Path: utzoo!utgpu!jarvis.csri.toronto.edu!mailrus!tut.cis.ohio-state.edu!bloom-beacon!apple!vsi1!daver!lynx!m5 From: m5@lynx.uucp (Mike McNally) Newsgroups: comp.unix.wizards Subject: Reading from stderr Message-ID: <5437@lynx.UUCP> Date: 12 Apr 89 17:47:32 GMT Reply-To: m5@lynx.UUCP (Mike McNally) Distribution: na Organization: Lynx Real-Time Systems Inc, Campbell CA Lines: 18 Am I in good company in believing that a program that reads from standard error is a naughty program? It seems to be done (usually) as an alternative to the horrible drudgery of opening /dev/tty. I ask because I'm facing the problem of fixing our OS to cope with this (actually it'll just be a minor, even trivial, change to init, and maybe some stuff in the stdio library). Maybe I'm old fashioned, but if I want to read a response from the terminal I figure it's best to go ahead and open the tty. I mean, somebody invented /dev/tty for that very reason; hell, even RSTS has KB:! Uncompress does it, by the way; that's the only thing about the compress stuff I can find to complain about. -- Mike McNally Lynx Real-Time Systems uucp: {voder,athsys}!lynx!m5 phone: 408 370 2233 Where equal mind and contest equal, go.