Chet Ramey <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>> Is this a bug?
>>
$ t=test #bash builtin
$ $t -t ' '; echo $?
0
>
> Doesn't look like it:
I think it is a bug, but libc may or may not hide it, depending on the
strtol[l] implementation. SUS says:
# If the subjec
When I enter a command over multiple lines, e.g.
for f in *; do
echo $f
done
Then I press to go back to that history entry, Ctrl+A takes me to
the start of the entire multi-line command, rather than to the
beginning of the "done" line, as I would expect.
Settings:
> shopt cmdhist
cmdhist
Mikel Ward wrote:
When I enter a command over multiple lines, e.g.
for f in *; do
echo $f
done
Then I press to go back to that history entry, Ctrl+A takes me to
the start of the entire multi-line command, rather than to the
beginning of the "done" line, as I would expect.
Settings:
shop
Hi Chet
Thanks for your reply.
Disabling cmdhist stores each line separately in the history, which I
don't want.
The documentation says C-a goes to the start of the line, not the
start of the entry.
Trivial or an RFE maybe, but I think it's a bug nonetheless.
My ideal would be: At the end of a