OK - I've seen the "posts can't contain that content" messages; now I got one popping up when I try to post this comment in response to a comment to me:
@Ole: thanks for the [URL](http: // efreedom .com /Question/2-96245/Linux-Debian-Pee-Moreutils) (though I had to fix it with the correct scheme and no embedded spaces). I note that
peehas different semantics fromtpipeon several counts: most notably,tpipekeeps writing to available pipes until they are all closed, rather than stopping on the first error aspeedoes. Thebashfacilities are good ifbashis reliably available on all platforms of interest, saving me the job. (The URL in the tail of my answer points to the same notation, but not the same article) as yours.
Is EFreedom on the banned URL list too? Or is there a bug in the comments on SO? Well, since the "Sorry, posts can't contain that content" message pops up, I guess the answer is "Yes, EFreedom is a banned URL".
- How can we tell which URLs are banned and where is the explanation of why they are banned?
- Is it really necessary to ban them?
- The error message needs to explain what is wrong - or provide a link to the explanation of what is wrong.
I ended up getting this comment posted:
@Ole: thanks for the URL (I had to fix it with the correct scheme and no embedded spaces, but SO is being nasty about EFreedom). I note that pee has different semantics from tpipe on several counts: most notably, tpipe keeps writing to available pipes until they are all closed, rather than stopping on the first error as pee does. The bash facilities are good if bash is reliably available on all platforms of interest, saving me the job. (The URL in the tail of my answer points to the same notation, but not the same article) as yours.
But it shouldn't be that damn hard!