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EDITRC(5edit)                        LOCAL                        EDITRC(5edit)

NAME
       editrc — configuration file for editline library

SYNOPSIS
       editrc

DESCRIPTION
       The   editrc   file   defines   various  settings  to  be  used  by  the
       editline(3edit) library.

       The format of each line is:

             [prog:]command [arg ...]

       command is one  of  the  editline(3edit)  builtin  commands.   Refer  to
       “BUILTIN COMMANDS” for more information.

       prog  is  the  program  name string that a program defines when it calls
       el_init(3) to set up editline(3edit), which is usually argv[0].  command
       will be executed for any program which matches prog.

       prog may also be a regex(3) style  regular  expression,  in  which  case
       command  will  be  executed for any program that matches the regular ex-
       pression.

       If prog is absent, command is executed for all programs.

BUILTIN COMMANDS
       The editline library has some builtin commands,  which  affect  the  way
       that the line editing and history functions operate.  These are based on
       similar named builtins present in the tcsh(1) shell.

       The following builtin commands are available:

       bind [-aeklrsv] [key [command]]
             Without options and arguments, list all bound keys and macros, and
             the editor command or input string to which each one is bound.  If
             only  key is supplied, show the binding for that key or macro.  If
             key command is supplied, bind the editor command to  that  key  or
             macro.

             The options are as follows:

             -a    List  or  change  key  bindings  in the vi(1) mode alternate
                   (command mode) key map.

             -e    Bind all keys to the standard GNU Emacs-like bindings.

             -k    key is interpreted as a symbolic arrow key name,  which  may
                   be one of up, down, left or right.

             -l    List all editor commands and a short description of each.

             -r    Remove the binding of the key or macro key.

             -s    Define a keyboard macro rather than a key binding or command
                   macro:  command is taken as a literal string and appended to
                   the input queue whenever  key  is  typed.   Bound  keys  and
                   macros  in  command  are  themselves reinterpreted, and this
                   continues for ten levels of interpretation.

             -v    Bind all keys to the standard vi(1)-like bindings.

             The editline(7edit) manual documents all editor commands and  con-
             tains more information about macros and the input queue.

             key  and  command  can  contain  control  characters  of  the form
             ‘^character’ (e.g. ‘^A’), and the following backslashed escape se-
             quences:

                   \a          Bell
                   \b          Backspace
                   \e          Escape
                   \f          Formfeed
                   \n          Newline
                   \r          Carriage return
                   \t          Horizontal tab
                   \v          Vertical tab
                   \nnn        The ASCII character corresponding to  the  octal
                               number nnn.

             ‘\’  nullifies  the special meaning of the following character, if
             it has any, notably ‘\’ and ‘^’.

       echotc [-sv] arg ...
             Exercise terminal capabilities given in arg.  If  arg  is  ‘baud’,
             ‘cols’,  ‘lines’, ‘rows’, ‘meta’, or ‘tabs’, the value of that ca-
             pability is printed, with “yes” or “no” indicating that the termi-
             nal does or does not have that capability.

             -s returns an empty string for non-existent  capabilities,  rather
             than causing an error.  -v causes messages to be verbose.

       edit [on | off]
             Enable or disable the editline functionality in a program.

       history list | size n | unique n
             The  ‘list’  command lists all entries in the history.  The ‘size’
             command sets the history size to n entries.  The ‘unique’  command
             controls  if  history  should keep duplicate entries.  If n is non
             zero, only keep unique history entries.  If n is zero,  then  keep
             all entries (the default).

       settc cap val
             Set  the terminal capability cap to val, as defined in termcap(5).
             No sanity checking is done.

       setty [-a] [-d] [-q] [-x] [+mode] [-mode] [mode] [char=c]
             Control which tty modes  that  editrc  won't  allow  the  user  to
             change.  -d, -q or -x tells setty to act on the ‘edit’, ‘quote’ or
             ‘execute’ set of tty modes respectively; defaulting to -x.

             Without  other  arguments, setty lists the modes in the chosen set
             which are fixed on (+mode) or off (-mode).  -a lists all tty modes
             in the chosen set regardless of the setting.  With +mode, -mode or
             mode, fixes mode on or off or removes control of mode in the  cho-
             sen set.

             Setty  can also be used to set tty characters to particular values
             using char=value.  If value is empty then the character is set  to
             _POSIX_VDISABLE.

       telltc
             List the values of all the terminal capabilities (see termcap(5)).

ENVIRONMENT
       EDITRC           Names   the   default   configuration   file   for  the
                        editline(3edit) library.

FILES
       ~/.editrc                         Last resort  user  configuration  file
                                         for  the editline(3edit) library if no
                                         other file is specified.

SEE ALSO
       editline(3edit), regex(3), termcap(5), editline(7edit)

AUTHORS
       The editline library was written by Christos Zoulas, and this manual was
       written by Luke Mewburn, with some sections inspired by tcsh(1).

Debian                            May 22, 2016                    EDITRC(5edit)

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