Re: What Is Your Favorite Terminal Setup?

2010-10-08 Thread Gabriel Gunderson
On Fri, Oct 8, 2010 at 4:59 PM, Alex Esplin wrote: > Terminator is quite configurable, and has lots of things to tweak and > tinker with, which was another plus for me, too. What does Terminator give you that screen doesn't? Gabe /* PLUG: http://plug.org, #utah on irc.freenode.net Unsubscribe:

Re: What Is Your Favorite Terminal Setup?

2010-10-08 Thread Levi Pearson
On Fri, Oct 8, 2010 at 6:33 PM, Jonathan Duncan wrote: > > On 08 Oct 2010, at 17:38, Nicholas Leippe wrote: > >> You can do that with emacs, and then have all of emacs functionality >> on top of it. >> I know several people that live inside emacs very comfortably. >> > > Wow, you know all of the 3

Re: What Is Your Favorite Terminal Setup?

2010-10-08 Thread Levi Pearson
On Fri, Oct 8, 2010 at 6:33 PM, Jonathan Duncan wrote: > > On 08 Oct 2010, at 17:38, Nicholas Leippe wrote: > >> You can do that with emacs, and then have all of emacs functionality >> on top of it. >> I know several people that live inside emacs very comfortably. >> > > Wow, you know all of the 3

Re: What Is Your Favorite Terminal Setup?

2010-10-08 Thread Dave Smith
On Oct 8, 2010, at 4:59 PM, Alex Esplin wrote: > I use Terminator[1]. It allows for grid-based subdividing of your +1 for Terminator. I love setting up one Terminator instance with a 2x2 grid of terminals (for building, using git, and quick command line access). In another Terminator instance (o

Re: What Is Your Favorite Terminal Setup?

2010-10-08 Thread Michael Torrie
On 10/08/2010 03:35 PM, Ryan Simpkins wrote: > What I do is create a master screen session with ctrl-f as escape key, with no > hardstaus line. I recently moved from screen to tmux. Not really sure if tmux is better, but tmux does let you divide the terminal's screen anyway you want. /* PLUG: h

Re: What Is Your Favorite Terminal Setup?

2010-10-08 Thread Jonathan Duncan
On 08 Oct 2010, at 16:59, Alex Esplin wrote: > I use Terminator[1]. It allows for grid-based subdividing of your > terminal window, which I like so I can see stuff side-by-side or > top-bottom. Then, if I want I can launch screen sessions from each > sub-window. So I usually have one sub-window p

Re: What Is Your Favorite Terminal Setup?

2010-10-08 Thread Jonathan Duncan
On 08 Oct 2010, at 17:38, Nicholas Leippe wrote: > You can do that with emacs, and then have all of emacs functionality > on top of it. > I know several people that live inside emacs very comfortably. > Wow, you know all of the 3 individuals that use emacs? Impressive. ;) /* PLUG: http://plu

Re: What Is Your Favorite Terminal Setup?

2010-10-08 Thread Nicholas Leippe
You can do that with emacs, and then have all of emacs functionality on top of it. I know several people that live inside emacs very comfortably. /* PLUG: http://plug.org, #utah on irc.freenode.net Unsubscribe: http://plug.org/mailman/options/plug Don't fear the penguin. */

Re: What Is Your Favorite Terminal Setup?

2010-10-08 Thread Alex Esplin
On Fri, Oct 8, 2010 at 15:35, Ryan Simpkins wrote: > I've been wondering though, are there other terminal emulators out there worth > looking at? I chose gnome-terminal because it was there and seemed to work. > There have been occasions where it has frozen up on me. The background options > are a

What Is Your Favorite Terminal Setup?

2010-10-08 Thread Ryan Simpkins
I've been using gnome-terminal for years. Usually with just one tab opened in to a master screen session. It isn't uncommon to have 20+ active sessions on various systems. The most I've had running under normal use was around 50. What I do is create a master screen session with ctrl-f as escape ke

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2010-10-08 Thread Doran L. Barton
An Oracle recruiter contacted my wife. She asked me to pass these along to the LUG lists... Company: Oracle Location: Salt Lake City Jr – Mid Level Engineer - IRC1373937 Snr Level Engineer – IRC136 The Solaris Revenue Product Engineering team is responsible for source code level analysis