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The Lounge What is on Your Mind? Should we use CODE Tags for terminal input and output? Post 302909664 by rbatte1 on Friday 18th of July 2014 06:33:31 AM
Old 07-18-2014
It's also important because multiple spaces will get compressed in 'normal' text, but are respected within code tags.

This is an "X" with fifteen spaces, then another "X" in normal text:-
X X

This is an "X" with fifteen spaces, then another "X" in code tags:-
Code:
X               X

It's much better for clarity of indented code and for crucial fixed-width data.


Thanks for asking Smilie
Robin
 

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UL(1)							      General Commands Manual							     UL(1)

NAME
ul - do underlining SYNOPSIS
ul [ -i ] [ -t terminal ] [ name ... ] DESCRIPTION
Ul reads the named files (or standard input if none are given) and translates occurrences of underscores to the sequence which indicates underlining for the terminal in use, as specified by the environment variable TERM. The -t option overrides the terminal kind specified in the environment. The file /etc/termcap is read to determine the appropriate sequences for underlining. If the terminal is incapable of underlining, but is capable of a standout mode then that is used instead. If the terminal can overstrike, or handles underlining automati- cally, ul degenerates to cat(1). If the terminal cannot underline, underlining is ignored. The -i option causes ul to indicate underlining onto by a separate line containing appropriate dashes `-'; this is useful when you want to look at the underlining which is present in an nroff output stream on a crt-terminal. SEE ALSO
man(1), nroff(1), colcrt(1) BUGS
Nroff usually outputs a series of backspaces and underlines intermixed with the text to indicate underlining. No attempt is made to opti- mize the backward motion. 4th Berkeley Distribution May 7, 1986 UL(1)
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