I'm sorry to disapoint you Jason but I'm talking about zopesh Copyrighted by Stefane Fermigier, www.fermigier.com. Jason Cunliffe wrote:
"Jose Soares" <jose@sferacarta.com> wrote:
Fine. Actually I'm using a version of zopesh implemented by me with such commands and I find those very useful. IMHO this is the very powerful of a shell. The other day I needed to change the words: <dtml-in "qry.provincie()"> with <dtml-in "mtd.provincie(reg='ER')"> in a great number of documents using sed 's/<dtml-in "qry.provincie()">/<dtml-in "mtd.provincie(reg='ER')">/g' * I did this job in a while. Imagine you what hard work searching and changing it by hand.
Jose that's great.. Are you going to post the sed code somehere?
Even though I do not know sed very well, I would still love to have it included in the toolkit. Your exmle alone is rason to learn to use it well.
Is your version a completely separate one from Jerome's or an extension? Either way, everyone will benefit if you can merge your work asap :-)
ZShells really bring Zope in line with the core Python design philosophy of interactive command line interpreter. They are a really important exciting addition to Zope and its Management Interface. Also cuold be connected in interesting ways to backend Python manipulation of Zope [live using ZEO].
I look forwards to having ZShell scripting .. any ideas how to do this right?
today's top 10 wishlist-->
1. grep 2. find 3. history 4. pipes 5. if then loops 6. while do 7. environment variables 8. regular expressions 9. .zsh scripts 10 .zrc config
./Jason ___________________________________________________________ Jason CUNLIFFE = NOMADICS['Interactive Art and Technology']