Which Shell?

Which shell? Normally the programming language does not specify existence of any shells or others environmental tasks. What happens if the program is run as an OS driver, a system service, or without any OS at all on the bare board? Otherwise, how does this task differ from Execute a System Command? Does spawning a shell qualify? --Dmitry-kazakov 13:15, 26 August 2008 (UTC)

I guess we could restrict it to mean systems that have command line shells such as bash/tcsh/... on Unix systems, cmd.exe on Windows, or posix-like shells. Maybe we should state what shell the command line is compatible with? --Paddy3118 13:55, 26 August 2008 (UTC)

The examples on the page seem to indicate that the task is running a line of the programming language from a shell; and not doing anything of the shell from the programming language. I am not sure exactly what you are allowed to use; because the OCaml example just echoes a string and pipes it into the ocaml program. You can do that with any language with an interpreter that reads from standard input, so it seems kind of trivial. --Spoon! 19:25, 26 August 2008 (UTC)

As far as I know one-liners are just anything you can fit into a line (or more...!) of a shell, to do a task. So it is ok if you feed an interpreter with input through pipe, at least I believe so. --ShinTakezou 11:02, 9 February 2009 (UTC)

About C and /tmp

Yes but this way it won't work on environments that have not /tmp, or use other convention for directory separator (e.g. \ instead of /); I suppose it would have not worked anyway out of a posix-like shell... --ShinTakezou 11:00, 9 February 2009 (UTC)

Return to "Shell one-liner" page.