C shell
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− | /bin/csh is where you'll find the binary of the C shell, so called because its syntax is very like the C programming language. It was written by Bill Joy of Sun Microsystems and is the only other shell besides the spartan [[Bourne shell]] (/bin/sh) that comes installed by default on a freshly-installed FreeBSD system. | + | /bin/csh is where you'll find the binary of the C shell, so called because its syntax is very like the C programming language. It was written by Bill Joy of Sun Microsystems and is the only other shell besides the spartan [[Bourne shell]] (/bin/sh) that comes installed by default on a freshly-installed FreeBSD system. |
− | Other shells that you can install and customize for ease of use | + | FreeBSD actually uses the tcsh variant of the csh. If you run '''ls -i /bin/*csh''' you'll see that /bin/csh is a hardlink to /bin/tcsh (meaning they are actually the same file). |
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+ | Other shells that you can install and customize for ease of use include the [[bash]], [[psh]], [[ksh]], and [[zsh]] shells. | ||
[[Category: Shells]] | [[Category: Shells]] |
Latest revision as of 16:21, 25 August 2012
/bin/csh is where you'll find the binary of the C shell, so called because its syntax is very like the C programming language. It was written by Bill Joy of Sun Microsystems and is the only other shell besides the spartan Bourne shell (/bin/sh) that comes installed by default on a freshly-installed FreeBSD system.
FreeBSD actually uses the tcsh variant of the csh. If you run ls -i /bin/*csh you'll see that /bin/csh is a hardlink to /bin/tcsh (meaning they are actually the same file).
Other shells that you can install and customize for ease of use include the bash, psh, ksh, and zsh shells.