On 2018-05-17 22:50, Adrian Grigore wrote:
> How would you have other tools like cat(1) or ls(1) handle them?
Through the $FS and $RS environment variables.
So you can do `FS=\xHH ls` (where HH is the hex code for the ASCII field
separator). The ls in usul handles that.
-- Raphaël
On Thu, May 17, 2018, at 10:50, Adrian Grigore wrote:
> How would you have other tools like cat(1) or ls(1) handle them?
I don't know. The way it currently handles them perhaps.
I am sorry, but st hasn't super powers, and it cannot do impossible things.
Control mask the upper bits of the key (key & 0x1F) while shift clears the
6th bit, so ctrl+shift+p = (p & ~0x20) & 0x1f. As you can see, it is
impossible to differentiate between ^p and ^P.
Regards,
The terminal is still the lowest common denominator in user
interfaces. Which is Good, because while it restrains you from doing a
few useful things, it also stops everyone else from doing some
extremely harmful things. Sadly that also means there's little
incentive for fixing the awful stuff (like
How would you have other tools like cat(1) or ls(1) handle them?
On Thu, May 17, 2018 at 6:16 AM, Greg Reagle wrote:
> On Wed, May 16, 2018, at 10:05, Adrian Grigore wrote:
>> What do you guys think of this:
>>
>> https://ronaldduncan.wordpress.com/2009/10/31/text-file-formats-ascii-delimited-te
Thank you everyone your answers, it was really helpful.
I do hope Leonerd's approach prevails http://www.leonerd.org.uk/hacks/fixterms/
On 16 May 2018 at 23:09, Amer wrote:
>> Is there way to make Contol-sequences case sensitive?
>
> You can use this patch to support extended set of hotkeys.
>
On Wed, May 16, 2018, at 10:05, Adrian Grigore wrote:
> What do you guys think of this:
>
> https://ronaldduncan.wordpress.com/2009/10/31/text-file-formats-ascii-delimited-text-not-csv-or-tab-delimited-text/
Seems reasonable to me. For the purpose of transferring data between two
different spr