Recalling Commands in Unix?
Robert Claeson
prc at erbe.se
Sat Jan 6 01:33:05 AEST 1990
In article <8769.2597362d at ecs.umass.edu>, satam at ecs.umass.edu (Kirtikumar Satam) writes:
> In article <5141 at blake.acs.washington.edu>,
> gnat at blake.acs.washington.edu (Laura Frazier) writes:
> > Is there any command in Unix comparable to ^B in VMS that will allow me
> > to recall previous commands instead of typing them repeatedly?
> On ULTRIX, a new "csh" is provided. It allows browsing thru' commands
> like VMS using up-down arrow keys. Once the command is recalled, it
> can be edited using "vi" like commands i.e. 'x' for delete, 'i' for
> insert etc.
The Korn shell (usually /bin/ksh on those systems that have it) has command-
line editing using vi, Unipress emacs or Gnu emacs commands. No support for
arrow keys, though.
BBC (Boston Business Computing) has a DCL clone shell (VCL) that includes
most of the common VMS commands, including the HELP system. It supports
full DCL-like command-line editing. There's an EDT clone as well.
--
Robert Claeson E-mail: rclaeson at erbe.se
ERBE DATA AB
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