### Argument parsing and shebang (`#!`) lines In CoffeeScript 1.x, `--` was required after the path and filename of the script to be run, but before any arguments passed to that script. This convention is now deprecated. So instead of: ```bash coffee [options] path/to/script.coffee -- [args] ``` Now you would just type: ```bash coffee [options] path/to/script.coffee [args] ``` The deprecated version will still work, but it will print a warning before running the script. On non-Windows platforms, a `.coffee` file can be made executable by adding a shebang (`#!`) line at the top of the file and marking the file as executable. For example: ```coffee #!/usr/bin/env coffee x = 2 + 2 console.log x ``` If this were saved as `executable.coffee`, it could be made executable and run: ```bash ▶ chmod +x ./executable.coffee ▶ ./executable.coffee 4 ``` In CoffeeScript 1.x, this used to fail when trying to pass arguments to the script. Some users on OS X worked around the problem by using `#!/usr/bin/env coffee --` as the first line of the file. That didn’t work on Linux, however, which cannot parse shebang lines with more than a single argument. While such scripts will still run on OS X, CoffeeScript will now display a warning before compiling or evaluating files that begin with a too-long shebang line. Now that CoffeeScript 2 supports passing arguments without needing `--`, we recommend simply changing the shebang lines in such scripts to just `#!/usr/bin/env coffee`.