Re: Capturing Text

2000-05-24 Thread Michael O'Donnell
I agree that xterm's log-to-file feature can be handy sometimes, but it also can be a security hole so it's often not compiled in. ** To unsubscribe from this list, send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the following text in the *body* (*no

Re: Capturing Text

2000-05-24 Thread Karl J. Runge
On Wed, 24 May 2000, "Patrick J. O'Rourke" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > > > > Is there a way to capture(record) the text in a terminal window or in run > > > level 3? > > on a somewhat related note... > > xterm's on Solaris have an option to 'Log to File' on the 'Main Options' > menu (CT

Re: Capturing Text

2000-05-24 Thread Patrick J. O'Rourke
> > > Is there a way to capture(record) the text in a terminal window or in run > > level 3? on a somewhat related note... xterm's on Solaris have an option to 'Log to File' on the 'Main Options' menu (CTRL-BTN1), however I noticed on Linux this option is labelled as 'Print Window'. Is this a

Re: Capturing Text

2000-05-23 Thread Bruce Dawson
Yes. You can use the script command... $ script file.log ... Your session $ exit The final exit will put you back in the shell that was running when you issued the script command. Rick Petree wrote: > > Is there a way to capture(record) the text in a terminal window or

Capturing Text

2000-05-23 Thread Rick Petree
Is there a way to capture(record) the text in a terminal window or in run level 3? Rick :-) [EMAIL PROTECTED] winmail.dat