Date: Fri, 22 Nov 2019 16:16:58 +0800 From: Clark Wang <dearv...@gmail.com> Message-ID: <CADv8-ogRv-atdWkiRNWdVA=V03XKpq4AF1-pDTmc=pmkuih...@mail.gmail.com>
| Curious why people care about this? For some people it seems to be related to wanting to see $? in their prompt, and either have it explicit that a SIGINT interrupted command entry, or continue with previous $? .. For me it is partly just because of what $? is. From posix: ? Expands to the decimal exit status of the most recent pipeline (see Section 2.9.2). nothing about being altered by anything other than (at least attempted) execution of a pipeline (ie: some command or other). More practically, the times when I want it are when I have run a command, then start typing the next one, and realise that I really meant to check the exit status of the last one before running another. If I finish typing my next command I just mentally curse my forgetfulness, and take whatever action I can (often re-running the previous command, if that makes sense). But if I catch it before I have finished the next command, I have the opportunity to abort what I'm doing, and check $? before it is lost. If that happens while still on the first (or only) line of the new command, then a line kill char (^U often) is OK, deletes whatever I typed, and I can replace that with "echo $?" or whatever. But if it happens after a \n has been entered, that no longer works, whereas SIGINT (^C usually) does: Compare bash... jinx$ false jinx$ while sleep 3 do ^C jinx$ echo $? 130 (in bash my PS2 is set to be (become really) invisible so I can cut/paste whole command sequences) to the NetBSD sh (where editline doesn't handle my PS2 "properly") [jinx]{2}$ false [jinx]{2}$ while sleep 3 > do > [jinx]{2}$ echo $? 1 [jinx]{2}$ true [jinx]{2}$ while sleep 3 > do > [jinx]{2}$ echo $? 0 (there was a ^C, not echoed explicitly, after the PS2 prompt on the line after each "do" ... the lack of the echo another difference between editline and readline I assume, the ^C is echoed if I disable editline and just use the tty driver, my PS2 also works as planned then). [jinx]{2}$ set +V [jinx]{2}$ true [jinx]{2}$ while sleep 3 do ^C [jinx]{2}$ echo $? 0 kre