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Top Forums UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers Sudo to root, but keep my own aliases? Post 303031004 by paqman on Wednesday 20th of February 2019 10:44:59 AM
Old 02-20-2019
Quote:
Originally Posted by bakunin
Well, challenge him then: if he is not able to find a solution for the problem of separating his environment from the system environment and still get his environment for his own sessions then he is not gods own gift but simply less accomplished to put it in gentle terms. The ancient greeks (sometimes it pays to have endured four years of ancient greek and 6 years of latin in school) had a word for "layman", "private citizen" (as opposed to "office holder") or, generally, "unskilled [one]". You may want to look it up eventually. ;-))

bakunin
Ha, well I actually just told him I was going to change it back, and he just shrugged and let it go. Which is funny because when I talked to him about it the other day he was pretty adamant about leaving it. Anyway, I really didn't want to jump through a bunch of hoops to accomplish it, so it works out that he just let it go.

The funny thing is, he's really not unskilled, he's pretty good at his job, problem is he knows it, and is very condescending and just very short with everyone. Thanks for the suggestions everyone, wish I could say I used them to come up with a cool solution, when really I just needed to deal with the human aspect. :-)
 

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FORTUNE(6)							 BSD Games Manual							FORTUNE(6)

NAME
fortune -- print a random, hopefully interesting, adage SYNOPSIS
fortune [-aefilosw] [-m pattern] [[N%] file/dir/all] DESCRIPTION
When fortune is run with no arguments it prints out a random epigram. Epigrams are divided into several categories, where each category is subdivided into those which are potentially offensive and those which are not. The options are as follows: -a Choose from all lists of maxims, both offensive and not. (See the -o option for more information on offensive fortunes.) -e Consider all fortune files to be of equal size (see discussion below on multiple files). -f Print out the list of files which would be searched, but don't print a fortune. -i Ignore case for -m patterns. -l Long dictums only. -m pattern Print out all fortunes which match the regular expression pattern. See regex(3) for a description of patterns. -o Choose only from potentially offensive aphorisms. Please, please, please request a potentially offensive fortune if and only if you believe, deep down in your heart, that you are willing to be offended. (And that if you are, you'll just quit using -o rather than give us grief about it, okay?) ... let us keep in mind the basic governing philosophy of The Brotherhood, as handsomely summarized in these words: we believe in healthy, hearty laughter -- at the expense of the whole human race, if needs be. Needs be. --H. Allen Smith, "Rude Jokes" -s Short apothegms only. -w Wait before termination for an amount of time calculated from the number of characters in the message. This is useful if it is exe- cuted as part of the logout procedure to guarantee that the message can be read before the screen is cleared. The user may specify alternative sayings. You can specify a specific file, a directory which contains one or more files, or the special word all, which says to use all the standard databases. Any of these may be preceded by a percentage, which is a number N between 0 and 100 inclusive, followed by a '%' character. If it is, there will be an N percent probability that an adage will be picked from that file or directory. If the percentages do not sum to 100, and there are specifications without percentages, the remaining percent will apply to those files and/or directories, in which case the probability of selecting from one of them will be based on their relative sizes. As an example, given two databases funny and not-funny, with funny twice as big, saying $ fortune funny not-funny will get you fortunes out of funny two-thirds of the time. The command $ fortune 90% funny 10% not-funny will pick out 90% of its fortunes from funny (the ``10%'' is unnecessary, since 10% is all that's left). The -e option says to consider all files equal; thus $ fortune -e is equivalent to $ fortune 50% funny 50% not-funny Datafiles for fortune are created by the strfile(8) utility, which is not installed by default, The source code for this utility can be found in /usr/src/games/fortune/strfile, if it exists. FILES
/usr/share/games/fortune/* Fortune files. SEE ALSO
regex(3), random(6), rot13(6) BSD
September 9, 2004 BSD
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