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Full Discussion: messed up path
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers messed up path Post 302498130 by davcra on Saturday 19th of February 2011 03:34:43 PM
Old 02-19-2011
messed up path

Help!!

Seem to have messed up my path, as I keep getting command not found error. Could someone please tell whats wrong or how to fix it.

Code:
export PATH=/opt/local/bin:/opt/local/sbin:/usr/bin:$PATH

---------- Post updated at 08:34 PM ---------- Previous update was at 07:50 PM ----------

nevermind all is well again............. for nowSmilie
 

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ttk::frame(n)							 Tk Themed Widget						     ttk::frame(n)

__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

NAME
ttk::frame - Simple container widget SYNOPSIS
ttk::frame pathName ?options? _________________________________________________________________ DESCRIPTION
A ttk::frame widget is a container, used to group other widgets together. STANDARD OPTIONS
-class -cursor -takefocus -style See the ttk_widget manual entry for details on the standard options. WIDGET-SPECIFIC OPTIONS [-borderwidth borderWidth] The desired width of the widget border. Defaults to 0. [-relief relief] One of the standard Tk border styles: flat, groove, raised, ridge, solid, or sunken. Defaults to flat. [-padding padding] Additional padding to include inside the border. [-width width] If specified, the widget's requested width in pixels. [-height height] If specified, the widget's requested height in pix- els. WIDGET COMMAND
Supports the standard widget commands configure, cget, identify, instate, and state; see ttk::widget(n). NOTES
Note that if the pack, grid, or other geometry managers are used to manage the children of the frame, by the GM's requested size will nor- mally take precedence over the frame widget's -width and -height options. pack propagate and grid propagate can be used to change this. SEE ALSO
ttk::widget(n), ttk::labelframe(n), frame(n) KEYWORDS
widget, frame, container Tk 8.5 ttk::frame(n)
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