Lines Matching +full:reference +full:- +full:buffer
16 Vi/Ex Reference Manual
34 This document is the reference guide for the 4.4BSD
94 George Neville-Neil added the Tcl interpreter,
102 IEEE Std 1003.2-1992, IEEE Standard Portable Operating
110 .sy echo -n >index
111 .oh 'Vi/Ex Reference''USD:13-%'
112 .eh 'USD:13-%''Vi/Ex Reference'
119 is a line-oriented text editor.
127 .b \-R
128 (read-only) option of
131 This reference manual is the one provided with the
137 are intended as bug-for-bug compatible replacements for the original
141 This reference manual is accompanied by a traditional-style manual page.
150 This reference is intended for users already familiar with
186 .IP "8-bit clean data, large lines, files"
194 .CO <control-X>
209 colon command-line,
228 colon command-line.
241 .IP "Left-right scrolling"
246 to do left-right screen scrolling, instead of the traditional
272 on lines from the edit buffer.
280 .\"Editing is unchanged, with the exception that a \fC<carriage-return>\fP
297 .CO <control-W>
305 .CO <control-T>
330 .CO <control-A>
362 .b \-s
363 (the historic \- option)
432 .b \-c
480 The recovery directory should be owned by root, or at least by a pseudo-user.
482 .QQ sticky-bit
483 semantics are available, the directory should have the sticky-bit
506 .b \-t
601 Non-printable characters, for which
620 .QT "0x<high-halfbyte> ... 0x<low-halfbyte>" ,
622 .QT "\e<high-one-or-two-bits> ... \e<low-three-bits>" .
718 .CO <control-]> ,
745 .CO <control-T>
748 .CO <control-T>
751 .CO <control-]>
770 .CO <control-T>
775 .CO <control-T>
781 .CO <control-]>
834 .CO <control-]> ,
839 .CO <control-T>
916 it is expected to be a <colon> or <blank>-separated list of
921 .IP ":cs[cope] f[ind] c|d|e|f|g|i|s|t buffer|pattern"
933 If the pattern is a double-quote character followed by a valid buffer
936 then the contents of the named buffer are used as the pattern.
956 it is expected to contain a colon-separated list of directory names
1179 .LI <control-M>
1183 .LI <control-M>
1204 As a quick reference, the following function calls are provided for
1327 process, the edit session is read-only (as if the
1330 .b \-R
1335 .CO <control-G>
1418 .LI <control-C> ,
1420 .KY "<literal-next>"
1421 .IP "<literal-next>"
1425 .LI <control-V> .
1428 .LI <control-Q>
1456 .KY buffer
1457 .IP buffer
1460 text into a specific buffer, for later use, if the command allows
1464 command cannot save the changed text in a named buffer).
1485 where a buffer name is expected.
1488 named by lowercase characters, e.g. the buffer named by the
1491 is the same as the buffer named by the character
1493 with the exception that, if the buffer contents are being changed (as
1499 to the buffer, instead of replacing the current contents.
1507 or a single line of text specified by using a line-oriented motion,
1513 commands, a copy of the text is placed into the numeric buffer
1515 regardless of the user specifying another buffer in which to save it.
1533 <control-A> % ( )
1539 Before this copy is done, the previous contents of buffer
1541 are moved into buffer
1544 into buffer
1547 The contents of buffer
1553 In this case, the buffer rotation described above occurs before the
1554 replacement of the buffer's contents.
1570 .LI [buffer]
1594 displays the current orientation for each buffer.
1596 if the buffer is subsequently inserted into the text, line oriented
1603 If there is more than one line in the buffer, however, the current
1605 .KY "unnamed buffer"
1606 .IP "unnamed buffer"
1607 The unnamed buffer is a text storage area which is used by commands
1608 that use or operate on a buffer when no buffer is specified by the user.
1609 If the command stores text into a buffer,
1610 the text is stored into the unnamed buffer even if a buffer is also
1612 It is not possible to append text to the unnamed buffer.
1613 If text is appended to a named buffer,
1614 the named buffer contains both the old and new text,
1615 while the unnamed buffer contains only the new text.
1616 There is no way to explicitly reference the unnamed buffer.
1618 Historically, the contents of the unnamed buffer were discarded by many
1621 never discards the contents of the unnamed buffer until new text
1626 .KY "<carriage-return>"
1627 .IP "<carriage-return>"
1629 .LI <control-M> .
1637 .LI <control-J> .
1639 .LI <control-M>
1642 .oh 'Vi/Ex Reference (Vi Commands)''USD:13-%'
1643 .eh 'USD:13-%''Vi/Ex Reference (Vi Commands)'
1645 .oh 'Vi/Ex Reference''USD:13-%'
1646 .eh 'USD:13-%''Vi/Ex Reference'
1675 is a positive number, refers to the N-th line of the file.
1746 .PQ -
1755 .QT \-
1758 .QT \-5
1760 .QT \&.\-5 .
1765 .QT -
1768 .QT \-
1773 .QT \-
1776 .QT ++\-++
1807 The second address of any two-address sequence corresponds to a line that
1813 .oh 'Vi/Ex Reference (Ex Commands)''USD:13-%'
1814 .eh 'USD:13-%''Vi/Ex Reference (Ex Commands)'
1816 .oh 'Vi/Ex Reference (Options)''USD:13-%'
1817 .eh 'USD:13-%''Vi/Ex Reference (Options)'
1819 .oh 'Vi/Ex Reference''USD:13-%'
1820 .eh 'USD:13-%''Vi/Ex Reference'