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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Control cursor position also at bottom of window Post 303043695 by Ralph on Tuesday 4th of February 2020 09:13:03 AM
Old 02-04-2020
Quote:
Originally Posted by wisecracker
Hi Ralph...

Take a look at the two command below.
The first will give you your terminal size in lines, columns.
IF your terminal can do it, (xterm for example), the second will auto adjust it for you...

Code:
term_size=($( stty size ))
printf "%b" "\x1B[8;24;80t"

The 24 and 80 in the 'printf' statement can be anything to ALMOST the size of your desktop...
Interesting. What do the outer parentheses around $(stty size) accomplish? I know they are used to force execution in a subshell. But what are they doing here?

I would have gone for
Code:
lines=$(stty size)
lines=${lines% *}

The printf statement doesn't seem to accomplish anything over here. What is it supposed to do? Is that documented somewhere?

In terms of documentation I was looking at this and this.
 

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RESIZE(1)							  X Window System							 RESIZE(1)

NAME
resize - set environment and terminal settings to current xterm window size SYNOPSIS
resize [ -v | -u | -c ] [ -s [ row col ] ] DESCRIPTION
Resize prints a shell command for setting the appropriate environment variables to indicate the current size of xterm window from which the command is run. Resize determines the command through several steps: o first, it finds the name of the user's shell program. It uses the SHELL variable if set, otherwise it uses the user's data from /etc/passwd. o then it decides whether to use Bourne shell syntax or C-Shell syntax. It uses a built-in table of known shells, which can be overrid- den by the -u and -c options. o then resize asks the operating system for the terminal settings. This is the same information which can be manipulated using stty. o then resize asks the terminal for its size in characters. Depending on whether the "-s option is given, resize uses a different escape sequence to ask for this information. o at this point, resize attempts to update the terminal settings to reflect the terminal window's size in pixels: o if the -s option is used, resize then asks the terminal for its size in pixels. o otherwise, resize asks the operating system for the information and updates that after ensuring that the window's dimensions are a multiple of the character height and width. o in either case, the updated terminal settings are done using a different system call than used for stty. o then resize updates the terminal settings to reflect any altered values such as its size in rows or columns. This affects the values shown by stty. o finally, resize writes the shell command for setting the environment variables to the standard output. EXAMPLES
For resize's output to take effect, resize must either be evaluated as part of the command line (usually done with a shell alias or func- tion) or else redirected to a file which can then be read in. From the C shell (usually known as /bin/csh), the following alias could be defined in the user's .cshrc: % alias rs 'set noglob; eval `resize`' After resizing the window, the user would type: % rs Users of versions of the Bourne shell (usually known as /bin/sh) that don't have command functions will need to send the output to a tempo- rary file and then read it back in with the "." command: $ resize > /tmp/out $ . /tmp/out OPTIONS
The following options may be used with resize: -c This option indicates that C shell commands should be generated even if the user's current shell is not /bin/csh. -s [rows columns] This option indicates that Sun console escape sequences will be used instead of the VT100-style xterm escape codes. If rows and columns are given, resize will ask the xterm to resize itself using those values. Both of the escape sequences used for this option (first to obtain the window size and second to modify it) are subject to xterm's allowWindowOps resource setting. The window manager may also choose to disallow the change. The VT100-style escape sequence used to determine the screen size always works for VT100-compatible terminals. VT100s have no cor- responding way to modify the screensize. -u This option indicates that Bourne shell commands should be generated even if the user's current shell is not /bin/sh. -v This causes resize to print a version number to the standard output, and then exit. Note that the Sun console escape sequences are recognized by XFree86 xterm and by dtterm. The resize program may be installed as sunsize, which causes makes it assume the -s option. The rows and columns arguments must appear last; though they are normally associated with the -s option, they are parsed separately. FILES
/etc/termcap for the base termcap entry to modify. ~/.cshrc user's alias for the command. ENVIRONMENT
SHELL Resize determines the user's current shell by first checking if $SHELL is set, and using that. Otherwise it determines the user's shell by looking in the password file (/etc/passwd). Generally Bourne-shell variants (including ksh) do not modify $SHELL, so it is possible for resize to be confused if one runs resize from a Bourne shell spawned from a C shell. TERM Resize sets this to "xterm" if not already set. TERMCAP Resize sets this variable on systems using termcap, e.g., when resize is linked with the termcap library rather than a ter- minfo library. The latter does not provide the complete text for a termcap entry. COLUMNS, LINES Resize sets these variables on systems using terminfo. Many applications (including the curses library) use those variables when set to override their screensize. SEE ALSO
use_env(3) csh(1), stty(1), tset(1) xterm(1) AUTHORS
Mark Vandevoorde (MIT-Athena), Edward Moy (Berkeley) Thomas Dickey (invisible-island.net). Copyright (c) 1984, 1985 by X Consortium See X(7) for a complete copyright notice. Patch #295 2013-07-06 RESIZE(1)
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