KSH-93 VS. KSH-88


The following is a list of known incompatibilities between ksh-93 and ksh-88.
I have not include cases that are clearly bugs in ksh-88.  I also have
omitted features that are completely upward compatible.

1.      Functions, defined with name() with ksh-93 are compatible with
       the POSIX standard, not with ksh-88.  No local variables are
       permitted, and there is no separate scope.  Functions defined
       with the function name syntax, maintain compatibility.
       This also affects function traces.

2.      ! is now a reserved word.  As a result, any command by that
       name will no longer work with ksh-93.

3.      The -x attribute of alias and typeset -f is no longer
       effective and the ENV file is only read for interactive
       shells.  You need to use FPATH to make function definitions
       visible to scripts.

4.      A built-in command named command has been added which is
       always found before the PATH search.  Any script which uses
       this name as the name of a command (or function) will not
       be compatible.

5.      The output format for some built-ins has changed.  In particular
       the output format for set, typeset and alias now have single
       quotes around values that have special characters.  The output
       for trap without arguments has a format that can be used as input.

6.      With ksh-88, a dollar sign ($') followed by a single quote was
       interpreted literally.  Now it is an ANSI-C string.  You
       must quote the dollar sign to get the previous behavior.
       Also, a $ in front of a " indicates that the string needs
       to be translated for locales other than C or POSIX.  The $
       is ignored in the C and POSIX locale.

7.      With ksh-88, tilde expansion did not take place inside ${...}.
       with ksh-93, ${foo-~} will cause tilde expansion if foo is
       not set.  You need to escape the ~ for the previous behavior.

8.      Some changes in the tokenizing rules where made that might
       cause some scripts with previously ambiguous use of quoting
       to produce syntax errors.

9.      Programs that rely on specific exit values for the shell,
       (rather than 0 or non-zero) may not be compatible.  The
       exit status for many shell failures has been changed.

10.     Built-ins in ksh-88 were always executed before looking for
       the command in the PATH variable.  This is no longer true.
       Thus, with ksh-93, if you have the current directory first
       in your PATH, and you have a program named test in your
       directory, it will be executed when you type test; the
       built-in version will be run at the point /bin is found
       in your PATH.

11.     Some undocumented combinations of argument passing to ksh
       builtins no longer works since ksh-93 is getopts conforming
       with respect to its built-ins.  For example, typeset -8i
       previously would work as a synonym for typeset -i8.

12.     Command substitution and arithmetic expansion are now performed
       on PS1, PS3, and ENV when they are expanded.  Thus,  ` and $(
       as part of the value of these variables must be preceded by a \
       to preserve their previous behavior.

13.     The ERRNO variable has been dropped.

14.     If the file name following a redirection symbol contain pattern
       characters they will only be expanded for interactive shells.

15.     The arguments to a dot script will be restored when it completes.

16.     The list of tracked aliases is not displayed with alias unless
       the -t option is specified.

17.     The POSIX standard requires that test "$arg" have exit status
       of 0, if and only if $arg is null.  However, since this breaks
       programs that use test -t, ksh93 treats an explicit test -t
       as if the user had entered test -t 1.

18.     The ^T directive of emacs mode has been changed to work the
       way it does in gnu-emacs.

19.     ksh-88 allowed unbalanced parenthes within ${name op val} whereas
       ksh-93 does not.  Thus, ${foo-(} needs to be written as ${foo-\(}
       which works with both versions.

20.     kill -l in ksh-93 lists only the signal names, not their numerical
       values.

21.     Local variables defined by typeset are statically scoped in
       ksh93.  In ksh88 they were dynamically scoped although this
       behavior was never documented.

22.     The value of the variable given to getopts is set to ? when
       the end-of-options is reached to conform to the POSIX standard.

23.     Since the POSIX standard requires that octal constants be
       recongnized, doing arithmetic on typeset -Z variables can
       yield different results that with ksh88.  Most of these
       differences were eliminated in ksh93o.

24.     Starting after ksh93l, If you run ksh name, where name does
       not contain a /, the current directory will be searched
       before doing a path search on name as required by the POSIX
       shell standard.

25.     In ksh93, cd - will output the directory that it changes
       to on standard output as required by X/Open.  With ksh88,
       this only happened for interactive shells.

26.     As an undocumented feature of ksh-88, a leading 0 to an
       assignment of an integer variable caused that variable
       to be treated as unsigned.  This behavior was removed
       starting in ksh93p.

27.     The getopts builtin in ksh93 requires that optstring contain
       a leading + to allow options to begin with a +.

28.     In emacs/gmacs mode, control-v will not display the version when
       the stty lnext character is set to control-v or is unset.
       The sequence escape control-v will display the shell version.

I am interested in expanding this list so please let me know if you
uncover any others.