On the surface, sounds like a pretty simple, and *extremely* useful, hack. Like, I access the internet via my isp's "shell accounts", so when I use "their" lynx, I also get their .cfg, which has been set up to work on THIS system (the isp's).
However, I'd like to be able to set *some* (non-"Option-Page") .cfg-items myself. What better way than by using *two* .cfg-files -- the system's *very large* one, used to provide (relatively-speaking) "default values" for everything, then as a 2nd .cfg, my own *very small* one. What interface-change is needed to provide this capability? Simply allow *multiple* -cfg options, with the .cfg-files being read in as seen in a left-to-right processing of the cmd-line's options. What say? (Heck -- maybe this capability is already there -- is the lynx-manual (originally written *years* ago by that professor somewhere, and, at least as of several years ago, not touched by him since) being updated these days? Is it possibly now "up to date" with lynx?) David ; To UNSUBSCRIBE: Send "unsubscribe lynx-dev" to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
