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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers ^H characters appear when opening text file using vi - RHEL Post 302819231 by Don Cragun on Monday 10th of June 2013 01:02:38 PM
Old 06-10-2013
In addition to what bakunin and in2nix4life have said, using x\bx\bx (where x is any printing character and \b is a backspace character) is a remnant of the days before CRT terminals. On a hardcopy device, that sequence literally printed the character 3 times in (almost) the same position (making it appear as bold text). Some CRT displays also recognized this sequence and highlighted characters presented this way. Some line printers also printed lines containing backspaces multiple times such that each overstruck character was printed in the appropriate position as many times as it appeared in the line (again producing bold text because hard copy devices were never accurate enough to double or triple print a character at exactly the same position).

Another common sequence is _\bx which produces underlined text on hardcopy output devices and on soft copy devices that recognize the sequence to produce underlined text.

Back in the early days, nroff was used for character addressable device output and troff was use to produce output for typesetting hardware. Later, troff device tables allowed it to be used with any type of output device. Historically, the col utility was used to get rid of several nroff artifacts that made it hard for humans to read the text files containing the overstrikes on a device that showed all of the characters in a line without performing overstrike processing (such as on a CRT when using vi to view the contents of the file). The col utility could also be used to convert tabs to sequences of spaces and vice versa, and also had options for dealing with half-line motions (that nroff used to display subscripts and superscipts on terminals and printers like the DASI 300s daisy wheel printers and terminals). Some later *roff implementations provided deroff in addition to or instead of col; but most systems that have an nroff utility also have a col utility (look for man pages for these utilities to determine the choices you have on your system).

Note also that without options, the cat utility doesn't do anything to get rid of overstrikes; it just copies data to the output device and the overstrikes and when an output device handles overstrikes by displaying the last character "printed" in a given output position, the overstrikes become invisible.

Thus endeth this morning's ancient history lesson on overstriking. Smilie
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COLCRT(1)						    BSD General Commands Manual 						 COLCRT(1)

NAME
colcrt -- filter nroff output for CRT previewing SYNOPSIS
colcrt [-] [-2] [file ...] DESCRIPTION
The colcrt utility provides virtual half-line and reverse line feed sequences for terminals without such capability, and on which overstrik- ing is destructive. Half-line characters and underlining (changed to dashing `-') are placed on new lines in between the normal output lines. The following options are available: - Suppress all underlining. This option is especially useful for previewing allboxed tables from tbl(1). -2 Cause all half-lines to be printed, effectively double spacing the output. Normally, a minimal space output format is used which will suppress empty lines. The program never suppresses two consecutive empty lines, however. The -2 option is useful for sending output to the line printer when the output contains superscripts and subscripts which would otherwise be invisible. ENVIRONMENT
The LANG, LC_ALL and LC_CTYPE environment variables affect the execution of colcrt as described in environ(7). EXIT STATUS
The colcrt utility exits 0 on success, and >0 if an error occurs. EXAMPLES
A typical use of colcrt would be tbl exum2.n | nroff -ms | colcrt - | more SEE ALSO
col(1), more(1), nroff(1), troff(1), ul(1) HISTORY
The colcrt command appeared in 3.0BSD. BUGS
Should fold underlines onto blanks even with the '-' option so that a true underline character would show. Cannot back up more than 102 lines. General overstriking is lost; as a special case '|' overstruck with '-' or underline becomes '+'. Lines are trimmed to 132 characters. Some provision should be made for processing superscripts and subscripts in documents which are already double-spaced. Characters that take up more than one column position may not be underlined correctly. BSD
July 31, 2004 BSD
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