Le 30/12/2017 à 02:07, Bart Schaefer a écrit : > On Fri, Dec 29, 2017 at 3:45 PM, Bart Schaefer > wrote: >> Mathieu wants execution to begin as soon as there is >> some code in the buffer, without waiting for the final keyword to >> appear. Where odes this quote come from, it seems I missed a message. Did someone replied to "zsh-workers@"? > Not-so-incidentally, the fact that zsh does NOT do this is one of the > primary reasons that zsh exists at all. Paul Falstad found it > distasteful that csh DOES that, and set out to create a shell that had > the interactive advantages of csh while preserving the separation of > parse and execution as found in sh and ksh. I was, of course, completely unaware of that. I would be interested with more technical details if you could provide me some links. And, just for memory, forcing execution at some explicit point is not my goal, but just a possible mean I considered to bypass the lake of a "keyword" reserved-keyword-command, similar to `command` and `builtin`. Implenting such a thing wouldn't require de abandon the separation of parse and execution, would it? Cheers