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Re: Readline macro question
From: |
Chet Ramey |
Subject: |
Re: Readline macro question |
Date: |
Mon, 1 Aug 2022 15:17:43 -0400 |
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Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; Intel Mac OS X 10.15; rv:91.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/91.11.0 |
On 7/29/22 6:44 PM, Robert E. Griffith wrote:
Thanks Koichi Murase, This opens up a whole new set of possibilities for
me. For some reason I thought -x only executed external commands and I
would not be able to change the environment.
Is there a way to get readline to return from inside the
rl_print_line_and_clear function? Like simulating a \n? I tried appending a
\n to READLINE_LINE but that did not cause it to return
That has the same effect as if you had entered ^V^M. Adding a character to
the line buffer does not make it appear in readline's input.
If not, I think I can use a macro that invokes a shell function and then
has a \C-m to tell readline to return.
That is the most common idiom. You use a macro that contains the key
sequences you want to appear on readline's input, exactly as if they had
been read from the keyboard. If you bind a key sequence to a shell
command using `bind -x', you need to put that key sequence in the macro.
I can only invoke a readline
function from within a macro string if that function has a keyseq bound to it?
Yes, there is no other way to invoke a bindable readline command.
$ bind -x '"<someObscureKey>": fooFn'
$ bind '"\eOP": "<someObscureKey>\C-m"'
Exactly.
--
``The lyf so short, the craft so long to lerne.'' - Chaucer
``Ars longa, vita brevis'' - Hippocrates
Chet Ramey, UTech, CWRU chet@case.edu http://tiswww.cwru.edu/~chet/