From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 Return-Path: Received: (qmail 21982 invoked from network); 4 Feb 2003 19:59:01 -0000 Received: from sunsite.dk (130.225.247.90) by ns1.primenet.com.au with SMTP; 4 Feb 2003 19:59:01 -0000 Received: (qmail 15033 invoked by alias); 4 Feb 2003 19:58:25 -0000 Mailing-List: contact zsh-users-help@sunsite.dk; run by ezmlm Precedence: bulk X-No-Archive: yes X-Seq: 5882 Received: (qmail 15025 invoked from network); 4 Feb 2003 19:58:25 -0000 Received: from localhost (HELO sunsite.dk) (127.0.0.1) by localhost with SMTP; 4 Feb 2003 19:58:25 -0000 X-MessageWall-Score: 0 (sunsite.dk) Received: from [216.136.173.101] by sunsite.dk (MessageWall 1.0.8) with SMTP; 4 Feb 2003 19:58:25 -0000 Message-ID: <20030204195826.54693.qmail@web12303.mail.yahoo.com> Received: from [207.245.16.18] by web12303.mail.yahoo.com via HTTP; Tue, 04 Feb 2003 14:58:26 EST Date: Tue, 4 Feb 2003 14:58:26 -0500 (EST) From: Le Wang Subject: Re: Prompt themes To: Zsh users list In-Reply-To: <20030204194344.GC32379@io.com> MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii --- John Buttery wrote: > Are you saying there's a difference between playing with $fpath and > $FPATH (I mean, besides the syntactic differences of dealing with them, > I realize one's an array and the other's different...but a difference in > the results produced after the modification)? No. You can look at the two superficially as seperate representations of the same variable. I'm not sure what kind of magic Zsh performs internally. > > Perpend/append good; set bad. > > That depends on your definitions of good and bad. :) If it makes you > feel better, I have this line right above my normal FPATH-setting line > in .zshrc: > > #export FPATH="${HOME}/.zsh/functions:${FPATH}" > > It's there to be uncommented at any time; part of being > "debug-resilient". :) Ok. To each his own. -- Le ______________________________________________________________________ Post your free ad now! http://personals.yahoo.ca