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Date:      Fri, 31 Dec 2004 21:38:20 -0600
From:      Adam Fabian <afabian@austin.rr.com>
To:        Michael Madden <madden@cmsrtp.com>
Cc:        freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: Programming with Bourne or C shell
Message-ID:  <20050101033820.GA602@turingmachine.mentalsiege.net>
In-Reply-To: <20050101032022.GA1890@cmsrtp.com>
References:  <20050101032022.GA1890@cmsrtp.com>

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On Fri, Dec 31, 2004 at 09:20:22PM -0600, Michael Madden wrote:
> http://www.faqs.org/faqs/unix-faq/shell/csh-whynot/
>
> Are most FreeBSD users still using csh or tcsh has their interactive
> shell and sh for programming?  I think it would be nice to use the
> same interactive and programming shell for consistency.

It's been my impression (in other words, this is all speculation based
on my statistically-insignificant interaction with other FreeBSD
users, reading the mailing list, etc.) that most FreeBSD users have
Bourne shells (bash, ksh93, pdksh) for interactive use and scripting.
Old-school users occasionally use tcsh for interactive use, and almost
no one scripts anything with csh/tcsh.

I wouldn't read too much into the defaults of any program.  Lots of
good UNIX programs have relatively poor defaults, in my experience.
In any case, you will always have some Bourne-based shell on anything
vaguely UNIX-ish, but may not have a csh-based shell.
-- 
Adam Fabian (afabian@austin.rr.com)



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