UNIX Shell. Also see C Shell and Bourne Shell.
An HP-UX shell, featuring command history recall and line-editing. Invoked as /usr/bin/ksh. As of the 10.0 Release of HP-UX, this shell is obsolete, replaced by the POSIX shell.
One of the shells available in the Unix operating system. The Korn shell is an extended version of the Bourne shell that includes many of the features of the C shell. LAN Local Area Network.
A version of the Unix shell developed by David Korn from AT&T Bell Labs and referred to as ksh. It combines the best features of the Bourne shell and the C shell.
Written by David Korn, it is compatible with the Bourne shell, but provides a much wider range of programming features. The Korn shell also offers improved versions of many of the C shell's interactive features. To start a Korn shell from the command line, type ksh and press Enter. See also Bourne shell and C shell.
A shell, created by David Korn, which is one of the standard shells in SVR4. The Korn shell provides enhanced features such as command line editing and a history file.
A user interface for UNIX with extensive scripting (programming) support. Written by David G. Korn. The shell features command line editing and will also accept scripts written for the Bourne Shell.
The Korn shell (ksh) is a Unix shell which was developed by David Korn (AT&T Bell Laboratories) in the early 1980s. It is wholly upwards compatible with the Bourne shell and includes many features of the C shell as well, such as a command history, which was inspired by the requests of Bell Labs users.