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VIEWGLOB(1)		  Viewglob Manual (viewglob)		   VIEWGLOB(1)

NAME
       viewglob - convenience wrapper script for the Viewglob package

SYNOPSIS
       viewglob [options]

DESCRIPTION
       Viewglob	 supervises  interactive shell activity and tracks file selec‐
       tions and globs in a graphical display showing the contents of relevant
       directories.

       The viewglob command is a convenience wrapper for two other programs in
       the Viewglob package which do the actual work,  vgseer(1)  and  vgd(1).
       You  will  want	to  use	 those programs directly to do things that are
       non-simple.

       If this script is run from a terminal,  that  terminal  will  be	 used.
       Otherwise  the  default terminal program will be determined using gcon‐
       ftool-2(1), with xterm as the fallback.

       General information about using Viewglob can be found on	 this  manpage
       under USAGE.

OPTIONS
       This  program  follows  the  usual  GNU	command line syntax, with long
       options starting with two dashes.  A summary is included below.

       -h, --host=<name>
	      Connect a new vgseer process to a vgd process on the given host.
	      You  should  only specify this if you are not connecting to your
	      local machine.

       -p, --port=<number>
	      Connect a new vgseer process to a vgd process on the given port.
	      If  it  is  a local connection and there is no vgd active on the
	      port, one will be started.  The default  port  for  Viewglob  is
	      16108  (1-GLOB).	 By  default  Viewglob will communicate over a
	      Unix-domain socket for a local vgd instance, but will still lis‐
	      ten on the specified port for remote connections.

       -c, --shell-mode=<name>
	      Shell  to	 be  used.   name  can	be “bash” or “zsh” (default is
	      bash).

       -t, --shell-star=<on/off>
	      Show or hide the asterisk character  which  is  usually  at  the
	      beginning of a vgseer shell prompt.

       -d, --display=<vgmini|vgclassic|[path]>
	      Display  program.	 The Viewglob package comes with vgclassic and
	      vgmini (the newer display).  Though there aren't any other  dis‐
	      plays  in	 existence at this point, one could be used by passing
	      its path.	 The default is vgmini.

       -s, --sort-style=<windows|ls>
	      In the display, sort files with directories first	 (Windows)  or
	      purely by name (ls).  ls mode is the default.

       -r, --dir-order=<descending|ascending|ascending-pwd-first>
	      In  the  display,	 list  directories  in	descending  order (the
	      default), ascending (last referenced directory has the top list‐
	      ing), or ascending with the current directory always first.

       -z, --font-size-modifier=<+/-##>
	      Increase	or  decrease  the base font size in the display by the
	      given number.  E.g.  “-z	+2”  increases	the  window  manager's
	      default by 2, while “-z -2” decreases the default by 2.

       -i, --file-icons=<on/off>
	      Show or hide the file type icons in the display.

       -H, --help
	      Show summary of options.

       -V, --version
	      Show the version of the package.

       Note that vgseer and vgd have further options when used directly.

USAGE
       When  you start Viewglob, you'll be presented with your familiar prompt
       and a new window showing the file layout of the current directory.   As
       you  begin to type a command, the display window will highlight to show
       potential filename completions (dull highlight) and file selections and
       globs/expansions	 (vibrant  highlight).	 Also,	as you reference other
       directories (e.g. ../ or /usr/local/), their  layouts  will  appear  as
       well.

       At  the	bottom of the display is the command line.  This is what View‐
       glob is actually basing its results on; if you find the display is  not
       showing	what  you  expected,  check to make sure the display's command
       line is the same as the one in the shell, as they can be different (see
       NOTES below).

       With  a few exceptions, any text you type into the display is passed to
       the terminal as input.  So if you wished, you could use the display  as
       your interface to the shell -- this actually works quite well if you're
       doing a lot of file management.	Arrow keys, Page Up, Page Down,	 Home,
       and End are interpreted by the display and not passed to the terminal.

       If you start other Viewglob-supervised shells, they will share the dis‐
       play if they connect to the same vgd process (default).	Whichever ter‐
       minal  is currently active (i.e. has window focus or is being typed in)
       will have its environment shown.

       Display Navigation
	   You can navigate the display from  the  terminal  by	 pressing  C-g
	   (Ctrl-G) followed by a direction character.	They are:

		  Up:		       C-k, C-p, or <Up Arrow>
		  Down:		       C-j, C-n, or <Down Arrow>
		  Page Up:	       C-b, C-u, or <Page Up>
		  Page Down:	       C-f, C-d, or <Page Down>

	   To  enter  a real C-g to the shell, type it twice.  Navigation com‐
	   mands can be chained together - for example, typing C-g C-f C-f C-k
	   will	 page  down  twice and then move up once.  The chain is broken
	   when a non-navigation character is typed.

	   In vgmini, the default display program, Up and  Down	 are  used  to
	   switch between viewable direcories, while Page Up and Page Down are
	   used to navigate the currently viewed directory.

       Commands
	   There are four Viewglob commands in addition to display navigation.
	   After typing C-g:

		  Set or clear mask:   <ENTER>
		  Toggle on/off:       C-<SPACE>
		  Refocus window:      <TAB>
		  Disable:	       C-q

	   Toggling  will  close the display if it's active or open it if not.
	   It's completely safe to open and close the display multiple times.

	   The behaviour of the refocus command is affected by the following:
		  -  The display program used.
		  -  The vgd execution options.
		  -  The location of the display in  relation  to  the	active
		     terminal.

	   Generally it tries to ensure that both the terminal and the display
	   are viewable at the same time, and if they already are, it switches
	   the focus between the display and the active terminal (sort-of like
	   an internal Alt-<TAB>).

	   If the display did not automatically update to  the	current	 shell
	   after a window shuffle (i.e. it's showing the environment of a dif‐
	   ferent shell), refocusing will wake it up.  This is often necessary
	   for tabbed terminals like gnome-terminal and konsole.

	   Disabling  Viewglob functionality disconnects the terminal from vgd
	   and turns vgseer off, resulting in an almost regular shell.	 There
	   is no way to re-enable Viewglob in a shell which has been disabled.

       Filename Masking
	   File	 masking  is  a	 way  to control the number and types of files
	   shown in the display.  The default mask is  "*",  which  shows  all
	   non-hidden  files.  To show ALL files, an appropriate mask would be
	   ".* *".  To show only C source files, the mask could be "*.[ch]" or
	   "*.c *.h".  To just display directory file types, the mask would be
	   "*/".

	   A mask can be set with the key sequence C-g	[mask]	<ENTER>.   The
	   mask	 string will print in the display as it's being typed.	Typing
	   a non-printable character (such as <ESC> or C-c) while  creating  a
	   new	mask  will cancel it.  The mask can be set back to the default
	   "*" with a simple C-g <ENTER>.

	   File masking is done on the client level.   Therefore,  when	 using
	   Viewglob  with  a  remote  machine,	a conservative file mask could
	   improve response time a little.

       File/Directory Name Insertion
	   The name of any file or directory can be passed to the terminal  by
	   double  left-clicking.  If shift is held, the full path of the file
	   or directory is passed.  Insertion works as follows:

	       If you are currently at the command line (i.e.  the  shell  has
	       control of the terminal):
	       - Special characters (*, ?, !, etc.) are escaped.
	       - If  there is no whitespace to the left of the cursor, a space
		 is prepended to the inserted text.
	       - If there is no whitespace to the right of the cursor, a space
		 is appended to the inserted text.

	       If  you	are  executing	another program in the terminal (say a
	       text editor or something):
	       - The text is inserted as-is, without any escaping or spacing.

	   Note that insertion of file names works pretty  much	 the  same  as
	   just	 pasting  text into the terminal -- it's interpreted only as a
	   series of keystrokes.  This means it's your	responsibility	to  be
	   sure	 that  the shell is in a state cooperative to the reception of
	   text.  For example, if you use  vi-mode  in	your  shell,  and  you
	   insert  a  file  name  while you're in command mode, the shell will
	   receive the data as a series of commands - probably	not  what  you
	   wanted to do.

FILES
       ~/viewglob/vgseer.conf
       ~/viewglob/vgd.conf

	      If present, these file specify a default configuration for View‐
	      glob.  See the manuals for vgseer(1) and vgd(1) for more	infor‐
	      mation.

NOTES
       First  of  all,	when  I	 say  below “such-and-such feature of bash/zsh
       doesn't work in Viewglob”, I just mean that the display will  not  show
       expansion  information  for  that  feature.   The functionality of both
       shells is UNCHANGED by running Viewglob.	 Anyhow.

       Unfortunately, I haven't found a good way to predict history  expansion
       (stuff involving the special char “!”).	The Viewglob display will pre‐
       tend any construction starting with an  unescaped  !  does  not	exist.
       Exceptions: a ! by itself, or the !(foo) pattern match.

       A  Viewglob'd  shell session will not extend to subshells.  That is, if
       while in a Viewglob session you run, say, “bash” or “su”, Viewglob will
       probably be temporarily disabled until you exit the new shell.  This is
       a consequence of Viewglob's implementation, but I'd probably keep  this
       behaviour even if I could get around it.

       Since  Viewglob	doesn't track changes in shell variables, I've decided
       to take out variable interpretation entirely.  If Viewglob sees what it
       thinks  is  a  variable	in  its command line, it'll stop processing it
       until it's removed.  The variables will of  course  work	 fine  in  the
       shell itself.

       While  running  Viewglob, don't unset or change the following variables
       and functions.

	      In bash: PS1, PROMPT_COMMAND, histchars;
	      In zsh:  PROMPT (or PS1), RPROMPT, precmd, TRAPHUP;

       Viewglob would probably become confused.	 Note that if  you  do	change
       one  of	these  (maybe  you were curious, or you just forgot), it won't
       affect the shell you were using, just the display.
       If you want to modify these variables, do so outside of a Viewglob ses‐
       sion, or put your changes in the shell's run control file.

       Only  the  first	 command  in a compound command will be interpreted by
       Viewglob.  For example, as you type:

	      $ mv *.jp{e,}g ~/photos/ && rm *

       Viewglob will stop listening when it sees “&&”, and  the	 display  will
       only  register  *.jp{e,}g.  This isn't an implementation problem - it's
       just that showing globbing for the subsequent commands could be	decep‐
       tive, as the filesystem could be changed by executing the first command
       (as it is in this case).

       Command substitution  (stuff  with  backticks  (`)  or  $(command))  is
       ignored	by  Viewglob  for  the reason given above.  Works fine in your
       shell though.

       The display will not interpret aliases in zsh.

       For more information, please visit:

	      http://viewglob.sourceforge.net/

BUGS
       Tabbed terminal programs such as gnome-terminal and konsole confuse the
       active-terminal-tracking functionality (use the refocus command to tell
       Viewglob you've changed shells).

       Command line tracking seems to be pretty good for general use,  but  is
       far from perfect.

       Resizing	 the  terminal	window after you've typed a multi-line command
       will often cause Viewglob's command line to become temporarily  out  of
       sync  with  the	true command line, though it tries really hard to keep
       up.  No big deal if this happens -- Viewglob should be in sync  by  the
       start of the next command.

       And  there are certainly others.	 If you spot any bugs (and they aren't
       explained by NOTES above), send me a message,  okay?   Ideas  and  code
       contributions are also very welcome.

AUTHORS
       Stephen Bach <sjbach@users.sourceforge.net>

SEE ALSO
       bash(1), zsh(1), ls(1), glob(7), dir_colors(5).

				April 26, 2006			   VIEWGLOB(1)
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