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Re: Shush!
From: |
Mike Miller |
Subject: |
Re: Shush! |
Date: |
Fri, 20 Dec 2013 22:43:39 -0600 (CST) |
User-agent: |
Alpine 2.00 (DEB 1167 2008-08-23) |
On Wed, 23 Oct 2013, Damian Harty wrote:
I'm using octave as part of a larger process, calling it from the
command line with the -q argument to keep it quiet.
Except that it isn't. It publishes some warnings to standard error and
I'd rather it didn't. Is there a "no really, be quiet" mode?
At the moment I'm using it in a unix-style shell in Cygwin and so I
redirect "standard error" to /dev/null, like the good old days. This
does exactly what I want but I was curious if there is a "no stderr
output" option; I can't see it here:
http://www.gnu.org/software/octave/doc/interpreter/Command-Line-Options.html
It has been a couple of months, but I just saw this. In case it helps
anyone, with bash I just do this when I want to run something in the
background with no stdout or stderr:
process &>/dev/null &
The "&>" catches both.
Mike
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