On Sun, Oct 27, 2019 at 2:31 PM Noel Chiappa wrote: > > From: Charles Anthony > > > /home/CAnthony > > I think it was >user_dir_dir>Group>User, wasn't it? I seem to remember my > homedir on MIT-Multics was >udd>CSR>JNChiappa? > > >user_dir_dir>Project>User >user_dir_dir Home directories of users >daemon_dir_dir Home directories of daemons >process_dir_dir /proc "Names" are aliases, similar to soft links; "udd" is a name for "user_dir_dir" so ">udd" and ">user_dir_dir" point to the same directory. >user_dir_dir>SysAdmin>admin or >udd>sa>a is ~root/ Circulating back to the original question, backslash is used as an escape character on Multics. "\f" is end-of-file-ish, used eg to leave input mode in text editors. -- Charles And I wonder if the 'dd' directory on PDP-7 Unix owe anything to 'udd'? > > Getting back to the original query, I'm wondering if '/' was picked > as it wasn't shifted, unlike '>'? > > Noel > -- X-Clacks-Overhead: GNU Terry Pratchett