On 8/22/20 5:25 PM, George R Goffe wrote:
>
> Chet,
>
> I'm really perplexed with this situation. I type in "ls -al 123456<tab>" with
> only 1 tab key. NO indication of what's happening. I hit enter and get a
> message that "ls: cannot access '123456': No such file or directory" I try
> the same command but with 2 tab keys... hit enter and get the same msg.
Readline defaults to a visual bell, using the terminal's `vb' capability.
You can set the readline `bell-style' variable to `audible' to change that.
If you do, make sure your terminal emulator does something reasonable with
the ^G character.
> I tried the same with a partial filename that DOES exist in the directory. I
> can't seem to get the filename completion to ctrl-c out. gdb sees the ctrl-c
> but bash stays in the attempted filename completion. Enter doesn't work.
> Ctrl-c doesn't work. Ctrl-z doesn't work.
I just can't reproduce this. (Though there's no reason to expect ^Z to have
any effect, since we're not running a separate job here.)
>
> Shouldn't there be a message about no file found presented by bash? There
> appears to be NO indication that filename completion has failed to find a
> file.
Why would a message be appropriate here? It seems to me that the visible or
audible bell is the right indicator.
--
``The lyf so short, the craft so long to lerne.'' - Chaucer
``Ars longa, vita brevis'' - Hippocrates
Chet Ramey, UTech, CWRU [email protected] http://tiswww.cwru.edu/~chet/