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Apparently the UNIX standard way of saying you want to execute a
program/script in the current directory is to prefix the command with
./

Yes, that's right.

Which as I look back at the OP, seems to be what Brain was doing....so
I'm not sure why he was getting an error! :)

Brian (not Brain) was getting the error because his script pointed to an
executable that didn't exist. The top line of his script contained
(beginning in position 1) :
#!/bin/ksh

When there was no /bin/ksh to be found. The message said that the script
could not be found, but in fact /bin/ksh could not be found.

Dennis Lovelady
http://www.linkedin.com/in/dennislovelady
--
"The ships hung in the sky in the same manner that bricks don't."
-- Douglas Adams




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