In usual applications - yes. In terminal - no.
In terminal Ctrl+C will terminate the process, You are doing there.
Copy is Ctrl+Shift+C, Paste is Ctrl+Shift+V or Shift+Insert.
I just tried and it works this way at least on Lucid.
Viesturs
Hm, using X11 copy is marking the text with your
On 18 December 2011 04:36, alice aliceyou...@localnet.com wrote:
i go to the terminal to load rtapi as docs say cd emc2 halrun, then it gives
error consistig of rtapi kernel not loaded.
You don't need to cd to emc2, and halrun needs to be a command on a
line by itself.
i would include the
2011/12/18 andy pugh bodge...@gmail.com:
On 18 December 2011 04:36, alice aliceyou...@localnet.com wrote:
i go to the terminal to load rtapi as docs say cd emc2 halrun, then it gives
error consistig of rtapi kernel not loaded.
You don't need to cd to emc2, and halrun needs to be a command on
Viesturs Lācis schrieb:
/snip/
It's called pastebin because you paste text there using the
copy/paste method.
Select the text in the terminal window (with the mouse) and press Copy
(Ctrl-C)
Ctrl+Shift+C is copy in terminal :))
Viesturs
No, Control-C is copy, correctly. Control-X
2011/12/18 Peter Blodow p.blo...@dreki.de:
Viesturs Lācis schrieb:
/snip/
It's called pastebin because you paste text there using the
copy/paste method.
Select the text in the terminal window (with the mouse) and press Copy
(Ctrl-C)
Ctrl+Shift+C is copy in terminal :))
Viesturs
No,
i go to the terminal to load rtapi as docs say cd emc2 halrun, then it gives
error consistig of rtapi kernel not loaded. i would include the file but ive
not yet figured out how to save it to send it to the paste bin this install
disk was burned dec 16 thanx jeremy