I tried setting the interpreter to /bin/sh and that didn't help either.

>>>>> "RM" == Rick Meyerhoff <rick at eworld3.net> writes:

 RM> John may be on to something (or maybe just "on" something ;-) ). My 
 RM> opinion is that you should always name the interpretor at the top of a 
 RM> script as he suggests. Heck it can't hurt to try.

 RM> Jon Schewe wrote:
 >>>>>>> "JF" == Johnny Fulcrum <johnnyfulcrum at mn.rr.com> writes:
 >> 
 >> 
 JF> On Fri, 21 Nov 2003 10:13:40 -0600, Jon Schewe <jpschewe at mtu.net> wrote:
 >> >> I've got some shell scripts that I've put on my desktop in KDE.  Some of
 >> >> them execute just fine, however when I click on others they just bring 
 >> >> up a
 >> >> dialog box that says "subjective.sh not found" where subjective.sh is the
 >> >> name of the shell script.
 >> 
 JF> Humm.. do the ones that work have a #!/usr/bin/bash (or whatever 
 JF> shell/interpeter you're using) as the first line?
 >> 
 >> Actually none of them have that.  If I write a shell script that's like so:
 >> echo `pwd` > /tmp/foo
 >> That works.  However if it's something like this:
 >> echo `pwd` > /tmp/foo
 >> echo $PATH >> /tmp/foo
 >> java -classpath foo.jar foo
 >> It doesn't work, however it does write to /tmp/foo and java is in the
 >> path.  If I open up a shell propmpt and type ./foo.sh (containing either
 >> set of commands) it works just fine.
 >> 
 >> 

 RM> -- 
 RM> Eric (Rick) Meyerhoff

-- 
Jon Schewe | http://mtu.net/~jpschewe | jpschewe at mtu.net
GPG signature at http://mtu.net/~jpschewe/gpg.sig.html
For I am convinced that neither death nor life, neither angels 
nor demons, neither the present nor the future, nor any 
powers, neither height nor depth, nor anything else in all 
creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God that 
is in Christ Jesus our Lord. - Romans 8:38-39

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