. via Dng said on Thu, 13 Jan 2022 12:45:09 -0500
>The shell receives a series of tokens, and tries to interpret the
>first one as a command. In the double-quoted attempt above, it gets
>two tokens before the first pipe | ---
>
> 1) "cat -n"
>
> 2) /etc/fstab
>
>Of course, the system has no command named "cat -n". (And only a
>chaotic evil person would use a space in a command's name.) Something
>like
> "cat" "-n" /etc/fstab
>
>would work fine, the shell now sees three tokens (and the double
>quotes are completely unnecessary here), and the first is recognized
>as a command that's on the executable path.
>
>The same goes for "cat /etc/fstab" or "cat fstab", they're both just
>text strings that happen to include a space character.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
dng is correct !
SteveT
Steve Litt
Spring 2021 featured book: Troubleshooting Techniques of the Successful
Technologist
http://www.troubleshooters.com/techniques