Sponsored Content
Top Forums UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users "╭─ " Character combo in $PATH causes strange autocompletion behavior in zsh Post 302553104 by doctorfoo1 on Tuesday 6th of September 2011 07:47:53 PM
Old 09-06-2011
sounds like a character encoding mismatch. are you seeing this error from within Apples terminal ? try with a non apple terminal window. then check the encoding in the preferences . There is an emulation feature and character encoding setting in the terminal preferences.

hope this helps
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

[Perl] Strange ne "NO" behavior.

Hi there, I have a strange problem and I cannot figure it out what I am doing wrong here. Let me try to picture it. In principle it is prety straight forward, but something odd is happening. Here is part of the input file snmp_alm.cfg: ... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: ejdv
2 Replies

2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Command Character size limit in the "sh" and "bourne" shell

Hi!!.. I would like to know what is maximum character size for a command in the "sh" or "bourne" shell? Thanks in advance.. Roshan. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Roshan1286
1 Replies

3. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Command Character size limit in the "sh" and "bourne" shell

Hi!!.. I would like to know what is maximum character size for a command in the "sh" or "bourne" shell? Thanks in advance.. Roshan. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Roshan1286
1 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

Command Character size limit in the "sh" and "bourne" shell

Hi!!.. I would like to know what is maximum character size for a command in the "sh" or "bourne" shell? Thanks in advance.. Roshan. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Roshan1286
1 Replies

5. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Strange tab-completion behavior with zsh in screen

I'm running Mac OS, using the latest version of zsh. I've noticed that I have funny tab-completion behavior when inside a screen session. Specifically, once I press tab, the first part of my command seems to be duplicated before the completion results are inserted. For example, if I type... (14 Replies)
Discussion started by: marshaul
14 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

"find . -printf" without prepended "." path? Getting path to current working directory?

If I enter (simplified): find . -printf "%p\n" then all files in the output are prepended by a "." like ./local/share/test23.log How can achieve that a.) the leading "./" is omitted and/or b.) the full path to the current directory is inserted (enclosed by brackets and a blank)... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: pstein
1 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Using sed to find text between a "string " and character ","

Hello everyone Sorry I have to add another sed question. I am searching a log file and need only the first 2 occurances of text which comes after (note the space) "string " and before a ",". I have tried sed -n 's/.*string \(*\),.*/\1/p' filewith some, but limited success. This gives out all... (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: haggismn
10 Replies

8. Programming

Strange "getsockopt" Solaris behavior

Please take a look on following code: s = socket(PF_INET, SOCK_STREAM, 0); //socket fcntl(s, F_SETFL, O_NONBLOCK); //set socket to nonblock retry_conn: ret = connect(s, (struct sockaddr *)&serv_addr, sizeof(struct sockaddr_in)); // try to connect, for sure... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: revolta25
7 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

find . -path "*_nobackup*" -prune -iname "*.PDF" \( ! -name "*_nobackup.*" \)

These three finds worked as expected: $ find . -iname "*.PDF" $ find . -iname "*.PDF" \( ! -name "*_nobackup.*" \) $ find . -path "*_nobackup*" -prune -iname "*.PDF" They all returned the match: ./folder/file.pdf :b: This find returned no matches: $ find . -path "*_nobackup*" -prune... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: wolfv
3 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Why awk print is strange when I set FS = " " instead of FS = "\t"?

Look at the following data file(cou.data) which has four fields separated by tab. Four fields are country name, land area, population, continent where it belongs. As for country name or continent name which has two words, two words are separated by space. (Data are not accurately... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: chihuyu
1 Replies
encoding(n)						       Tcl Built-In Commands						       encoding(n)

__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

NAME
encoding - Manipulate encodings SYNOPSIS
encoding option ?arg arg ...? _________________________________________________________________ INTRODUCTION
Strings in Tcl are encoded using 16-bit Unicode characters. Different operating system interfaces or applications may generate strings in other encodings such as Shift-JIS. The encoding command helps to bridge the gap between Unicode and these other formats. DESCRIPTION
Performs one of several encoding related operations, depending on option. The legal options are: encoding convertfrom ?encoding? data Convert data to Unicode from the specified encoding. The characters in data are treated as binary data where the lower 8-bits of each character is taken as a single byte. The resulting sequence of bytes is treated as a string in the specified encoding. If encoding is not specified, the current system encoding is used. encoding convertto ?encoding? string Convert string from Unicode to the specified encoding. The result is a sequence of bytes that represents the converted string. Each byte is stored in the lower 8-bits of a Unicode character. If encoding is not specified, the current system encoding is used. encoding dirs ?directoryList? Tcl can load encoding data files from the file system that describe additional encodings for it to work with. This command sets the | search path for *.enc encoding data files to the list of directories directoryList. If directoryList is omitted then the command | returns the current list of directories that make up the search path. It is an error for directoryList to not be a valid list. If, | when a search for an encoding data file is happening, an element in directoryList does not refer to a readable, searchable direc- | tory, that element is ignored. encoding names Returns a list containing the names of all of the encodings that are currently available. encoding system ?encoding? Set the system encoding to encoding. If encoding is omitted then the command returns the current system encoding. The system encod- ing is used whenever Tcl passes strings to system calls. EXAMPLE
It is common practice to write script files using a text editor that produces output in the euc-jp encoding, which represents the ASCII characters as singe bytes and Japanese characters as two bytes. This makes it easy to embed literal strings that correspond to non-ASCII characters by simply typing the strings in place in the script. However, because the source command always reads files using the current system encoding, Tcl will only source such files correctly when the encoding used to write the file is the same. This tends not to be true in an internationalized setting. For example, if such a file was sourced in North America (where the ISO8859-1 is normally used), each byte in the file would be treated as a separate character that maps to the 00 page in Unicode. The resulting Tcl strings will not contain the expected Japanese characters. Instead, they will contain a sequence of Latin-1 characters that correspond to the bytes of the original string. The encoding command can be used to convert this string to the expected Japanese Unicode characters. For example, set s [encoding convertfrom euc-jp "xA4xCF"] would return the Unicode string "u306F", which is the Hiragana letter HA. SEE ALSO
Tcl_GetEncoding(3) KEYWORDS
encoding Tcl 8.1 encoding(n)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 05:25 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy