3.4 ftp'd version and I'd really
> like to build these progs.
>
> TIA
>
> Mike
>
> PS: is there a system call that i can build into a shell script (bash) to retrieve the current tty (the one that the bash is
> running on when making the call)???
>
> TAIA
>
>
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