It's true.
I use TCCLE (free version of Take Command) as a command-line shell on my
Windows machine. In an April round of updates, Windows 11 shifted to
opening TCCLE as a tab in a MS Terminal window rather than independently
as in the past. Fortunately, with a published hack I change Windows 11
back to the previous behavior.
Windows Terminal was there before the updates, but Windows didn't try as
aggressively to have us use it.
Maybe you are thinking of the Bash shell in Windows, part of the Windows
Subsystem for Linux? I don't use it myself; but, if I'm not mistaken,
you have to change some settings to activate WSL. Googling for
"bash shell" "Windows 11"
turns up many useful-looking pages. This one seems straightforward:
<https://mspoweruser.com/different-ways-to-run-shell-script-files-on-windows/>
Stan Brown
Tehachapi, CA, USA
https://BrownMath.com
On 2023-06-21 10:16, Christian Brabandt wrote:
>
>
>> Am 21.06.2023 um 18:13 schrieb Enan Ajmain <3nan.ajmain@gmail.com>:
>>
>> On Wed, 21 Jun 2023 13:41:03 +0100
>> Bram Moolenaar <Bram@moolenaar.net> wrote:
>>> Can we assume that MS Terminal is included with the distribution, or
>>> installed most widely? If so, then investing time in making this work
>>> properly is well worth it.
>>
>> Windows 11 comes with MS Terminal and is the default [1].
>
>
> Is this true? I thought I had to manually install it on my win 11 system.
>
> Thanks
> Chris
>
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