I want to get the screen width and cursor positions.
When I used curses, all the screen content was cleared.
So Can I use curses to get the screen size without clearing anything in the window?
Or is there any other alternative???
I can use only C or C++. (0 Replies)
Hi to all!
I'm a teacher of maths and physics in an italian high school in Milan, Italy.
I need a simple program that read the position of mouse cursor in function of time and write the coordinates in a text file. The time resolution have to be something like 1/10 sec or better (I have to know... (2 Replies)
Hi All,
In VI editor, to know the line number at any instant we use ctrl+g
Similarly, to know the current coulmn number what shall we use??
If not direct key controls like ctrl+g, Is there any comands that could be executed in colon or ex mode of VI to know the current column position???... (1 Reply)
hi all,
am trying to modify a ksh script to group server names together depending on the cluster they sit in. currently the script does a
find . -name '*.pid'
to find all running servers and prints out their pids and names.
current output looks something like this :
serverA ... (1 Reply)
I need to get the cursor position, and put it inside a variable. Problem is, i don't have the tput command, or ncurses.
Apparently I was supposed to try the following:
echo -e '\E
But I don't get a value or anything. Please help. (3 Replies)
I have a slight problem controlling the cursor position in a Bash terminal window. I have a function ask a question and then wait for an answer which is either 'y' or 'n' or a carriage return. Whenever the user enters anything else it just erases the answer and waits for the next one. However, the... (23 Replies)
Discussion started by: Ralph
23 Replies
LEARN ABOUT REDHAT
move
MOVE(7) SQL Commands MOVE(7)NAME
MOVE - position a cursor on a specified row of a table
SYNOPSIS
MOVE [ direction ] [ count ]
{ IN | FROM } cursor
DESCRIPTION
MOVE allows a user to move cursor position a specified number of rows. MOVE works like the FETCH command, but only positions the cursor
and does not return rows.
Refer to FETCH [fetch(7)] for details on syntax and usage.
NOTES
MOVE is a PostgreSQL language extension.
Refer to FETCH [fetch(7)] for a description of valid arguments. Refer to DECLARE [declare(7)] to define a cursor. Refer to BEGIN
[begin(7)], COMMIT [commit(7)], and ROLLBACK [rollback(7)] for further information about transactions.
USAGE
Set up and use a cursor:
BEGIN WORK;
DECLARE liahona CURSOR FOR SELECT * FROM films;
-- Skip first 5 rows:
MOVE FORWARD 5 IN liahona;
MOVE
-- Fetch 6th row in the cursor liahona:
FETCH 1 IN liahona;
FETCH
code | title | did | date_prod | kind | len
-------+--------+-----+-----------+--------+-------
P_303 | 48 Hrs | 103 | 1982-10-22| Action | 01:37
(1 row)
-- close the cursor liahona and commit work:
CLOSE liahona;
COMMIT WORK;
COMPATIBILITY
SQL92
There is no SQL92 MOVE statement. Instead, SQL92 allows one to FETCH rows from an absolute cursor position, implicitly moving the cursor
to the correct position.
SQL - Language Statements 2002-11-22 MOVE(7)