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- Path: informatik.tu-muenchen.de!fu-berlin.de!news.mathworks.com!howland.erols.net!bloom-beacon.mit.edu!senator-bedfellow.mit.edu!faqserv
- From: tmatimar@isgtec.com (Ted Timar)
- Newsgroups: comp.unix.shell,news.answers,comp.answers
- Subject: Welcome to comp.unix.shell [Frequent posting]
- Supersedes: <unix-faq/shell/intro_845483118@rtfm.mit.edu>
- Followup-To: comp.unix.shell
- Date: 24 Oct 1996 09:47:59 GMT
- Organization: ISG Technologies Inc
- Lines: 206
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
- Distribution: world
- Expires: 14 Nov 1996 09:47:19 GMT
- Message-ID: <unix-faq/shell/intro_846150439@rtfm.mit.edu>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: bloom-picayune.mit.edu
- X-Last-Updated: 1996/06/11
- Originator: faqserv@bloom-picayune.MIT.EDU
- Xref: informatik.tu-muenchen.de comp.unix.shell:43907 news.answers:84909 comp.answers:21861
-
- Archive-name: unix-faq/shell/intro
- Version: $Id: intro,v 2.4 1995/03/28 14:14:12 tmatimar Exp $
-
- This article is a monthly attempt to remind potential posters about
- what is appropriate for comp.unix.shell. If you would like to make
- any suggestions about the content of this article, please contact
- its maintainer at tmatimar@isgtec.com.
-
- Many FAQs, including this one, are available on the archive site
- rtfm.mit.edu in the directory pub/usenet/news.answers.
- The name under which a FAQ is archived appears in the "Archive-Name:"
- line at the top of the article. This FAQ is archived as
- "unix-faq/shell/intro".
-
- Companion articles include the answers to some Frequently
- Asked Questions. You may save yourself a lot of time by reading
- those articles before posting a question to the net.
-
- If you have not already read the overall Usenet introductory material
- posted to "news.announce.newusers", please do. Much of this article
- overlaps with the common sense guidelines posted there.
-
- Should I Post My Shell Question to the Net?
-
- Often the answer is "No, you can get an answer a lot faster without
- posting a question." Before you post, you should try -
-
- o Reading the manual for your system. Some day you may encounter
- the phrase "RTFM", which stands for "Read the Fine Manual"
- (except 'F' doesn't really stand for "Fine"). If you ask
- someone a question and they tell you to RTFM, it's an
- indication that you haven't done your homework. For instance,
- if you are trying to make a script run under csh instead of sh,
- check the man page for "csh". It might tell you what you need
- to know.
-
- When people use terminology like "read(2)", they are referring
- to the "read" man page in section 2 of the manual (which you
- would see by using "man 2 read").
-
- o Finding a knowledgeable user at your site. Many sites have
- at least a few shell experts who will be happy to help you
- figure out how to specify that a script should be run by csh.
- Many larger sites, particularly universities, may even have
- paid consultants whose job is to help you with these problems.
- Check with them first.
-
- o Find a good introductory book on Unix shells and shell programming.
- There are plenty of such books available, and you will save yourself
- a lot of trouble by having one handy and consulting it frequently.
- (Question 1.5 in the companion articles will let you know
- where you can find a list of good books.)
-
- Please remember that the comp.unix.* newsgroups are read by over 80,000
- people around the world, and that posting a question to this group will
- cost a lot of time and money by the time your article is distributed to
- Asia, Australia, Europe (west and east), Africa, the middle east,
- all corners of North, South and Central America and even Antarctica.
-
- Also, some people receive these newsgroups as part of a mailing list
- rather than a newsgroup. If you're one of these people, please don't
- send a "Remove me from this list" or "UNSUBSCRIBE" message to the
- wrong place. Take the time to figure out where you're getting this
- stuff from, and send your request to the mailing list maintainer, *not*
- to the list or newsgroup itself! Ask your local postmaster for help.
- (One of the answers in the companion articles deals with the details of
- the mailing list.)
-
- To Which Newsgroup Should I Post My Question?
-
- The choice of newsgroup is harder than it used to be. In the old days,
- you just had to choose between "comp.unix.questions" and
- "comp.unix.wizards". Now there are a variety of more specific groups.
- This group, "comp.unix.shell" is only for questions relating to any of
- the Unix shells and shell programing. Other groups each have their own
- mandates.
-
- Choose one of the following groups carefully. If you aren't sure where
- your question belongs or if your question is not specific to some
- particular version of Unix, try "comp.unix.questions". Many
- knowledgeable Unix wizards read that group and will be able to help you.
-
- Here are the capsule descriptions of various groups you might consider
- (extracted from a monthly posting to "news.announce.newusers")
-
- comp.unix.shell Using and programming any UNIX shell.
-
- comp.unix.questions General questions from UNIX users and sysadmins.
- If your question isn't a really good match for one of
- the groups below, post it here.
-
- news.answers Repository for periodic USENET articles. (Moderated)
- This article is crossposted there.
- Do not try to post here unless you're
- posting a list of FAQ's and their answers.
-
- comp.lang.c Discussion about C.
-
- comp.sources.unix Postings of complete, UNIX-oriented sources. (Moderated)
- comp.std.unix Discussion for the P1003 committee on UNIX. (Moderated)
- comp.unix.admin Administering a Unix-based system.
- comp.unix.aix IBM's version of UNIX.
- comp.unix.amiga Unix on the Commodore Amiga
- comp.unix.aux The version of UNIX for Apple Macintosh II computers.
- comp.unix.bsd Discussions relating to BSD UNIX.
- comp.unix.internals Discussions on hacking UNIX internals.
- comp.unix.large UNIX on mainframes and in large networks.
- comp.unix.misc Various topics that don't fit other groups.
- comp.unix.programmer Q&A for people programming under Unix.
- comp.unix.ultrix Discussions about DEC's Ultrix.
- comp.unix.xenix.misc General discussions regarding XENIX (except SCO).
- comp.unix.xenix.sco XENIX versions from the Santa Cruz Operation.
- comp.os.linux.* Discussion about Linux ...
- comp.lang.perl Discussion about Perl
-
- comp.unix.wizards In-depth discussions of advanced unix topics.
- People should not post to this group unless they
- have used unix as a user, sysadmin and know details
- of the kernel, and how different unix kernels differ.
- In other words, don't post to comp.unix.wizards.
-
- What Information Should I Include?
-
- It's hard to include too much information. There are hundreds of
- different systems out there, and they all have less in common
- than you might think. If you have a problem and are posting an
- article, please be sure to mention:
-
- o A descriptive subject line. Many people will decide whether
- to read your article solely on the basis of the subject line,
- so it should be a good statement of your problem.
-
- NOT GOOD GOOD
-
- "Help" "How do I port csh scripts to ksh?"
- "Csh question" "csh dumps core when I use '$<'"
-
- o What computer you are using, what specific version of the
- operating system it uses, and to what shell the question
- pertains. For instance,
-
- SunOS 4.0.1, Sun 3/50, tcsh 6.00.03
- 4.3BSD-tahoe, Vax 11/780, rc 1.0
- SVR3.2, 3b2, sh 4.2
-
- o If possible, the *exact* text of any error message you
- may have encountered.
-
- WRONG RIGHT
-
- "My csh script doesn't run" "When I type 'scriptname', I get
- sh: scriptname: This isn't a shell script.
- What does this mean? It isn't in
- the man page. This is using crash 3.14
- under Mueslix 9.3 on a Fax 68086502"
-
- It's a good idea to post unrelated questions in separate articles,
- so that people can keep different discussions separate. It's also
- a *very* good idea to include a line or two like this:
-
- "Please mail your answers to me and I'll summarize what I get
- and post the results to comp.unix.shell."
-
- This prevents many identical responses from different users to the
- same question from clogging up the newsgroup. And make sure
- you really summarize what you get - don't just concatenate
- all the mail you've received.
-
- It's also a good idea to read comp.unix.shell for at least a couple
- of weeks after you post your article to see what followup articles
- are posted.
-
- Should I Post an Answer to a Question?
-
- It's very tempting to post an answer to a question you read on the net,
- especially when you think "Aha, finally - a question I can answer!"
- Consider though that when a simple question is asked, such as the
- sort answered in the companion articles, many other people around the
- world already know the answer and may be posting their own reply.
- In order to avoid dozens of replies to simple questions, please
- wait a day or so and see if anyone else has already answered
- the question. If you have something special to contribute, please
- do so, but make sure you're not duplicating something someone else has
- already done.
-
- You should feel free to reply to any question >by email<. Even if
- the user gets 200 responses to his question, at least the load on the
- rest of the net is minimized.
-
- What About Posting Source Code?
-
- Posting small amounts of example code is fine (use comp.sources.unix to
- distribute complete programs) - but please make sure that your code
- runs (or at least compiles) properly. Don't just type it in while
- editing your posting and hope it will work, no matter how sure you are
- that it will. We all make mistakes.
-
- What About Those People
- Who Continue to Ask Stupid or Frequently Asked Questions
- In Spite of The Frequently Asked Questions Document?
-
- Just send them a polite mail message, possibly referring them to this document.
- There is no need to flame them on the net - it's busy enough as it is.
- --
- Ted Timar - tmatimar@isgtec.com
- ISG Technologies Inc, 6509 Airport Rd., Mississauga, Ont., Canada L4V 1S7
-