Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Change Console Title
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Change Console Title Post 52065 by Ygor on Wednesday 9th of June 2004 08:33:59 AM
Old 06-09-2004
Some shells have "print" built-in, but its just the same as "echo".

Incidentally, "CTRL-V then ESC" is the same as "\033". See man ascii.
 

8 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Solaris

Change Terminal Title

Is it possible to change the title of a Terminal window on Solaris? For example, for a MS Windows command window, one can simply type "title NameofWindow" to change the title for a command window. I was looking for similar functionality for terminal windows. Thanks. (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: here2learn
8 Replies

2. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Change putty title window?

Is it possible to change the putty window title from a Unix command line? (12 Replies)
Discussion started by: akbar
12 Replies

3. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Change title of aixterm window online

Is there any way to change title of aixterm window online? Also is it possible to freeze first/last few lines online? (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Soham
1 Replies

4. AIX

How to change cronjob title?

Once I type "mail" command, I got to see the mail like below: > 1 daemon Thu Aug 12 17:31 31/938 "Output from cron job " My question is, how to do change the default title "Output from cron job " to be more customized title? Thanks. (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: ngaisteve1
4 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

How to change the title bar of the terminal screen

Hi, How to change the value after the symbol '@' ? $ i.e. @mac1 I want to change it to @prod2 Also need to change the same in the title bar on the top when we open a new terminal. (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: milink
3 Replies

6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Change putty title name

Hello all, I have a not so unix question for you guys(or maybe it is). I use PUTTY to login to serverA (my putty title shows as serverA.domainname.com) Now from ServerA i do ssh user@ServerB (i have ssh public private key setup)... now my question is when i do ssh and logon to... (20 Replies)
Discussion started by: abdul.irfan2
20 Replies

7. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers

Delete columns with a specific title XXX, where the position change in each file

Goodmorning, I know how to cut a string and a column, and how to find a word. I have a file with over 100 columns. All columns have a title in the first line. I have to delete all columns with the XXX title. I can't use cut -f because the position of XXX columns change in each file, and in... (14 Replies)
Discussion started by: echo manolis
14 Replies

8. Post Here to Contact Site Administrators and Moderators

Change title of a thread after it is created

hi, how do we change the title of a thread after it is created? Thanks (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: milhan
5 Replies
Mined  is a simple screen editor.  At any instant, a window of 24
lines is visible on the screen.  The current position in the file
is shown by the cursor.  Ordinary characters typed in are insert-
ed at the cursor.  Control characters and  keys  on  the  numeric
keypad	(at the right-hand side of the keyboard) are used to move
the cursor and perform other functions.  Commands exist  to  move
forward  and backward a word, and delete words either in front of
the cursor or behind it.  A word in this context is a sequence of
characters  delimited  on  both  ends by white space (space, tab,
line feed, start of file, or end  of  file).   The  commands  for
deleting  characters and words also work on line feeds, making it
possible to join two consecutive lines by deleting the line  feed
between  them.	 The  editor  maintains one save buffer (not dis-
played).  Commands are present to move text from the file to  the
buffer, from the buffer to the file, and to write the buffer onto
a new file.  If the edited text cannot be written out  due  to	a
full disk, it may still be possible to copy the whole text to the
save buffer and then write it to a different file on a	different
disk with CTRL-Q.  It may also be possible to escape from the ed-
itor with CTRL-S and remove some files.   Some	of  the  commands
prompt	for  arguments	(file names, search patterns, etc.).  All
commands that might result in  loss  of  the  file  being  edited
prompt to ask for confirmation.  A key (command or ordinary char-
acter) can be repeated times by typing where is the  escape  key.
Forward  and  backward searching requires a regular expression as
the search pattern.  Regular expressions follow the same rules as
in  the  editor,  These  rules	can be stated as: Any displayable
character matches itself.  . (period) matches any  character  ex-
cept line feed.  ^ (circumflex) matches the start of the line.	$
(dollar sign) matches the end of the line.  c matches the  char-
acter  c  (including  period, circumflex, etc).  [string] matches
any of the characters in the string.  [^string]  matches  any  of
the  characters  except  those	in the string.	[x-y] matches any
characters between x and y (e.g., [a-z]).  Pattern*  matches  any
number	of  occurrences of pattern.  Some examples of regular ex-
pressions are:
  The boy   matches the string The boy
  ^$	    matches any empty line.
  ^.$	    matches any line containing exactly 1 character
  ^A.*.$   matches any line starting with an A,  ending  with	a
	    period.
  ^[A-Z]*$  matches  any line containing only capital letters (or
	    empty).
  [A-Z0-9]  matches any line containing either a  capital  letter
	    or a digit.
  .*X$	    matches any line ending in X
  A.*B	    matches any line containing an A and then a B

Control characters cannot be entered into a file simply by typing
them because all of them are editor commands.  To enter a control
character,  depress  the ALT key, and then while holding it down,
hit the ESC key.  Release both ALT and ESC and type  the  control
character.   Control  characters  are displayed in reverse video.
The commands are as follows.

CURSOR MOTION
arrows Move the cursor in the indicated direction CTRL-A Move cursor to start of current line CTRL-Z Move cursor to end of current line CTRL-^ Move cursor to top of screen CTRL-_ Move cursor to end of screen CTRL-F Move cursor forward to start of next word CTRL-B Move cursor backward to start of previous word SCREEN MOTION
Home key Move to first character of the file End key Move to last character of the file PgUp key Scroll window up 23 lines (closer to start of the file) PgDn key Scroll window down 23 lines (closer to end of the file) CTRL-U Scroll window up 1 line CTRL-D Scroll window down 1 line MODIFYING TEXT
Del key Delete the character under the cursor Backspace Delete the character to left of the cursor CTRL-N Delete the next word CTRL-P Delete the previous word CTRL-T Delete tail of line (all characters from cursor to end of line) CTRL-O Open up the line (insert line feed and back up) CTRL-G Get and insert a file at the cursor position BUFFER OPERATIONS
CTRL-@ Set mark at current position for use with CTRL-C and CTRL-K CTRL-C Copy the text between the mark and the cursor into the buffer CTRL-K Delete text between mark and cursor; also copy it to the buffer CTRL-Y Yank contents of the buffer out and insert it at the cursor CTRL-Q Write the contents of the buffer onto a file MISCELLANEOUS
numeric + Search forward (prompts for regular expression) numeric - Search backward (prompts for regular expression) numeric 5 Display the file status CTRL-] Go to specific line CTRL-R Global replace pattern with string (from cursor to end) CTRL-L Line replace pattern with string CTRL-W Write the edited file back to the disk CTRL-X Exit the editor CTRL-S Fork off a shell (use CTRL-D to get back to the edi- tor) CTRL- Abort whatever the editor was doing and wait for com- mand CTRL-E Erase screen and redraw it CTRL-V Visit (edit) a new file Mined was designed by Andy Tanenbaum and written by Michiel Huis- jes.
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 03:51 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy