Poor messages when the '#!' file isn't found

2024-06-13 Thread Dan Jacobson
$ echo \#!/usr/bin/python > k $ chmod +x k $ ./k bash: ./k: cannot execute: required file not found Bash should really mention what file it is talking about. $ echo 'x:k; ./$<' > Makefile $ make ./k make: ./k: No such file or directory make: *** [Makefile:1: x] Error 127 $ ls ./k ./k Make is wor

sh vs. bash -xc 'a=b c=$a'

2024-05-22 Thread Dan Jacobson
It seems these should both make one line "+ a=b c=b" output, for s in sh bash do $s -xc 'a=b c=$a' done I mean they give the same results, but bash splits it into two lines, so the user reading the bash -x output cannot tell if one (correct) or two (incorrect) lines were used. They can tell with

Re: Add option to just print history, with no added timestamps or line numbers

2024-04-12 Thread Dan Jacobson
>>>>> "CR" == Chet Ramey writes: CR> On 3/24/24 11:39 PM, Lawrence Velázquez wrote: >> On Sun, Mar 24, 2024, at 11:01 PM, Dan Jacobson wrote: >>> P.S., "\t%s" seems to have an extra space squeezed between them with >>> bash: "\t

Re: Add option to just print history, with no added timestamps or line numbers

2024-03-24 Thread Dan Jacobson
Hmm, so no matter POSIX mode or not, both will be dragging around that little piece of toilet paper stuck to their shoes (\t)... unless some new option is invented.

Re: Add option to just print history, with no added timestamps or line numbers

2024-03-24 Thread Dan Jacobson
How unfortunate. P.S., "\t%s" seems to have an extra space squeezed between them with bash: "\t %s", unless perhaps the spec says that %s always starts with a space.

Re: Add option to just print history, with no added timestamps or line numbers

2024-03-24 Thread Dan Jacobson
> "MDK" == Martin D Kealey writes: MDK> How about « fc -ln » ? I like it! P.S., $ help fc -nomit line numbers when listing Yes, it omits the line numbers. But leaves the "^I " separators! $ fc -l 999 1000|cat -vt 999^I echo invite Nerbleson for dinner 1000^I echo and Snordsw

Add option to just print history, with no added timestamps or line numbers

2024-03-23 Thread Dan Jacobson
$ help history should mention how in the world one is supposed to just print the plain history, without any line numbers or time stamps. You might say, "Just strip it off with perl or sed." Well, fine. Then mention that in help history. Currently one needs massive superfund environmental clean-u

Add example of bind readline-command-line

2023-12-12 Thread Dan Jacobson
bash man page says -v Display readline variable names and values in such a way that they can be re-read. Perhaps add an example of rereading via the bind command: $ bind 'set bell-style visible' else the user might try: $ echo set bell-style visible|bind Yes,

Re: Make reverse-i-search failure joltingly clear

2023-12-12 Thread Dan Jacobson
Well these days the chances of bells, visual or audible, getting through are less and less, e.g., https://github.com/alacritty/alacritty/issues/1528 and on chromebook one must turn the bell on, etc. So I still think something different should happen than each forlorn character just mounting up on

Make reverse-i-search failure joltingly clear

2023-12-10 Thread Dan Jacobson
Type ^R and some string, At the point while we are typing that the search fails, all that happens is the word "failed" gets added at front, (reverse-i-search)`nni': set jida^Ci.org/geo/house_numbering/grids/us/il/lake/lake_county/ (failed reverse-i-search)`nnii': set jida^Ci.org/geo/house_number

Re: set -x vs. n=($@)

2023-09-06 Thread Dan Jacobson
m=$@; n=($@)' + m='a b c' + n=($@) ) >>>>> "CR" == Chet Ramey writes: CR> On 9/3/23 6:08 AM, Dan Jacobson wrote: >> It's not fair: >> set -x a b c >> m=$@ n=($@) >> == gives == >> + m='a b c' >> + n=($@)

Warn upon "declare -ax"

2023-09-04 Thread Dan Jacobson
Shouldn't "declare -ax" print a warning that it is useless?

set -x vs. n=($@)

2023-09-03 Thread Dan Jacobson
It's not fair: set -x a b c m=$@ n=($@) == gives == + m='a b c' + n=($@) please either say + m=$@ + n=($@) or better: + m='a b c' + n=('a' 'b' 'c') or metion on https://www.gnu.org/software/bash/manual/html_node/The-Set-Builtin.html the special exception. GNU bash, version 5.2.15

Re: Document m=1 m=2; echo $m result

2023-07-02 Thread Dan Jacobson
> "LV" == Lawrence Velázquez writes: LV> This is stated under "Simple Command Expansion". OK good. No more issue.

Document m=1 m=2; echo $m result

2023-07-02 Thread Dan Jacobson
man page says: A variable may be assigned to by a statement of the form name=[value] If value is not given, the variable is assigned the null string. All values undergo tilde expansion, parameter and variable expansion... OK, but do please mention s

Re: Junk at the end on history

2023-04-06 Thread Dan Jacobson
Sorry everybody. I cannot reproduce it. Nor is anything wrong with the HISTFILEs... It must of had something to do with me exploring many "i3" windows configurations that day.

Re: Junk at the end on history

2023-04-04 Thread Dan Jacobson
There probably was. Say, there should be a way to protect the user against something like that. I wish I could just tell it to only allow utf-8 in my history.

Junk at the end on history

2023-04-04 Thread Dan Jacobson
$ history works fine if I pipe it into tail. But if I just let it pour out on the screen, I get this junk after it sitting at the prompt: 9997 Tue, 04 Apr 2023 17:31:36 +0800 history 9998 Tue, 04 Apr 2023 17:31:59 +0800 history |tail Tue, 04 Apr 2023 17:32:06 +0800 history $ 64;1;2;6;9;1

Show slash if a directory upon TAB

2022-11-11 Thread Dan Jacobson
$ pdf pdf pdf2ps pdfcrack pdffonts pdfinfo pdfsig pdftocairo pdftoppm pdftotext pdf2dsc pdfattach pdfdetach pdfimages pdfseparate pdftexi2dvi pdftohtml pdftops pdfunite What's this, a new command called "pdf". I must try it! $ pdf bash: pdf: command not found $ ls -d pdf pdf Oh, all along it was

Re: Document -x and -vx give the same results

2021-11-14 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
I was testing -xeu vs. -vxeu on set -xeu set /var/lib/exim4/config.autogenerated cp $@ /tmp update-exim4.conf --verbose diff /tmp $@||: set update-exim4.conf.conf echo . $PWD/$@-jidanni > /tmp/$@ diff $@ /tmp and no matter STDOUT or STDERR they gave the same results, there in emacs' *compilation*

Document -x and -vx give the same results

2021-11-14 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
Man page says: -vPrint shell input lines as they are read. -xPrint commands and their arguments as they are executed. Perhaps mention that -x and -vx give the same results, often or always. GNU bash, version 5.1.8

Re: help for needs to mention for ((...))

2021-09-19 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
OK, so it first looks for exact hits, then does a grep style match. And we see that $ help f|grep :. false: false fc: fc [-e ename] [-lnr] [first] [last] or fc -s [pat=rep] [command] fg: fg [job_spec] for: for NAME [in WORDS ... ] ; do COMMANDS; done for ((: for (( exp1; exp2; exp3 )); do COMMANDS

Re: help for needs to mention for ((...))

2021-09-19 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
$ help f|wc -l 72 $ help fo |wc -l 24 $ help for |wc -l 10 $ help for\ |wc -l 14 $ help for\ \( |wc -l 14 $ help for\ \(\(|wc -l 14 So help help's 'If PATTERN is specified, gives detailed help on all commands matching PATTERN." is not telling the whole story about matching.

Re: help for needs to mention for ((...))

2021-09-19 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
OK, then "help for" should at least mention that trick to get the rest of the story.

help for needs to mention for ((...))

2021-09-19 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
$ help for only mentions for name [ [ in [ word ... ] ] ; ] do list ; done and needs to be updated to mention for (( expr1 ; expr2 ; expr3 )) ; do list ; done $ echo $BASH_VERSION 5.1.8(1)-release

"command" help page

2021-08-20 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
$ help command | grep -i -- -v -vprint a description of COMMAND similar to the `type' builtin -Vprint a more verbose description of each COMMAND $ command -v cat /bin/cat $ type cat cat is /bin/cat $ command -V cat cat is /bin/cat So it turns out -V is like type, not -v! Also

Document that set -v inside case statements is special

2021-04-20 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
Please document on the man page somewhere that set -v, +v inside case statements is special: $ cat A case x in x) set -v : B case y in y) set -v : Z ;; esac

Document variable names need to be all ASCII

2021-04-19 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
$ e哈=1 bash: e哈=1: command not found OK, but on man bash is it ever mentioned that a variable name must be all ASCII? ENVIRONMENT When a program is invoked it is given an array of strings called the environment. This is a list of name-value pairs, of the form nam

Say to use test -e in preference to test -a

2021-02-08 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
$ man bash #and $ help test #say -a FILETrue if file exists. -e FILETrue if file exists. OK, but add a note that it would be better to use -e, as it is more portable. Compare $ test -a . $ /usr/bin/test -a .

skip-completed-text "on" should be the default

2021-01-07 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
My experiments, https://github.com/scop/bash-completion/issues/489 "prove" that set skip-completed-text on should be the default, not off.

bind documentation needs example for variables too, not just keys

2021-01-07 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
Man bash says Readline Variables Readline has variables that can be used to further customize its behav‐ ior. A variable may be set in the inputrc file with a statement of the form set variable-name value or using the bind builtin command (see SHELL B

Allow using a different completion pager

2021-01-07 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
$ man bash page-completions (On) If set to On, readline uses an internal more-like pager to dis‐ play a screenful of possible completions at a time. OK, and it looks like: final.target first-boot-complete.target fstrim.service fstrim.timer --More-- But if I c

Expand first before asking the question "Display all xxx possibilities?"

2020-08-02 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
Instead of $ zz /jidanni_backups/da Display all 113 possibilities? (y or n) n and then finally showing $ zz /jidanni_backups/dan_home_bkp how about doing the expansion first, so entering $ zz /jidanni_backups/da would then change into $ zz /jidanni_backups/dan_home_bkp with below it the questio

Re: $ becomes \$ upon tab expansion

2020-05-25 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
OK, filed https://github.com/scop/bash-completion/issues/417 .

$ becomes \$ upon tab expansion

2020-05-24 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
$ ls $HOME/xx/yy/z becomes $ ls \$HOME/xx/yy/zz It should become $ ls $HOME/xx/yy/zz else it will fail when the user finally hits RET. (Assume a zz file already exists. "ls" here is just an example. same for "cat" etc.) Bash 5.0.16

Re: Add non-interactive PROMPT_COMMAND

2020-03-11 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
> "AKK" == Andreas Kusalananda Kähäri writes: AKK> Does setting a DEBUG trap not do what you want? Such a trap would be AKK> executed before each simple command... OK! I guess it does! Thanks.

Add non-interactive PROMPT_COMMAND

2020-03-10 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
PROMPT_COMMAND=sleep\ 1 is great, it lets us slow down scripts... but alas only if they are interactive. One might say: "Sure, instead of $ bash script just use $ sed 's/^/sleep 1; /' script | bash" But that assumes one command per line, and could easily mangle things. Instead bash simply needs

unsetting non set items

2019-12-19 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
Man bash: "unset" if there is no variable by that name, any function with that name is unset. Add: If there is no function by that name, nothing happens for that name.

Running 32 bit program on 64 bit system makes bash etc. look bad

2019-11-01 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
$ mapping/taipower/pole2tm bash: mapping/taipower/pole2tm: No such file or directory Must be a bash bug! Proof: $ ls -l mapping/taipower/pole2tm -rwxr-xr-x 1 jidanni jidanni 11290 2012-06-19 mapping/taipower/pole2tm But wait, $ strace mapping/taipower/pole2tm execve("mapping/taipower/pole2tm", [

Re: Idea: *.p completion

2019-09-01 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
CR> I'm saying that's what the default bash completion code does. The default CR> bash completion code leaves the word unchanged. Yes. That's why I'm saying wouldn't it be neat if it made *.p into *.pdf? What harm could possibly happen? The idea being if the user has handed it an asterisk, then he

Re: Idea: *.p completion

2019-09-01 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
>>>>> "CR" == Chet Ramey writes: CR> On 9/1/19 11:10 AM, 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson wrote: >> $ ls *.pdf >> a.pdf b.pdf >> $ diff *.p >> >> At this point should complete "*.pdf". CR> It does (well, the default completion does, may

Idea: *.p completion

2019-09-01 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
$ ls *.pdf a.pdf b.pdf $ diff *.p At this point should complete "*.pdf". Or maybe as a bonus it could complete "a.pdf b.pdf" via a different key.

mention bind when mentioning inputrc

2019-04-19 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
On the man page: Readline Variables Readline has variables that can be used to further customize its behavior. A variable may be set in the inputrc file with a ADD: ^or inspected with the bind command, or set statement of the for

Maybe implement emacs' previous-history-element

2019-03-02 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
All I know is in emacs, let's say we did ^Rgrandma this morning, and in the afternoon we did ^Rgrandpa. Well we could do ^R^R to search for grandpa again, and for grandma we could employ ^R then > M-p (translated from p) runs the command > previous-history-element (found in minibuffer-local-isear

Add warning on test -a, -o documentation

2019-02-13 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
On the bash man page at expr1 -a expr2 True if both expr1 and expr2 are true. expr1 -o expr2 True if either expr1 or expr2 is true. and on "help test" perhaps add the same warning as one sees on (info "(coreutils) Connectives for

Re: ${p+\"$p\"}

2019-01-22 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
OK so bash is right and dash is wrong? So I should file a dash bug?

${p+\"$p\"}

2019-01-21 Thread Dan Jacobson
So how am I to get "A" with bash? $ cat z p=A cat <

$PS5, for sh -v!

2018-04-03 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
$PS4 is for sh -x. Well, $PS5 or $PSv should be for sh -v! Imagine, with just a simple PS5='$ ', one could produce perfect dialogues, $ set -eu /tmp/x $ mkdir $@ $ cd $@ $ seq 3|xargs touch $ ls -U $@ 3 2 1 $ mv -v $@ /var$@ created directory '/var/tmp/x' copied '/tmp/x/1' -> '/var/tmp/x/1' cop

Re: help complete: mention remove all AND restore all

2017-11-10 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
> "EB" == Eduardo Bustamante writes: EB> I googled "disable programmable completion bash" and the first result I was just googling for disable bash completion. That's how confusing it is for most users.

Re: help shopt: mention what happens if only optnames are given

2017-11-05 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
OK it mentions "Without any option arguments". Then it also needs to mention "Without any argument at all".

help shopt: mention what happens if only optnames are given

2017-11-05 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
$ help shopt shopt: shopt [-pqsu] [-o] [optname ...] Set and unset shell options. Change the setting of each shell option OPTNAME. Without any option arguments, list all shell options with an indication of whether or not each is set. Add: If just optnames are given, list

Re: help complete: mention remove all AND restore all

2017-11-05 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
OK, please on $ help complete at "-r" please mention "To instead toggle on and off PROGRAMMABLE completion, use shopt -[su] progcomp." Reason: there is very little chance the user could Google the right answer out of the forest of answers out there. (P.S., I am not sure if PROGRAMMABLE should be

Re: help complete: mention remove all AND restore all

2017-11-05 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
PG> There is no magic way to restore them Actually it also says -pprint existing completion specifications in a reusable format So maybe it should say do I=$(completion -p); completion -r; : your tests; $I but I didn't test it.

Re: variables not TAB expanded except in first position

2017-11-05 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
OK submitted https://github.com/scop/bash-completion/issues/173

help complete: mention remove all AND restore all

2017-11-05 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
$ help complete -rremove a completion specification for each NAME, or, if no NAMEs are supplied, all completion specifications Add To later restore them do ... as one often wants to remove them all, try something, and then put them all back. I am no

variables not TAB expanded except in first position

2017-11-05 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
$ $BRO #makes $BROWSER. Good! $ xargs $BRO #just beeps. Bad. Yes I have bash-completions installed but am not sure what is to blame.

Re: ulimit -c unlimited

2017-07-26 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
CR> The third command attempts to increase the limit beyond the current hard CR> limit. If you're not root, this is not permitted. I find it odd that a normal user can raise it only once...

Re: ulimit -c unlimited

2017-07-26 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
$ ulimit -c 0 $ ulimit -c 99 $ ulimit -c 99 $ ulimit -c 99 bash: ulimit: 99: limit out of range $ ulimit -c 999 bash: ulimit: 999: limit out of range

ulimit -c unlimited

2017-07-25 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
$ ulimit -c 99 $ ulimit -c 99 $ ulimit -c unlimited bash: ulimit: core file size: cannot modify limit: Operation not permitted Maybe say: try again with numbers, not letters.

Re: expand x*y concludes with one

2017-06-25 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
OK I submitted http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=865875 against bash-completion.

Re: expand x*y concludes with one

2017-06-23 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
$ apt-cache policy bash bash-completion bash: Installed: 4.4-5 ... bash-completion: Installed: 1:2.1-4.3 ... OK $ INPUTRC=/dev/null bash $ : k*m kam kaam kam OK I suppose I should report a bug against the bash-completion package.

expand x*y concludes with one

2017-06-23 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
# su - nobody $ touch kam kaam kam $ : k*m #becomes: $ : kam $ sh sh-4.4$ : k*m #does a better job it seems: kam kaam kam sh-4.4$ : k*m

CTRL-R RET "morning after pill" keystroke

2017-05-14 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
New idea: you've searched way back in history (^R), found what you want, and hit RET, only to realize that you really wanted to hit ^O. Well now you have to search all over again (^R) and then hit ^N to get the same effect. Well perhaps there could be a "morning after pill" keystroke added. Bash

Re: echo x > a > b > c > d

2017-04-16 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
OK. (But shellcheck doesn't catch it either.) $ { echo '#!/bin/sh'; echo 'echo x > c > c > c';}|shellcheck /dev/stdin $ { echo '#!/bin/sh'; echo 'echo x < c < c < c';}|shellcheck /dev/stdin

Re: echo x > a > b > c > d

2017-04-16 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
OK sorry. I guess they make a lot of sense.

echo x > a > b > c > d

2017-04-16 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
Maybe bash should catch this $ echo x > a > b > c > d and print a warning. Same with $ cat < a < b < c < d

Re: history vs. poweroff

2017-01-31 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
GW> Log out, log back in as root, issue the command, and accept that root's GW> (very short) shell history will be lost. Well mention that on the man page. I.e., the man page should address the paradox of saving a complete history vs. being able to turn off one's computer.

Re: history vs. poweroff

2017-01-31 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
GW> I'm confused. You don't logout before shutting down your computer? GW> I would strongly recommend doing so, unless it's an emergency. All I know is I want to issue one command to turn off the computer. If I logged off first, how could I issue that (poweroff(8)) command? OK you people turn of

history vs. poweroff

2017-01-30 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
Man page says: When a shell with history enabled exits... and The shell exits by default upon receipt of a SIGHUP... However on slower systems, at the end of the day when the user issues the poweroff(8) command, all this might not complete, resulting in the entire day's of history getting thr

help vs. partial option lists

2017-01-03 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
$ help complete ... Options: -pprint existing completion specifications in a reusable format -rremove a completion specification for each NAME, or, if no NAMEs are supplied, all completion specifications -Dapply the completions and actio

Re: run_readline_command to avoid the bother of binding something

2016-09-18 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
OK then please add dump-functions Print all of the functions and their key bindings to the read- line output stream. If a numeric argument is supplied, the out- put is formatted in such a way that it can be made part of an inputr

undocumented 'prefer-visible-bell' found in /bin/bash

2016-09-17 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
$ strings /bin/bash | grep -c prefer-visible-bell 1 $ man bash | grep -c prefer-visible-bell 0 $ find /usr/share/doc/bash* -type f | xargs zgrep prefer-visible-bell | wc -l 0

Re: run_readline_command to avoid the bother of binding something

2016-09-17 Thread Dan Jacobson
Furthermore, one could finally do $ run_readline_command dump-variables | grep bell prefer-visible-bell is set to `on' bell-style is set to `audible' which is rather impossible, even if one does bind unbound commands. Currently one must probably use script(1), bind the key, and then exit and grep

run_readline_command to avoid the bother of binding something

2016-09-17 Thread Dan Jacobson
On the bash page at the end of Readline Command Names The following is a list of the names of the commands and the default key sequences to which they are bound. Command names without an accom- panying key sequence are unbound by default. In the following descrip-

why would anybody want ESC . to remember "&" ?

2016-08-01 Thread Dan Jacobson
$ bla1 bla2 bla3 & $ $ & Why not $ bla3 What value is remembering "&". Emacs' doesn't, and doesn't bother even mentioning it: C-c . runs the command comint-insert-previous-argument, which is an interactive compiled Lisp function in `comint.el'. It is bound to C-c .. (comint-insert-previous-a

TAB expand as much as you can before asking "Display all possibilities"

2016-06-13 Thread Dan Jacobson
Here we observe that bash _could_ first expand as much as it could, before asking us y or n, $ find .backups/\!h Display all 277 possibilities? (y or n) n $ find .backups/\!home\!jidanni\! Instead it waits until we say "n". (All I typed was the first line, and the "n"). BASH_VERSION='4.4.0(1)-rc

$ < some_file some_command Tab expansion

2016-06-06 Thread Dan Jacobson
Tab expansion works for both parts of $ some_command < some_file but not the some_command of $ < some_file some_command BASH_VERSION='4.4.0(1)-rc1'

Re: why must bash zap last search string just because we hit ^C?

2015-10-20 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
> Press Ctrl-u OK I see this also works for $ ^Rabcdefg^U $ some command the boss told me to do $ ^R^R and voila! I am back to searching "abcdefg" again. OK, I'll remember ^U. Case closed. Thanks everybody.

Re: why must bash zap last search string just because we hit ^C?

2015-10-17 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
> "DR" == Dave Rutherford writes: DR> Can you run gnu screen? ^A-c will get you a new shell session in the DR> existing terminal emulator (it will use a new terminal device, though, DR> if that's what you care about.) Let's pretend that I am on a gunk device on a gunk OS and all I have to wo

Re: why must bash zap last search string just because we hit ^C?

2015-10-17 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
> "CFAJ" == Chris F A Johnson writes: CFAJ> ^Z then fg ^Rsearch_string^Z^Z^Z^Z the ^Z's are ignored. I can't get back to a prompt with ^Z.

Re: why must bash zap last search string just because we hit ^C?

2015-10-17 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
> "DW" == Dennis Williamson writes: DW> Or just open a new terminal rather than interrupting an in-progress search. I am on a device where opening a new terminal is a lot of trouble.

Re: why must bash zap last search string just because we hit ^C?

2015-10-17 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
> "CFAJ" == Chris F A Johnson writes: CFAJ> Or just press UP (as many times as necessary) and RET. That won't get me to a $ prompt. I want to suspend my search and resume it later.

Re: why must bash zap last search string just because we hit ^C?

2015-10-17 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
DW> On Fri, Oct 16, 2015 at 1:50 PM, Chet Ramey wrote: DW> ^C rudely aborts the entire operation.  Why assume you want to save any DW> of the context? Because I got a phone call: the boss asked me to execute a shell command. I used ^C to get myself back to a prompt so I could type in the

why must bash zap last search string just because we hit ^C?

2015-10-16 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
Type ^Racb^C^R^R (Search backwards for abc, then hit ^C, then try searching backwards some more using the last search string.) My problem is why must bash zap the memory of abc just because we hit ^C?

Re: make first different character bold when showing completions ala emacs

2015-10-11 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
> "CR" == Chet Ramey writes: CR> There is an option in readline-7.0 that will cause completion to display CR> the common prefix of a set of possible completions in a distinctive CR> color. This has essentially the same visual effect. OK. I see http://packages.debian.org/readline-common is o

make first different character bold when showing completions ala emacs

2015-10-09 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
# dpkg -i /var/cache/apt/archives/phpmyadmin_4%3a4. shows phpmyadmin_4%3a4.4.15-1_all.deb phpmyadmin_4%3a4.5.0.2-2_all.deb # dpkg -i /var/cache/apt/archives/phpmyadmin_4%3a4. Can you please make the first different character bold, like emacs does, Possible completions are: phpmyadmin_4%3a4.4.15

add argument to help history

2014-10-23 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
$ help history -d offset delete the history entry at offset OFFSET. -aappend history lines from this session to the history file -nread all history lines not already read from the history file -rread the history file and append the contents to the his

Display all 132 possibilities? (y, n, or t) t=time!

2014-06-14 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
Super duper idea: you know when we hit TAB and it says Display all 132 possibilities? (y or n) Well, that happens to be the 'ls -a' format it is asking about. Well, who says that is the most natural format or the format we want at that time? What if occasionally we want the 'ls -t' or 'ls -ta' f

'help' command adds unnecessary trailing blanks indenting empty lines

2014-05-03 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
No big deal but, $ help :|cat -e :: :$ Null command.$ $ No effect; the command does nothing.$ $ Exit Status:$ Always succeeds.$

>| expansion assumes | rules instead of > rules

2014-03-10 Thread 積丹尼 Dan Jacobson
# su - nobody #create pristine bug testing environment $ : >| /tmp/ shows much less choices than $ : > /tmp/ It is probably wrongly assuming we want to see the $ : | /tmp/ choices! BASH_VERSION='4.3.0(1)-release' $ apt-cache policy bash-completion bash-completion: Installed: (none)

Bug#739835: ~ vs. filename expansion

2014-02-22 Thread Dan Jacobson
X-debbugs-cc: chet.ra...@case.edu bug-bash@gnu.org Package: bash-completion Version: 1:2.1-2 >>>>> "CR" == Chet Ramey writes: CR> On 2/21/14, 9:33 PM, Dan Jacobson wrote: >> Hitting TAB twice at the end of >> nobody@jidanni5:/$ : /home/jidanni/jidanni.org

~ vs. filename expansion

2014-02-21 Thread Dan Jacobson
Hitting TAB twice at the end of nobody@jidanni5:/$ : /home/jidanni/jidanni.org/location/directions/ nobody@jidanni5:/$ : ~jidanni/jidanni.org/location/directions/ shows a list of list of the filenames for the former, but not the latter. Indeed the for the latter one will have to type the filenames

two ESC . in a row on a fresh shell kills it

2014-02-19 Thread Dan Jacobson
Try su - nobody #(pristine account) then type : then type ESC . ESC . Whammo! The shell dies! The second ESC . acts like ^D. # su - nobody No directory, logging in with HOME=/ nobody@jidanni5:/$ cd /tmp nobody@jidanni5:/tmp$ script Script started, file is typescript nobody@jidanni5:/tmp$ : nobody

Re: Hitting C-c C-c in Emacs' *shell* causes segmentation fault

2014-02-06 Thread Dan Jacobson
> "CR" == Chet Ramey writes: CR> OK, I'll bite. What is C-c C-c supposed to do? It looks like it just CR> spews a bunch of garbage to your screen. Is that the intent? C-c C-c runs the command comint-interrupt-subjob, which is an interactive compiled Lisp function in `comint.el'. (comint-

Hitting C-c C-c in Emacs' *shell* causes segmentation fault

2014-02-06 Thread Dan Jacobson
Dear Bug-Bash gentlemen, http://debbugs.gnu.org/16665 says it seems like a bash bug. Please have a look if you are also an emacs person.

Re: Segmentation fault when -x is added and variable contains nulls

2014-02-06 Thread Dan Jacobson
What a clod I was, thinking @ was ^@. OK glad you guys are hot on the trail.

Segmentation fault when -x is added and variable contains nulls

2014-02-05 Thread Dan Jacobson
# su - nobody No directory, logging in with HOME=/ $ cat /tmp/r LC_CTYPE=zh_TW.UTF-8 N=$(echo 統一|iconv -t big5 -f utf-8) sh -xc ': $N' $ sh /tmp/r /tmp/r: line 1: 4551 Segmentation fault LC_CTYPE=zh_TW.UTF-8 N=$(echo 統一|iconv -t big5 -f utf-8) sh -xc ': $N' Something about that embedded nul

Re: let's establish BASH_MINIMUM_TIME_BETWEEN_INTERACTIVE_COMMAND

2014-01-30 Thread Dan Jacobson
OK fixed spelling. Put in .bashrc to prevent accidental execution of many line clipboard paste dumps: case $- in *i*) safety_seconds=5 SECONDS=1 PROMPT_COMMAND="if ((SECONDS==0)); then echo TOO FAST HOLMES, waiting \ $safety_seconds seconds or hit ^C; sleep $saftey_seconds; else SEC

Re: let's establish BASH_MINIMUM_TIME_BETWEEN_INTERACTIVE_COMMAND

2014-01-30 Thread Dan Jacobson
case $- in *i*) saftey_seconds=5 SECONDS=1 PROMPT_COMMAND="if ((SECONDS==0)); then echo TOO FAST HOLMES, waiting \ $saftey_seconds seconds or hit ^C; sleep $saftey_seconds; else SECONDS=0; fi" esac

Re: let's establish BASH_MINIMUM_TIME_BETWEEN_INTERACTIVE_COMMAND

2014-01-30 Thread Dan Jacobson
Ah ha! Thanks for the private tip 4 minutes ago. This works!: saftey_seconds=5 PROMPT_COMMAND='if ((SECONDS==0)); then echo TOO FAST HOLMES, waiting '\ $saftey_seconds' seconds or hit ^C; sleep '$saftey_seconds'; else SECONDS=0; fi' Hope somebody documents it somewhere as otherwise, well, "the sh

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