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Re: disable zsh/newuser
- X-seq: zsh-users 11501
- From: Tim Haynes <zsh@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- To: zsh-users@xxxxxxxxxx
- Subject: Re: disable zsh/newuser
- Date: Fri, 18 May 2007 21:52:16 +0100
- In-reply-to: <200705181524.l4IFObDS007988@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> (Peter Stephenson's message of "Fri, 18 May 2007 16:24:37 +0100")
- Mailing-list: contact zsh-users-help@xxxxxxxxxx; run by ezmlm
- References: <20070517225932.GA581@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> <200705180920.l4I9KW7w004253@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> <20070518150340.GA9952@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> <200705181524.l4IFObDS007988@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Reply-to: Tim Haynes <zsh@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Sender: Tim Haynes <piglet@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Peter Stephenson <pws@xxxxxxx> writes:
[snip]
> It sounds like I've misunderstood your problem; I thought the problem
> *was* getting rid of it completely, but you want to leave it, just not
> run it by default. Actually, deleting the script will allow just that:
> if you look in the script you'll find it simply invokes a function that
> you can run from the command line. Alternatively, you can simply rename
> the script and let people source it under some other name. It's there
> exactly to allow customization without affecting the business end of the
> process in the function zsh-newuser-install.
Why not touch /etc/skel/zshrc or .zshrc ?
~Tim
--
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