Jim, First off, <http://cygwin.com/acronyms/#PCYMTNQREAIYR>.
Your use of the expression "on the server" in the two contexts is confusing. I think at this point you'd better provide the exact steps you use to launch "vi" and "telnet". AFAIK, vi simply echoes "^G" to the terminal. OTOH, telnet simply passes whatever characters it gets from the remote application to the terminal (which could be "^G"). Why not try to run "vi" both locally and remotely (via telnet) from the same type of window (either X or rxvt or a console) and see if you get the same ding. Igor On Wed, 28 Apr 2004, Jim Gelasakis wrote: > Me Again, > > We have determined that a session in Vi when Escape is pressed > we hear the the beep we want on the server - No sound card is used > instead it is a system bell. > > When we do this through a telnet session the beep still happens on the > server. > > Any ideas on how vi calls this the Beep? And also any ideas on routing > it to the telnet session? > > And yes it is a basic piezo beep not the WAV sound. sorry for the > maddening.... > > Kind Regards > Jim Gelasakis > > > > -----Original Message----- > From: Igor Pechtchanski [mailto:pechtcha<at>cs<dot>nyu<dot>edu] > Sent: Wednesday, 28 April 2004 12:18 AM > To: Jim Gelasakis > Cc: cygwin<at>cygwin<dot>com > Subject: Re: Control G Beep on Telnet session using Cygwin > > > On Tue, 27 Apr 2004, Jim Gelasakis wrote: > > > We are using Cygwin version 1.5.5(0.94/3/2) on Windows 2000. > > > > I have a telnet session to my Shell - using bash. > > > > I want to generate a system beep (not a WAV) in the telnet session. > > The Cygwin console uses the MessageBeep functionality of Windows, which > usually plays a WAV. > > > We used to be able to do this previously in MKS using the control ^G > > statement to generate a system beep to the telnet session through > > named PIPES. > > Huh? ^G is the BEL character, and should generate a beep (or a ding), > but what does that have to do with named pipes? > > > We have tried many ways through Cygwin but are unable to achieve the > > same result. Is their an equivalent way to get this to work??? are we > > > able to get this function to work under Cygwin??? > > > > Any ideas would be appreciated. > > > > Kind Regards > > Jim Gelasakis > > If you aren't getting any sound at all, try googling for "cygwin > defaultbeep". Otherwise, if you are getting the sound but not the one > you want, try it from an X application (e.g., xterm). See > <http://cygwin.com/ml/cygwin/2004-03/msg00903.html> for more info (be > sure to read the follow-ups, though). > Igor -- http://cs.nyu.edu/~pechtcha/ |\ _,,,---,,_ [EMAIL PROTECTED] ZZZzz /,`.-'`' -. ;-;;,_ [EMAIL PROTECTED] |,4- ) )-,_. ,\ ( `'-' Igor Pechtchanski, Ph.D. '---''(_/--' `-'\_) fL a.k.a JaguaR-R-R-r-r-r-.-.-. Meow! "I have since come to realize that being between your mentor and his route to the bathroom is a major career booster." -- Patrick Naughton -- Unsubscribe info: http://cygwin.com/ml/#unsubscribe-simple Problem reports: http://cygwin.com/problems.html Documentation: http://cygwin.com/docs.html FAQ: http://cygwin.com/faq/