gtsop 9 hours ago I've been always using -r for grep so it never occured to me that such a thing could happenLooks like user error to me tbh, similar to `rm -rf /`. Should `rm` give a warning when / is the argument?
I've been always using -r for grep so it never occured to me that such a thing could happen
Looks like user error to me tbh, similar to `rm -rf /`. Should `rm` give a warning when / is the argument?