The way I've done it is I have an alias in the shell that sources a file that's created by the perl script:
apocalypse$ which c c is an alias for . ~/bin/mychdir $ cat ~/bin/mychdir # ~/bin/finddir $1 $2 $3 $4 $5 $6 $7 $8 $9 cd "`cat $HOME/.targetdir`"
The benefit is that it stays within the same shell, which means my history and background jobs are all still there.

-- zigdon


In reply to Re: How to make perl affect my shell by zigdon
in thread How to make perl affect my shell by jatill

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