Then they can disregard my advice obviously. But I saw plenty of others in this thread who seemed interested in it genuinely for practical reasons, and with all the times I've seen young devs disregard old mature solutions, I thought it'd be worth mentioning.
Besides, "runs anywhere bash does" isn't really useful for a personal project. Work is where you're likely to run into a weird variety of legacy machines, not in a personal project where you have more control.
Regardless, the weird aversion to hearing advice that can just be disregarded if it doesn't apply to your case baffles me.
Besides, "runs anywhere bash does" isn't really useful for a personal project. Work is where you're likely to run into a weird variety of legacy machines, not in a personal project where you have more control.
Regardless, the weird aversion to hearing advice that can just be disregarded if it doesn't apply to your case baffles me.