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Full Discussion: Mac OS X & Unix.
Special Forums UNIX Desktop Questions & Answers Mac OS X & Unix. Post 20088 by dani++ on Saturday 20th of April 2002 03:46:04 PM
Old 04-20-2002
You can check out Fink (a MacOSX-based source and package manager) at http://fink.sourceforge.net

It will help you install and use hundreds of UNIX programs, more and more are added everyday. You can install the 'bash' shell if you like (MacOSX ships with 'tcsh' by defaut). There is a good bash manual http://www.linuxdoc.org on the 'Guides' section.

You can also check out various GUI UNIX frontends for MacOSX at http://www.versiontracker.com/macosx
Check out 'OpenMan' wich is a good manual page ('man page') frontend for MacOSX, very useful to learn CLI commands.

Quote:
It is safe to say that MAC OS X is growing very fast, but does not have as many command line utilities (Yet!) as older UNIX systems. After all, MAC OS X is barely a year old!!!
MacOSX is a year old but as you know it is NeXTSTEP based which is fairly old in itself (not mentioning its FreeBSD roots). There are so many commands and utilites that it's easy to get lost... Smilie Just installing 'cpan' opens a vast perl universe.


dani++
 

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lib(3pm)						 Perl Programmers Reference Guide						  lib(3pm)

NAME
lib - manipulate @INC at compile time SYNOPSIS
use lib LIST; no lib LIST; DESCRIPTION
This is a small simple module which simplifies the manipulation of @INC at compile time. It is typically used to add extra directories to perl's search path so that later "use" or "require" statements will find modules which are not located on perl's default search path. Adding directories to @INC The parameters to "use lib" are added to the start of the perl search path. Saying use lib LIST; is almost the same as saying BEGIN { unshift(@INC, LIST) } For each directory in LIST (called $dir here) the lib module also checks to see if a directory called $dir/$archname/auto exists. If so the $dir/$archname directory is assumed to be a corresponding architecture specific directory and is added to @INC in front of $dir. To avoid memory leaks, all trailing duplicate entries in @INC are removed. Deleting directories from @INC You should normally only add directories to @INC. If you need to delete directories from @INC take care to only delete those which you added yourself or which you are certain are not needed by other modules in your script. Other modules may have added directories which they need for correct operation. The "no lib" statement deletes all instances of each named directory from @INC. For each directory in LIST (called $dir here) the lib module also checks to see if a directory called $dir/$archname/auto exists. If so the $dir/$archname directory is assumed to be a corresponding architecture specific directory and is also deleted from @INC. Restoring original @INC When the lib module is first loaded it records the current value of @INC in an array @lib::ORIG_INC. To restore @INC to that value you can say @INC = @lib::ORIG_INC; CAVEATS
In order to keep lib.pm small and simple, it only works with Unix filepaths. This doesn't mean it only works on Unix, but non-Unix users must first translate their file paths to Unix conventions. # VMS users wanting to put [.stuff.moo] into # their @INC would write use lib 'stuff/moo'; NOTES
In the future, this module will likely use File::Spec for determining paths, as it does now for Mac OS (where Unix-style or Mac-style paths work, and Unix-style paths are converted properly to Mac-style paths before being added to @INC). SEE ALSO
FindBin - optional module which deals with paths relative to the source file. AUTHOR
Tim Bunce, 2nd June 1995. perl v5.8.0 2002-06-01 lib(3pm)
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