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Re: Using the "at" command
Thanks for educating me. I just did "which at" as well as "man at" on
Linux machine and learned that it was indeed a UNIX command. Sorry for
my ignorance ;p So where is Cygwin "at"?
-Tak
From: "Michael A. Chase" <mchase@ix.netcom.com>
Date: Tue, 17 Jul 2001 18:15:23 -0700
Subject: Re: Using the "at" command
> In most UNIXes, 'at' is used to run something once at a later time.
> --
> Mac :})
> ** I normally forward private questions to the appropriate mail list. **
> Give a hobbit a fish and he eats fish for a day.
> Give a hobbit a ring and he eats fish for an age.
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Tak Ota" <Takaaki.Ota@am.sony.com>
> To: <cygwin@cygwin.com>
> Sent: Tuesday, July 17, 2001 16:35
> Subject: Re: Using the "at" command
>
>
> > bash-2.05$ which at
> > /cygdrive/c/WINNT/system32/at
> > bash-2.05$
> >
> > I think "at" is a Windoze command. Install cron and use crontab -e
> > instead.
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