Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: What are <84>, <82>?
Top Forums UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers What are <84>, <82>? Post 303003874 by CaptSutter on Friday 22nd of September 2017 03:50:09 AM
Old 09-22-2017
Linux What are <84>, <82>?

Hi,
I am editing a text file in VI and am occasionally seeing "characters" <82> and <84>. in my VIM they are marked in the same way the EOL character ^M is.
When running
:cat filename.txt
the characters seem to be read as a linefeed.
How do I search and replace these characters in VI.
What are they?
I do know that for the EOL character I press CTRL-V and "Enter" to get ^M.

Is there a list of these characters somewhere. <82> does not seem to be "T"
 
GCHEM3D(1)						       gnome-chemistry-utils							GCHEM3D(1)

NAME
gchem3d - a small chemical viewer application SYNOPSIS
gchem3d [OPTION(S)...] [FILE...] DESCRIPTION
gchem3d is a small chemical viewer application, which can show several chemical file formats. OPTIONS
The following options are accepted: -b COLOR, --bgcolor=COLOR Use the given color as background color. COLOR can be one of "black" (default), "white", "#rrggbb" (don't forget to escape the "#" character in the shell). -d MODEL, --display3d=MODEL Choose how molecules are displayed. MODEL can be one of "BallnStick" (default), "SpaceFill". -?, --help Show application help options. --help-all, --help-* Print all or just a group of help options. These options are not documented here. Instead see gtk-options(7) and gnome-options(7). -v, --version Print gchem3d version information. SEE ALSO
gnome-options(7), gtk-options(7) AUTHORS
Jean Brefort <jean.brefort@normalesup.org> Program author. Daniel Leidert <daniel.leidert@wgdd.de> Manpage author. COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2002-2007 Jean Brefort Copyright (C) 2004-2007 Daniel Leidert Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU General Public License, Version 2 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation. gcu 0.12 $Date: 2009-03-19 10:53:47 +0100 (jeu. 19 mars 2009) $ GCHEM3D(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 07:03 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy