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1.1 root 1: .TH PD 1P "22 June 1983"
2: .UC 4
3: .SH NAME
4: pd \- change working project directory
5: .SH SYNOPSIS
6: .B pd
7: [\fB\-dp\fR] [dirname]
8: .SH DESCRIPTION
9: .I Dirname
10: becomes the new working directory.
11: .I Dirname
12: may be either a project or a regular directory.
13: .PP
14: Given without any arguments,
15: .I pd
16: returns you to the root directory of the current working project.
17: .PP
18: If
19: .I dirname
20: is a project directory in another project,
21: .I pd
22: makes that project the current working project.
23: .SH OPTIONS
24: .IP \fB\-d\fR
25: Print project directory description.
26: .IP \fB\-p\fR
27: Push old working directory onto the directory stack. The current working
28: project is not changed.
29: .SH EXAMPLE
30: To change to the `work' directory of a project named `spms':
31: .PP
32: pd ^spms^work
33: .SH "SEE ALSO"
34: cd(1), csh(1)
35: .SH DIAGNOSTICS
36: Exit status 0 is normal. Exit status 1 indicates an error.
37: .SH AUTHOR
38: Peter J. Nicklin
39: .SH BUGS
40: .I Pd
41: is provided only for C shell,
42: .I csh,
43: users because it is an aliased command. The `.cshrc' file in your
44: home directory should contain the following alias:
45: .PP
46: alias pd \'eval \`\^"pd" \\!*\`\^\'
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