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LEDIT(1)							      LEDIT(1)

NAME
       ledit - line editor, version 2.03

SYNOPSIS
       ledit [-h file] [-x] [-t] [-l length] [-a | -u] [command options]

DESCRIPTION
       The  command  ledit  allows  to	edit  lines one by one when running an
       interactive command. When typing a line, some keys with control or meta
       are  interpreted:  it is possible to insert characters in the middle of
       the line, go to the beginning or the end of the line,  get  a  previous
       line, search for a line with a pattern, etc.

OPTIONS
       The options are:

       -h file
	      Save  the	 lines typed (history) in file. The default is to have
	      them only in memory (so, they are lost at the end	 of  the  pro‐
	      gram).

       -x     Extend  the  history  file  (given in option "-h") if it already
	      exists. The default is to truncate the history file.

       -t     Display the sequences generated by the keys (for debugging).

       -v     Print ledit version and exit.

       -l length
	      Tells that length is the maximum line length displayed.  If  the
	      line  edited  is longer than this length, the line scrolls hori‐
	      zontally, while editing. The default value is 70.

       -a     Ascii encoding: characters whose code is greater	than  128  are
	      displayed with a backslash followed by their code.

       -u     Unicode  encoding:  the  terminal	 must have been set in unicode
	      mode. See commands unicode_start and unicode_stop.

       command options
	      Runs the command command and its possible options. This must  be
	      the last option of ledit. The default value is "cat".

KEYS BINDINGS
       When  ledit  starts,  some default key bindings are defined. The can be
       completed with a "leditrc" file. See the section LEDITRC.

       In the following lines, the caret sign  "^"  means  "control"  and  the
       sequence "M-" means "meta" (either with the "meta" prefix, or by press‐
       ing the "escape" key before). Examples:

       ^a	 press the "control" key, then press "a",  then	 release  "a",
		 then release "control".

       M-a	 press	the "meta" key, then press "a", then release "a", then
		 release "meta", or: press and release the "escape" key,  then
		 press	and  release "a" (the manipulation with "meta" may not
		 work in some systems: in this case, use the manipulation with
		 "escape").

       The default editing commands are:

	     ^a	  : beginning of line
	     ^e	  : end of line
	     ^f	  : forward char
	     ^b	  : backward char
	     M-f  : forward word
	     M-b  : backard word
	     TAB  : complete file name
	     ^p	  : previous line in history
	     ^n	  : next line in history
	     M-<  : first line in history
	     M->  : last line in history
	     ^r	  : reverse search in history (see below)
	     ^d	  : delete char (or EOF if the line is empty)
	     ^h	  : (or backspace) backward delete char
	     ^t	  : transpose chars
	     M-c  : capitalize word
	     M-u  : upcase word
	     M-l  : downcase word
	     M-d  : kill word
	     M-^h : (or M-del or M-backspace) backward kill word
	     ^q	  : insert next char
	     M-/  : expand abbreviation
	     ^k	  : cut until end of line
	     ^y	  : paste
	     ^u	  : line discard
	     ^l	  : redraw current line
	     ^g	  : abort prefix
	     ^c	  : interrupt
	     ^z	  : suspend
	     ^\	  : quit
	     return : send line
	     ^x	    : send line and show next history line
	     other  : insert char

       The arrow keys can be used, providing your keyword returns standard key
       sequences:

	     up arrow	 : previous line in history
	     down arrow	 : next line in history
	     right arrow : forward char
	     left arrow	 : backward char

       Other keys:

	     home	 : beginning of line
	     end	 : end of line
	     delete	 : delete char
	     page up	 : previous line in history
	     page down	 : next line in history
	     shift home	 : beginning of history
	     shift end	 : end of history

REVERSE SEARCH
       The reverse search in incremental, i.e. ledit backward searchs  in  the
       history	a  line	 holding  the  characters  typed. If you type "a", its
       search the first line before the current line holding an "a"  and  dis‐
       plays  it.  If you then type a "b", its search a line holding "ab", and
       so on. If you type ^h (or backspace), it returns to the	previous  line
       found. To cancel the search, type ^g. To find another line before hold‐
       ing the same string, type ^r.  To stop the editing and display the cur‐
       rent  line  found, type "escape" (other commands of the normal editing,
       different from ^h, ^g, and ^r stop the editing too).

       Summary of reverse search commands:

	     ^g	 : abort search
	     ^r	 : search previous same pattern
	     ^h	 : (or backspace) search without the last char
	     del : search without the last char
	     any other command : stop search and show the line found

LEDITRC
       If the environment variable LEDITRC is set, it contains the name of the
       leditrc	file. Otherwise it is the file named ".leditrc" in user's home
       directory. When starting, ledit reads this file, if it exists, to  mod‐
       ify  or	complete  the  default bindings. If this file is changed while
       reading lines, it is read again to take the new file into account.

       Bindings lines are the ones which start with a string defining the  key
       sequence	 and  follow with a colon and a binding. A binding is either a
       string or a command. The other lines are ignored For example,the line:

	   "\C-a": beginning-of-line

       binds the sequence "control-a" to the command "beginning-of-line".

       The key sequence may contain the specific meta-sequences:

	   \C-	 followed by a key: "control" of this key
	   \M-	 followed by a key: "meta" of this key
	   \e	 the "escape" key
	   \nnn	 where nnn is one, two, or three octal digits, or:
	   \xnn	 where nn is one or two hexadecimal digits:
		   the binary representation of a byte
	   \a	 bell = \C-g
	   \b	 backspace = \C-h
	   \d	 delete = \277
	   \f	 form feed = \C-l
	   \n	 newline = \C-j
	   \r	 carriage return = \C-m
	   \t	 tabulation = \C-i
	   \v	 vertical tabulation = \C-k

       The commands are:

	 abort: do nothing
	 accept-line: send the current line
	 backward-char: move the cursor to the previous character
	 backward-delete-char: delete the previous character
	 backward-kill-word: delete the previous word
	 backward-word: move the cursor before the previous word
	 beginning-of-history: display the first line of the history
	 beginning-of-line: move the cursor at the beginning of the line
	 capitalize-word: uppercase the first char and lowercase the rest
	 delete-char: delete the character under the cursor
	 delete-char-or-end-of-file: same but eof if no character in the line
	 downcase-word: lowercase whole word
	 end-of-history: display the last line of the history
	 end-of-line: move the cursor to the end of the line
	 expand-abbrev: try to complete the word by looking at the history
	 expand-to-file-name: try to complete the word from a file name
	 forward-char: move the cursor after the next word
	 forward-word: move the cursor to the next character
	 interrupt: interrupt command (send control-C)
	 kill-line: delete from the cursor to the end and save in buffer
	 kill-word: delete the next word
	 next-history: display the next line of the history
	 operate-and-get-next: send line and display the next history line
	 previous-history: display the previous line of the history
	 quit: quit ledit
	 quoted-insert: insert the next character as it is
	 redraw-current-line: redisplay the current line
	 reverse-search-history: backward search in the history
	 suspend: suspend ledit (send control-Z)
	 transpose-chars: exchange the last two characters
	 unix-line-discard: kill current line
	 upcase-word: uppercase whole word
	 yank: insert kill buffer

KNOWN BUGS
       If ledit has been launched in a shell script, the suspend command kills
       it and its command... Use "exec ledit comm" instead of "ledit comm".
       The  suspend  command stops ledit but not the called program. Do not do
       this if the called program is not waiting on standard input.
       In some systems (e.g. alpha), pasting two many characters works bad and
       may block the terminal. Probably a kernel problem. No solution.

SEE ALSO
       unicode_start(1), unicode_stop(1).

AUTHOR
       Daniel de Rauglaudre, at INRIA, france.
       daniel.de_rauglaudre@inria.fr

INRIA			       Wed Jan 23, 2008			      LEDIT(1)
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