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[Bug-ed] GNU ed 1.19-rc1 released
From: |
Antonio Diaz Diaz |
Subject: |
[Bug-ed] GNU ed 1.19-rc1 released |
Date: |
Mon, 12 Dec 2022 16:55:14 +0100 |
User-agent: |
Mozilla/5.0 (X11; U; Linux i586; en-US; rv:1.9.1.19) Gecko/20110420 SeaMonkey/2.0.14 |
GNU ed 1.19-rc1 is ready for testing here
http://download.savannah.gnu.org/releases/ed/ed-1.19-rc1.tar.lz
The sha256sum is:
a72480569979c1ed62bdeaddd10bf043fb3718b8058d5b90a533160ff37b611a
ed-1.19-rc1.tar.lz
Please, test it and report any bugs you find.
GNU ed is a line-oriented text editor. It is used to create, display, modify
and otherwise manipulate text files, both interactively and via shell
scripts. A restricted version of ed, red, can only edit files in the current
directory and cannot execute shell commands. Ed is the "standard" text
editor in the sense that it is the original editor for Unix, and thus widely
available. For most purposes, however, it is superseded by full-screen
editors such as GNU Emacs or GNU Moe.
The homepage is at http://www.gnu.org/software/ed/ed.html
Changes in this version:
* Reading a non-existent file with commands 'e' or 'E' did set the
'modified' flag, which prevented a following 'e' command from succeeding.
(Reported by Harry Graf).
* The long name of option '-s' has been changed to '--script'. Option
'-s' now only suppresses byte counts and the '!' prompt as mandated by
POSIX. It no longer suppresses diagnostic messages written to stderr.
(Both changes suggested by Andrew L. Moore).
* The short name '-q' has been assigned to options '--quiet' and
'--silent'. Option '-q' now only suppresses diagnostic messages written to
stderr.
* The help message showing the line where a script error happened when
ed's input is from a regular file is now printed to stdout instead of stderr
because it is enabled by the 'H' command.
* Ed no longer processes file names for backslash escapes.
(Suggested by Andrew L. Moore).
* It has been documented in the manual that address 0 is valid as a
starting point for searches so that '0;/RE/' can match the regular
expression RE in the first line of the buffer.
* It has been documented in the manual how to achieve the effect of ex
style '!' filtering with a sequence of commands.
Regards,
Antonio Diaz, GNU ed maintainer.
--
If you care about data safety and long-term archiving, please consider using
lzip. See http://www.nongnu.org/lzip/lzip_benchmark.html
http://www.nongnu.org/lzip/manual/lzip_manual.html#Quality-assurance and
http://www.nongnu.org/lzip/safety_of_the_lzip_format.html Thanks.
- [Bug-ed] GNU ed 1.19-rc1 released,
Antonio Diaz Diaz <=