On 2005-10-26, Tim Golden wrote: > [Sybren Stuvel] > > Tim Golden enlightened us with: >> > Well, I'm with you. I'm sure a lot of people will chime in to point >> > out just how flexible and useful and productive Linux is as a >> > workstation, but every time I try to use it -- and I make an honest >> > effort -- I end up back in Windows > >> I'm curious, what do you mean with "it" in the part "every time I try >> to use it"? > > Fair question. I have, over the years, installed and used Gentoo, > Vector, RH, Ubuntu Breezy (my current choice) and various other > flavours and distros. When I "use it" I mean typically that I use > whatever desktop-type thing presents itself to me -- Gnome or XFCE > or Fluxbox, say -- one or more editors (I tend to try things out to > see if they suit), and one or more command shells.
All distros look the same to me, because I have an environment that I like, and I keep my home directory acros distros. > As it happens, (and I suspect I'll have to don my flameproof suit here), > I prefer the Windows command line to bash/readline for day-to-day use, > including in Python. Why? Because it does what I can't for the life of > me get readline to do: you can type the first few letters of a > previously-entered command and press F8. This brings up (going backwards > with further presses) the last command which starts like that. And > *then* you can just down-arrow to retrieve the commands which > followed it. If someone can tell me how to do this with > bash/readline I will be indebted to them and it will increase my > chances of switching to Linux a bit! (Although not at work where I > have no choice!) In my ~/.inputrc: "\e[a": history-search-backward ## shift+up-arrow "\e[b": history-search-forward ## shift+down-arrow -- Chris F.A. Johnson <http://cfaj.freeshell.org> ================================================================== Shell Scripting Recipes: A Problem-Solution Approach, 2005, Apress <http://www.torfree.net/~chris/books/cfaj/ssr.html> -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list