Normally .BSET strips command line arguments which begin with '<', '>' and '>>', and uses them to set up I/O redirection. However, if you set ".process" to zero, .BSET treats these like any other arguments. Setting ".process" to zero is usually done with an external declaration of the form
.process {0};
If you set .PROCESS to any other value, .BSET allocates buffers of that size to hold redirection arguments. For example,
.process {10};
allocates buffers of 10 llinks to hold each redirection argument. The default buffer size is 8 llinks.
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