Hi list, I've been using screen for a couple of years with a hardstatus string stolen on the web and tinkled a bit afterward. But now I'd like to improve it.
Format escape sequences are fairly easy to understand (reading them is another thing ;p) except the truncation/padding stuff. I've tried to read and re-read the paragraphs regarding %=, %< and %= multiples times successively, and that multiple times over the last months. But honestly, I can't grasp the way it works. By browsing the web, it seems humans capable of mastering screen's string escapes exist but they didn't bother explaining those thoroughly. So my first question is: has a book (or more seriously an article or a detailed post) ever been written on the subject? Is yes, I'd be glad to be pointed it out. As a matter of fact, I'm trying to have a hardstatus string ressembling this (I've left out the attributes/color modifiers): [%H] %-w (%n-%t) %+n [%d/%m %c] But I'd like [%H] to be against the left side and [%d/%m %c] the be against the right one. I've fumbled to get this and finally found a solution at work by picking ideas here and there on the web, but I can't even remember it because I don't get the logic. The icing on the cake would be to have the "%-w (%n-%t) %+n" centered around the current window and not eating the outer parts when the space in the middle is not large enough. But this I've never managed to make this up. Thanks in advance for your help! -- Jeremie Le Hen < jeremie at le-hen dot org >< ttz at chchile dot org > _______________________________________________ screen-users mailing list screen-users@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/screen-users