Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Text editor
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Text editor Post 32777 by norsk hedensk on Thursday 5th of December 2002 09:31:09 PM
Old 12-05-2002
vi is a text editor that is supposed to make text editing extremely fast. this is because your hands never have to leave the home position. its tough to learn, but the people who do know it and use it swear by it. i use it cause its the default and i know how to save and quit without saving, haha thats it. vi has two modes, command mode and insert mode. command mode is for commands, like saving, quiting,and accessing the shell. insert mode is when you insert your text. when you hit the INSERT key you can type as much as you want. when you want to save you hit the ESC key, then shift-: and then x
to delete characters, hit ESC to enter command mode, and you can use the arrow keys then when the cursor is at the letter you want to get rid of, you cna hit x. i dont know how to do whole words or lines or whatever, but vi has ALOTTTTT of features. that i dont know how to use, or even know exist. see the man pages for vi. also take alook at vim.org.
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

VI or text editor

Before I learned how wonderfull VI and Unix was. I used a little crappy DOS editor. I wouldn't go back to it for anything. However I work with a lot of formatted files that use the column position. I wonder if any here knows of a way to make VI display the cursors coulmn position or if there is a... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Chrisg411
2 Replies

2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Text editor on Sun OS 3.0

I trying to setup a netranger security box. I don't know unix and went to view a filein the text editor. What is command to exit text editor. I tried esc q and ctrl q. HELP!!! STUCK IN TEXT EDITOR :) (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: malic
2 Replies

3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

pico text editor

I was wondering if there is any way to get a version of pico for windows. I have done a lot of programming work on Linux/UNIX exvironments for school, and I enjoy using pico for my programming needs, but I find all of the text editors in windows horrible, they distort my code and do not adhere to... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: popac
5 Replies

4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

How to load text editor PICO

Hi... I was wondering if anyone has any step by step guide on how to load the UNIX text editor PICO onto the Sun box? Thanks :) (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: atomicsushi
2 Replies

5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Pasting text in VI editor from a different editor

Hi, I knw its a silly question, but am a newbie to 'vi' editor. I'm forced to use this, hence kindly help me with this question. How can i paste a chunk 'copied from' a different editor(gedit) in 'vi editor'? As i see, p & P options does work only within 'vi'. (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: harishmitty
10 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

how to add text after a particular line on vi editor

hi suppose i have file 0f 10 lines. i want to add something after 8 line. may i append it anyhow without opening file. eg. i can appned at last. echo text >> file Thanks (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: manoj_dahiya22
9 Replies

7. Programming

Text editor in C

Hi, I want to create a text editor in C on Unix. Can any1 jus tell me how to start with n wat all I have to look into if I have to write an editor.. Thanks (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: julie_s
2 Replies

8. Windows & DOS: Issues & Discussions

need a good text editor for windows

I am looking to start to code some shell scripts, php, and probably some other web stuff. Free is preferred. I was looking at rocketedit but I would rather just use free open source if possible. On my Mac I love to use TextWrangler, so is there a Windows equivalent? For Vista/Win7 64bit ... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: tlarkin
5 Replies

9. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Any better text editor for unix?

Do you know any text editor (other than Gvim, which I am using) which is made specially for c type languages? The reason I ask for it is: I just spent 3 hours trying to find out start "if" and its end "if end".:wall: I hope there is an editor which can link each if with its closing endif . (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: animesharma
4 Replies

10. Solaris

Default text editor

Hi, sorry if something similar has already asked. But I am interested how to change default text editor on Unix Solaris? When I open File Manager -> Edit -> Properties.. -> Category (Advanced Settings) -> Default Editor (Other) I have something like: shelltool sh -c "sleep 3; vi $FILE"... (13 Replies)
Discussion started by: spuzh
13 Replies
LEDIT(1)						      General Commands Manual							  LEDIT(1)

NAME
ledit - line editor, version 2.03 SYNOPSIS
ledit [-h file] [-x] [-t] [-l length] [-a | -u] [command options] DESCRIPTION
The command ledit allows to edit lines one by one when running an interactive command. When typing a line, some keys with control or meta are interpreted: it is possible to insert characters in the middle of the line, go to the beginning or the end of the line, get a previous line, search for a line with a pattern, etc. OPTIONS
The options are: -h file Save the lines typed (history) in file. The default is to have them only in memory (so, they are lost at the end of the program). -x Extend the history file (given in option "-h") if it already exists. The default is to truncate the history file. -t Display the sequences generated by the keys (for debugging). -v Print ledit version and exit. -l length Tells that length is the maximum line length displayed. If the line edited is longer than this length, the line scrolls horizon- tally, while editing. The default value is 70. -a Ascii encoding: characters whose code is greater than 128 are displayed with a backslash followed by their code. -u Unicode encoding: the terminal must have been set in unicode mode. See commands unicode_start and unicode_stop. command options Runs the command command and its possible options. This must be the last option of ledit. The default value is "cat". KEYS BINDINGS
When ledit starts, some default key bindings are defined. The can be completed with a "leditrc" file. See the section LEDITRC. In the following lines, the caret sign "^" means "control" and the sequence "M-" means "meta" (either with the "meta" prefix, or by press- ing the "escape" key before). Examples: ^a press the "control" key, then press "a", then release "a", then release "control". M-a press the "meta" key, then press "a", then release "a", then release "meta", or: press and release the "escape" key, then press and release "a" (the manipulation with "meta" may not work in some systems: in this case, use the manipulation with "escape"). The default editing commands are: ^a : beginning of line ^e : end of line ^f : forward char ^b : backward char M-f : forward word M-b : backard word TAB : complete file name ^p : previous line in history ^n : next line in history M-< : first line in history M-> : last line in history ^r : reverse search in history (see below) ^d : delete char (or EOF if the line is empty) ^h : (or backspace) backward delete char ^t : transpose chars M-c : capitalize word M-u : upcase word M-l : downcase word M-d : kill word M-^h : (or M-del or M-backspace) backward kill word ^q : insert next char M-/ : expand abbreviation ^k : cut until end of line ^y : paste ^u : line discard ^l : redraw current line ^g : abort prefix ^c : interrupt ^z : suspend ^ : quit return : send line ^x : send line and show next history line other : insert char The arrow keys can be used, providing your keyword returns standard key sequences: up arrow : previous line in history down arrow : next line in history right arrow : forward char left arrow : backward char Other keys: home : beginning of line end : end of line delete : delete char page up : previous line in history page down : next line in history shift home : beginning of history shift end : end of history REVERSE SEARCH
The reverse search in incremental, i.e. ledit backward searchs in the history a line holding the characters typed. If you type "a", its search the first line before the current line holding an "a" and displays it. If you then type a "b", its search a line holding "ab", and so on. If you type ^h (or backspace), it returns to the previous line found. To cancel the search, type ^g. To find another line before holding the same string, type ^r. To stop the editing and display the current line found, type "escape" (other commands of the normal editing, different from ^h, ^g, and ^r stop the editing too). Summary of reverse search commands: ^g : abort search ^r : search previous same pattern ^h : (or backspace) search without the last char del : search without the last char any other command : stop search and show the line found LEDITRC
If the environment variable LEDITRC is set, it contains the name of the leditrc file. Otherwise it is the file named ".leditrc" in user's home directory. When starting, ledit reads this file, if it exists, to modify or complete the default bindings. If this file is changed while reading lines, it is read again to take the new file into account. Bindings lines are the ones which start with a string defining the key sequence and follow with a colon and a binding. A binding is either a string or a command. The other lines are ignored For example,the line: "C-a": beginning-of-line binds the sequence "control-a" to the command "beginning-of-line". The key sequence may contain the specific meta-sequences: C- followed by a key: "control" of this key M- followed by a key: "meta" of this key e the "escape" key nn where nnn is one, two, or three octal digits, or: xnn where nn is one or two hexadecimal digits: the binary representation of a byte a bell = C-g  backspace = C-h d delete = 277 f form feed = C-l newline = C-j carriage return = C-m tabulation = C-i v vertical tabulation = C-k The commands are: abort: do nothing accept-line: send the current line backward-char: move the cursor to the previous character backward-delete-char: delete the previous character backward-kill-word: delete the previous word backward-word: move the cursor before the previous word beginning-of-history: display the first line of the history beginning-of-line: move the cursor at the beginning of the line capitalize-word: uppercase the first char and lowercase the rest delete-char: delete the character under the cursor delete-char-or-end-of-file: same but eof if no character in the line downcase-word: lowercase whole word end-of-history: display the last line of the history end-of-line: move the cursor to the end of the line expand-abbrev: try to complete the word by looking at the history expand-to-file-name: try to complete the word from a file name forward-char: move the cursor after the next word forward-word: move the cursor to the next character interrupt: interrupt command (send control-C) kill-line: delete from the cursor to the end and save in buffer kill-word: delete the next word next-history: display the next line of the history operate-and-get-next: send line and display the next history line previous-history: display the previous line of the history quit: quit ledit quoted-insert: insert the next character as it is redraw-current-line: redisplay the current line reverse-search-history: backward search in the history suspend: suspend ledit (send control-Z) transpose-chars: exchange the last two characters unix-line-discard: kill current line upcase-word: uppercase whole word yank: insert kill buffer KNOWN BUGS
If ledit has been launched in a shell script, the suspend command kills it and its command... Use "exec ledit comm" instead of "ledit comm". The suspend command stops ledit but not the called program. Do not do this if the called program is not waiting on standard input. In some systems (e.g. alpha), pasting two many characters works bad and may block the terminal. Probably a kernel problem. No solution. SEE ALSO
unicode_start(1), unicode_stop(1). AUTHOR
Daniel de Rauglaudre, at INRIA, france. daniel.de_rauglaudre@inria.fr INRIA
Wed Jan 23, 2008 LEDIT(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 09:39 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy