You and Hans both missed my point. I was telling you to do it nor not, I was not doing it for you. I usually have my root account aliased to -i my personal account without. As root I prefer the extra check as me I don't care as much. As I said, I prefer to teach about alias so they know what is going on. On Wed, 2003-03-12 at 23:05, Lynn David Newton wrote: > >> ... I teach them about the alias so they know what > >> is going on. If they man rmi or cpi they will not > >> find it so that is a much worse idea then just a > >> bit of explanation. > > der> "rm *" in a directory and expecting to be able > der> to say yes or no to every file will not work. > der> "ksh: rmi: command not found" is easier to deal > der> with than lost data. > > I'm with Hans on this one. In 19 years of using Unix, I > could probably count on one hand the number of times > I've used the -i flag to rm. Or maybe on two hands. > > The correct behavior of rm is not to ask the user for > confirmation. That's what they should learn, and also > how to deal with it. > > It infuriates me when someone changes the defaults for > me. I remember when I first started using Red Hat it > frustrated me that no matter what I did it would ask me > for confirmation. It was so far beyond my ability to > comprehend that someone would have the audacity to > change the behavior of a Unix command that had worked > fine the way it is since 1969 that it didn't occur to > me until sometime later that RH had aliased it. A big > fat boo to them for doing that. > > Users who want that sort of behavior are entitled to > create it themselves. > > Somehow it reminds me of when I drove a U-Haul from the > coast of Maine to Arizona in 1978. The truck had a > governor on it that prevented me from going faster than > 40 miles an hour with the pedal to the metal, maybe 45 > if I was going downhill. Presumably someone at U-Haul > thought they were doing customers a safety favor by > forcing them to drive 15 miles under the speed limit > all the way across the country. -- David IS Mandala gpg fingerprint 8932 E7EF CCF5 1B8C 1B5C A92E C678 795E 45B2 D952 Phoenix, AZ (480) 460-7545 HP, (602) 741-1363 CP http://www.them.com/~davidm/