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Full Discussion: wildcard
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers wildcard Post 62127 by Perderabo on Friday 11th of February 2005 12:31:18 PM
Old 02-11-2005
The kernel doesn't know anything about metacharacters, but I don't really follow this question. If you don't quote a metacharacter, the shell will try to expand it. Quote the metacharacter and shell will leave it alone. So in:
grep "a*" filename
the grep command itself must deal with the asterisk. To the kernel * is just another character.
 

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ecppl(1)							Tntnet users guide							  ecppl(1)

NAME
ecppl - language-extractor for ecpp SYNOPSIS
ecppl [-I dir] [-ln] [-o output-filename] ecpp-filename DESCRIPTION
Ecppl is the language-extractor for ecpp. Ecpp - the template-language used with tntnet - supports internationalized applications. In ecpp-templates a tag <i18n> changes the meaning of curly braces. A phrase, which is enclosed in curly braces, can be translated. At run- time the phrase is looked up in a language-library. This mode can be quit with the tag </i18n>. Phrases must not have newlines or tabs. Every phrase, which is marked as translatable, is extracted with ecppl and written to standard output or to a specified output-filename line by line. OPTIONS
-I dir Search include-files in directory. This option can be passed multiple times. All specified directories are searched in turn for include-files. -l Extract language-phrases (the default) -n Extract non-language-phrases -o filename Specify output filename AUTHOR
This manual page was written by Tommi Makitalo <tommi@tntnet.org>. SEE ALSO
tntnet(1), ecpp(7), ecppll(1). Tntnet 2006-08-26 ecppl(1)
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