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03-11-2003, 10:16 AM
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#1
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Member
Registered: Jun 2001
Location: Louisville, KY USA
Distribution: RedHat and Debian
Posts: 89
Rep:
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Does anyone know the origin of using "~" to represent the user's home directory?
This has been a question I've been wanting to ask. Recently, it came to my attention that I've known that "~" represents the user's home directory in BASH for many years, but I haven't a clue why.
I've done a little google-ing too and couldn't come up with anything either.
Any uber-geeks out there have an answer?
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03-11-2003, 10:32 AM
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#2
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Moderator
Registered: Nov 2002
Location: Kent, England
Distribution: Debian Testing
Posts: 19,192
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Bearing in mind that Linux is a Unix variant, it probably comes from Unix.
Couldn't find anything on why that is the way it is though.
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03-11-2003, 10:56 AM
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#3
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Moderator
Registered: May 2001
Posts: 29,417
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Me neither, only thing I know is it's a shell-specific thingie to do brace/tilde/dollarsign expansion.
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03-11-2003, 12:16 PM
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#4
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Senior Member
Registered: Sep 2002
Location: Arizona, US, Earth
Distribution: Slackware, (Non-Linux: Solaris 7,8,9; OSX; BeOS)
Posts: 1,152
Rep:
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03-11-2003, 01:11 PM
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#5
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Member
Registered: Jun 2001
Location: Louisville, KY USA
Distribution: RedHat and Debian
Posts: 89
Original Poster
Rep:
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Cool moses, thanks for the link. Wish there was a definitive answer, but like Mick Jagger said, you can't always get what you want.
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03-13-2003, 05:44 AM
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#6
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Member
Registered: Feb 2003
Location: god's judge
Posts: 376
Rep:
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but if you try some times, you just might find, that you get what you need.
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10-14-2003, 03:42 PM
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#7
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LQ Newbie
Registered: Oct 2003
Posts: 8
Rep:
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The tilde is meaningless in the bourne shell on an IBM EXL server.
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