On 23/11/2024 01:11, Michael Kjörling wrote:
On 22 Nov 2024 12:40 -0500, from e...@gmx.us:
Boot off rescue media, mount the victim's / partition somewhere, then edit
/etc/shadow to change the second field (deliminated by colons)
to the null string.[...]
If what you are talking about is instead
On Fri, Nov 22, 2024 at 9:27 AM The David wrote:
> We have been using the debian 3.2.0-4-686-pae for our company. We are moving
> to another state and we forgot the password. Is there anyway to recover this
> without losing data? Thank you.
Yikes! That kernel goes back to Debian 7 - released 2
e...@gmx.us wrote:
> On 11/22/24 11:56, The David wrote:
> > We have been using the debian 3.2.0-4-686-pae for our company. We are
> > moving to another state and we forgot the password. Is there anyway to
> > recover this without losing data? Thank you.
>
> Boot off rescue media, mount the vic
Hi,
While people here can and will attempt to talk you through resolving
your problem…
On Fri, Nov 22, 2024 at 04:56:23PM +, The David wrote:
> We have been using the debian 3.2.0-4-686-pae for our company
This is an ancient kernel version and 32-bit (as denoted by 686-pae) is
also inadvisab
On Fri, 22 Nov 2024 16:56:23 +
The David wrote:
> We have been using the debian 3.2.0-4-686-pae for our company. We are
> moving to another state and we forgot the password. Is there anyway
> to recover this without losing data? Thank you.
You can boot the machine with a live system, mount t
On 22 Nov 2024 12:40 -0500, from e...@gmx.us:
>> We have been using the debian 3.2.0-4-686-pae for our company. We
>> are moving to another state and we forgot the password. Is there
>> anyway to recover this without losing data? Thank you.
>
> Boot off rescue media, mount the victim's / partition
On Fri, Nov 22, 2024 at 04:56:23PM +, The David wrote:
> We have been using the debian 3.2.0-4-686-pae for our company. We are moving
> to another state and we forgot the password. Is there anyway to recover this
> without losing data? Thank you.
Which password?
If it is some user's or root
On 11/22/24 11:56, The David wrote:
> We have been using the debian 3.2.0-4-686-pae for our company. We are moving
> to another state and we forgot the password. Is there anyway to recover this
> without losing data? Thank you.
Boot off rescue media, mount the victim's / partition somewhere, the
We have been using the debian 3.2.0-4-686-pae for our company. We are moving to
another state and we forgot the password. Is there anyway to recover this
without losing data? Thank you.
Sincerely,
David
Have a good day!
On Mon, Nov 4, 2024 at 9:22 AM Chris Green wrote:
>
> On Mon, Nov 04, 2024 at 11:10:03AM +, Chris Green wrote:
> > On Mon, Nov 04, 2024 at 05:34:49AM -0500, Felix Miata wrote:
> > >
> > > It's usually a good idea to disable CSM support (legacy/MBR booting), by
> > > whatever
> > > term your p
On Mon 04 Nov 2024 at 11:16:06 (+), Chris Green wrote:
> ... and if "Launch CSM" is disabled then when I boot from the Debain
> 12 USB stick I just get dropped into the grub menu and I can't do an
> install.
Can you describe the menu. We can't see over your shoulder.
Also, can you type c
On Mon, Nov 04, 2024 at 09:14:09AM -0600, David Wright wrote:
> On Mon 04 Nov 2024 at 11:16:06 (+), Chris Green wrote:
> > ... and if "Launch CSM" is disabled then when I boot from the Debain
> > 12 USB stick I just get dropped into the grub menu and I can't do an
> > install.
>
> Can you desc
On Mon, Nov 04, 2024 at 11:10:03AM +, Chris Green wrote:
> On Mon, Nov 04, 2024 at 05:34:49AM -0500, Felix Miata wrote:
> >
> > It's usually a good idea to disable CSM support (legacy/MBR booting), by
> > whatever
> > term your particular UEFI BIOS labels it.
> >
> The BIOS has "CSM Configur
On Mon, Nov 04, 2024 at 05:34:49AM -0500, Felix Miata wrote:
>
> It's usually a good idea to disable CSM support (legacy/MBR booting), by
> whatever
> term your particular UEFI BIOS labels it.
>
The BIOS has "CSM Configuration", if I go into that I'm offered:-
Launch CSM
Boot option fil
On Mon, Nov 04, 2024 at 05:34:49AM -0500, Felix Miata wrote:
> Chris Green composed on 2024-11-04 10:03 (UTC):
>
> > I just tried to install Debain 12 onto my Fujitsu Esprimo Q957 system
> > (was running xubuntu previously). I have installed Debian 12 using
> > the same USB stick on two other sys
On Mon, Nov 04, 2024 at 10:03:15AM +, Chris Green wrote:
>
> The whole installation ran without any problems but it simply fails to
> boot, I just get a blank black screen with a prompt at the top left
> cormer.
>
I just tried a second time (new install from scratch) and the result
is the sam
Chris Green composed on 2024-11-04 10:03 (UTC):
> I just tried to install Debain 12 onto my Fujitsu Esprimo Q957 system
> (was running xubuntu previously). I have installed Debian 12 using
> the same USB stick on two other systems so the installation media are
> OK.
> The whole installation ran
I just tried to install Debain 12 onto my Fujitsu Esprimo Q957 system
(was running xubuntu previously). I have installed Debian 12 using
the same USB stick on two other systems so the installation media are
OK.
The whole installation ran without any problems but it simply fails to
boot, I just ge
On 28/08/2024 01:58, gene heskett wrote:
wakeup time is 5 + seconds by which time a sleeve caught on a chuck jaw
has already tried to rip an arm off.
Taking into account your approach to configure applications
so sudo chmod 644 /etc/xdp/autostart/xscreensaver.desktop
You need a larger red h
On Sun, Sep 1, 2024 at 10:57 AM David Wright wrote:
>
> On Sun 01 Sep 2024 at 01:05:21 (-0400), gene heskett wrote:
> > On 8/31/24 22:58, David Wright wrote:
> > > And so should we assume Gene's report that he needs to actually login
> > > again after the screen locks itself is likely caused by con
On Sun 01 Sep 2024 at 01:05:21 (-0400), gene heskett wrote:
> On 8/31/24 22:58, David Wright wrote:
> > And so should we assume Gene's report that he needs to actually login
> > again after the screen locks itself is likely caused by confusing the
> > unlocking screen with a login screen? Being DE-
On 8/31/24 22:58, David Wright wrote:
On Sat 31 Aug 2024 at 18:01:59 (+1000), George at Clug wrote:
On Wednesday, 28-08-2024 at 11:31 Trish Fraser wrote:
On 8/26/24 13:27, Trish Fraser wrote:
S, what do I remove to absolutely, permanently disable the
screen blanker? And I mean no chance
On 8/31/24 22:58, David Wright wrote:
On Sat 31 Aug 2024 at 18:01:59 (+1000), George at Clug wrote:
On Wednesday, 28-08-2024 at 11:31 Trish Fraser wrote:
On 8/26/24 13:27, Trish Fraser wrote:
S, what do I remove to absolutely, permanently disable the
screen blanker? And I mean no chance
On Sat 31 Aug 2024 at 18:01:59 (+1000), George at Clug wrote:
> On Wednesday, 28-08-2024 at 11:31 Trish Fraser wrote:
> > >On 8/26/24 13:27, Trish Fraser wrote:
> > >>
> > >>> S, what do I remove to absolutely, permanently disable the
> > >>> screen blanker? And I mean no chance it can ever do
On Saturday, 31-08-2024 at 18:01 George at Clug wrote:
> On Wednesday, 28-08-2024 at 11:31 Trish Fraser wrote:
> > >On 8/26/24 13:27, Trish Fraser wrote:
> > >>
> > >>> S, what do I remove to absolutely, permanently disable the
> > >>> screen blanker? And I mean no chance it can ever do tha
On Wednesday, 28-08-2024 at 11:31 Trish Fraser wrote:
> >On 8/26/24 13:27, Trish Fraser wrote:
> >>
> >>> S, what do I remove to absolutely, permanently disable the
> >>> screen blanker? And I mean no chance it can ever do that to me
> >>> again.
> >>
> >> Seems like, in XFCE, you need to go
On Wed 28 Aug 2024 at 11:13:16 (-0400), gene heskett wrote⁰:
> On 8/27/24 21:03, David Wright wrote:
> > On Mon 26 Aug 2024 at 15:42:56 (-0400), Felix Miata wrote:
> > > David Wright composed on 2024-08-26 14:36 (UTC-0400):
> > >
> > > > ¹ touch Ctrl, the key at the extreme bottom left of the keyb
>On 8/26/24 13:27, Trish Fraser wrote:
>>
>>> S, what do I remove to absolutely, permanently disable the
>>> screen blanker? And I mean no chance it can ever do that to me
>>> again.
>>
>> Seems like, in XFCE, you need to go into settings and disable the
>> screensaver.
>>
>> Good luck!
>>
On Tue 27 Aug 2024 at 14:58:14 (-0400), gene heskett wrote:
> On 8/26/24 14:37, David Wright wrote:
> > On Mon 26 Aug 2024 at 10:29:10 (-0400), gene heskett wrote:
> > > xfce4 desktop, running linuxcnc, [ … ]
> > > came across a dangerous situation yesterday.
> > >
> > > Basically using the lathe
On Tue, Aug 27, 2024 at 02:44:52PM -0400, gene heskett wrote:
> On 8/26/24 14:25, Andrew M.A. Cater wrote:
> > On Mon, Aug 26, 2024 at 10:29:10AM -0400, gene heskett wrote:
> >
> > Gene,
> >
> > First things first: where did the image come from?
> > 32 or 64 bit? Exact version string from uname -
On 8/26/24 14:37, David Wright wrote:
On Mon 26 Aug 2024 at 10:29:10 (-0400), gene heskett wrote:
xfce4 desktop, running linuxcnc, [ … ]
came across a dangerous situation yesterday.
Basically using the lathe as a jig to hold a long piece I was tapping
by hand, powered up but stopped. screen bla
On 8/26/24 14:25, Andrew M.A. Cater wrote:
On Mon, Aug 26, 2024 at 10:29:10AM -0400, gene heskett wrote:
rpib runniing bookworm. Private net. rt-preempt kernel. Security is a closed
garage door and lead projectiles for unwanted guests.
Gene,
First things first: where did the image come from?
On Tue, Aug 27, 2024 at 01:56:43PM -0400, Felix Miata wrote:
> gene heskett composed on 2024-08-27 10:14 (UTC-0400):
>
> > tomas@ wrote:
>
> >> Assuming, again, you are under X11, there is "xset s off", which would
> >> disable the screensaver *and* the DPMS blanking. See the xset man page
> >> f
gene heskett composed on 2024-08-27 10:14 (UTC-0400):
> tomas@ wrote:
>> Assuming, again, you are under X11, there is "xset s off", which would
>> disable the screensaver *and* the DPMS blanking. See the xset man page
>> for all the gory details. This [1] is a good overview for all the
>> other t
On 8/26/24 14:09, fxkl4...@protonmail.com wrote:
On Mon, 26 Aug 2024, gene heskett wrote:
rpib runniing bookworm. Private net. rt-preempt kernel. Security is a
closed garage door and lead projectiles for unwanted guests.
xfce4 desktop, running linuxcnc, which controls all 255 volt power to an
On 8/26/24 13:27, Trish Fraser wrote:
S, what do I remove to absolutely, permanently disable the screen
blanker? And I mean no chance it can ever do that to me again.
Seems like, in XFCE, you need to go into settings and disable the
screensaver.
Good luck!
That I'm assuming is canceled
On 8/26/24 12:46, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
On Mon, Aug 26, 2024 at 10:29:10AM -0400, gene heskett wrote:
rpib runniing bookworm. Private net. rt-preempt kernel. Security is a closed
garage door and lead projectiles for unwanted guests.
[...]
You have provided lots of details which don't help u
On Tue, Aug 27, 2024 at 10:14:59AM -0400, gene heskett wrote:
> On 8/26/24 12:46, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
[...]
> > Assuming, again, you are under X11, there is "xset s off" [...]
> That apparently turned it off for this boot.
Good news!
[...]
> so It is always turned off? I think its runnin
On 8/26/24 12:46, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
On Mon, Aug 26, 2024 at 10:29:10AM -0400, gene heskett wrote:
rpib runniing bookworm. Private net. rt-preempt kernel. Security is a closed
garage door and lead projectiles for unwanted guests.
[...]
You have provided lots of details which don't help u
On 27/08/2024 01:46, Thomas Schmitt wrote:
In these modern times, home office slave workers need ways to simulate
relentless activity. Google "mouse jiggler", "auto clicker".
There are mechanical mouse platforms, pseudo-mouse USB devices, and even
software emulated mice.
This case it would be e
> - most of the desktop environments incorporate some element of screen
> blanking for security (or power saving).
There's also "burn in" for some monitor technologies.
Stefan
David Wright composed on 2024-08-26 14:36 (UTC-0400):
> ¹ touch Ctrl, the key at the extreme bottom left of the keyboard,
> to defeat it.
Are you sure?
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Apple_keyboard_-.jpg
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:AT_keyboard_original_layout.png
https://
On 2024-08-26 15:29, gene heskett wrote:
S, what do I remove to absolutely, permanently disable the screen
blanker? And I mean no chance it can ever do that to me again.
In Settings>Power Manager I selected "do nothing" or "never" for all the
options.
If want to blank the monitor I use t
Hi,
gene heskett wrote:
> xfce4 desktop,
> screen blanker came on and locked me out till I logged back in
If everything else fails:
In these modern times, home office slave workers need ways to simulate
relentless activity. Google "mouse jiggler", "auto clicker".
There are mechanical mouse platf
On Mon 26 Aug 2024 at 10:29:10 (-0400), gene heskett wrote:
> xfce4 desktop, running linuxcnc, [ … ]
> came across a dangerous situation yesterday.
>
> Basically using the lathe as a jig to hold a long piece I was tapping
> by hand, powered up but stopped. screen blanker came on and locked me
> ou
On Mon, Aug 26, 2024 at 10:29:10AM -0400, gene heskett wrote:
> rpib runniing bookworm. Private net. rt-preempt kernel. Security is a closed
> garage door and lead projectiles for unwanted guests.
>
Gene,
First things first: where did the image come from?
Is it originally from Raspberry Pi OS?
On Mon, 26 Aug 2024, gene heskett wrote:
> rpib runniing bookworm. Private net. rt-preempt kernel. Security is a
> closed garage door and lead projectiles for unwanted guests.
>
> xfce4 desktop, running linuxcnc, which controls all 255 volt power to an
> 11x56" lathe with several horsepower at its
> S, what do I remove to absolutely, permanently disable the screen
> blanker? And I mean no chance it can ever do that to me again.
IME, this is a bit of an uphill battle, sadly.
Basically, lots of tools can request/cause some kind of "screen
blanking" so you can never be sure you've disable
On Mon, Aug 26, 2024 at 10:29:10AM -0400, gene heskett wrote:
> rpib runniing bookworm. Private net. rt-preempt kernel. Security is a closed
> garage door and lead projectiles for unwanted guests.
[...]
You have provided lots of details which don't help us help you. But,
alas, you left out the in
rpib runniing bookworm. Private net. rt-preempt kernel. Security is a
closed garage door and lead projectiles for unwanted guests.
xfce4 desktop, running linuxcnc, which controls all 255 volt power to an
11x56" lathe with several horsepower at its disposal. New install, came
across a dangerous
Michael Morgan wrote:
> When I ran "apt --fix-broken install", I got the following message:
>
> The following additional packages will be installed:
> chromium-browser chromium-codecs-ffmpeg-extra
> The following packages will be upgraded:
> chromium-browser chromium-codecs-ffmpeg-extra
>
>
Dear all,
I don't know much about linux and need your kind help.
My son's Raspberry Pi 4B's OS is "Debian GNU/Linux 12 (bookworm)" (from
"/etc/os-release").
Yesterday I tried to run "apt update" "apt upgrade", but it stuck at
upgrading package "chromium-browser" (The progress status bar froze; c
On 06/29/2024 12:17 PM, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
On Sat, Jun 29, 2024 at 06:37:23AM -0500, Richard Owlett wrote:
[...]
When searching for information on regular expressions I came across one that
did it by searching for
{"1 thru 9" OR "10 thru 99" OR "100 thru 999"} .
I lost the reference ;
On 2024-06-30 14:21, Greg Wooledge wrote:
On Sun, Jun 30, 2024 at 12:32:15 +0100, mick.crane wrote:
got it thanks.
I don't know what you're trying to do, but ERE [0-7]{1,2} matches one-
or two-digit *octal* numbers (e.g. 5, 07, 72, 77) but not numbers that
contains the digits 8 or 9.
D
Hello,
On Sun, Jun 30, 2024 at 09:21:57AM -0400, Greg Wooledge wrote:
> Do you have a book whose verses are enumerated in octal?
No one clarified that this was the *Christian* Bible. 😀
Thanks,
Andy
On Sun, Jun 30, 2024 at 12:32:15 +0100, mick.crane wrote:
> got it thanks.
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
I don't know what you're trying to do, but ERE [0-7]{1,2} matches one-
or two-digit *octal* numbers (e.g. 5, 07, 72, 77) but not numbers that
contains the digits 8 or 9.
Do you have a book whose verses
On 2024-06-29 20:29, Greg Wooledge wrote:
On Sat, Jun 29, 2024 at 20:18:02 +0100, mick.crane wrote:
Oh, I see what the question was.
There is "use regular expressions", "use multi line matching" in Geany
I'm not very good at regular expressions.
I'd probably do it 3 times
"search for"
"search f
* Richard [24-06/30=Su 00:57 +0200]:
> That's how you warrant your ban, idiot.
Don't get yourself banned, Richard.
Anybody else remember Erik Naggum?
On Sun, Jun 30, 2024 at 00:57:07 +0200, Richard wrote:
> That's how you warrant your ban, idiot.
Let it go. Don't keep pouring more fuel on the fire.
Add Curt to your killfile (or whatever your MUA calls your ban list).
He's already been banned by the list admins anyway, so your local ban
is jus
That's how you warrant your ban, idiot.
On 29.06.24 20:40, Curt wrote:
On 2024-06-29, wrote:
Defamatory. What are you, a fucking lawyer? Sue me then, you little snit.
Bad day today?
As usual, you cut all that was pertinent to your meretricious commentary
and left only what suited your brai
On 2024-06-29 20:29, Greg Wooledge wrote:
On Sat, Jun 29, 2024 at 20:18:02 +0100, mick.crane wrote:
Oh, I see what the question was.
There is "use regular expressions", "use multi line matching" in Geany
I'm not very good at regular expressions.
I'd probably do it 3 times
"search for"
"search f
On Sat, Jun 29, 2024 at 20:18:02 +0100, mick.crane wrote:
> Oh, I see what the question was.
> There is "use regular expressions", "use multi line matching" in Geany
> I'm not very good at regular expressions.
> I'd probably do it 3 times
> "search for"
> "search for"
> "search for"
There's mor
On 2024-06-29 16:09, Max Nikulin wrote:
On 29/06/2024 20:07, mick.crane wrote:
On 2024-06-29 12:34, Max Nikulin wrote:
To manipulate with HTML it is better to write a script in some
programming language, e.g. for python there are lxml etree and
BeautifulSoup packages. This way it is easier to m
On Sat 29 Jun 2024 at 17:08:04 (+0200), Vincent Lefevre wrote:
> On 2024-06-28 20:53:50 +, Michael Kjörling wrote:
> > Yes, it almost certainly can be done with a single sed (or other
> > similar tool) invocation where the regular expression matches
> > precisely what you want it to match. But
On 2024-06-29, wrote:
>
>
>> Defamatory. What are you, a fucking lawyer? Sue me then, you little snit.
>
> Bad day today?
As usual, you cut all that was pertinent to your meretricious commentary
and left only what suited your brain-damaged hypocrisy.
BTW, eliding a succinct paragraph to leave o
On Sat, Jun 29, 2024 at 05:43:15PM -, Curt wrote:
[...]
> Defamatory. What are you, a fucking lawyer? Sue me then, you little snit.
Bad day today?
I can't help you. I'm out of this thread.
--
t
signature.asc
Description: PGP signature
On 2024-06-29, wrote:
>
>> Owlett is a notorious troll who never listens to reason.
>
> This is wrong, borderline defamatory. Richard Owlett is not a
Andy Smith:
It's not an authentic Owlett thread unless it contains an enormous
XY problem, a monomaniacal obsession with a solution already
pa
On Sat, Jun 29, 2024 at 06:37:23AM -0500, Richard Owlett wrote:
[...]
> When searching for information on regular expressions I came across one that
> did it by searching for
>{"1 thru 9" OR "10 thru 99" OR "100 thru 999"} .
> I lost the reference ;<
That would be something like ([0-9]|[1-9]
On Sat, Jun 29, 2024 at 04:02:56PM -, Curt wrote:
> On 2024-06-29, Michael Kjörling wrote:
> >>
> >> HUH ??
> >
> > ..._focus on the goal_.
> >
>
>
> Owlett is a notorious troll who never listens to reason.
This is wrong, borderline defamatory. Richard Owlett is not a
troll [1]. He
Hi,
> > So you may prefer to use regexes as
> > Murphy intended, handling both the opening and closing tags at the same
> > time, leaving the intervening text intact.
>
> In this particular case I suspect it would become overly complex.
> I've already discovered that the order of edits is importan
On 2024-06-29, Michael Kjörling wrote:
>>
>> HUH ??
>
> ..._focus on the goal_.
>
Owlett is a notorious troll who never listens to reason.
But you people adore this kind of troll, inexplicably, perhaps because
he allows you to expand endlessly on your reams of essentially useless
knowl
On 29/06/2024 20:07, mick.crane wrote:
On 2024-06-29 12:34, Max Nikulin wrote:
To manipulate with HTML it is better to write a script in some
programming language, e.g. for python there are lxml etree and
BeautifulSoup packages. This way it is easier to maintain valid
document structure with pai
On 2024-06-28 20:53:50 +, Michael Kjörling wrote:
> Yes, it almost certainly can be done with a single sed (or other
> similar tool) invocation where the regular expression matches
> precisely what you want it to match. But unless this is something you
> will do very often, I tend to prefer rea
Hello,
On Sat, Jun 29, 2024 at 01:46:27PM +, Michael Kjörling wrote:
> On 29 Jun 2024 06:12 -0500, from rowl...@access.net (Richard Owlett):
> >> there may be other closing tags you don't want to
> >> change because they close other tags we haven't seen.
> >
> > Chuckle ;} The appropriate "
On 29 Jun 2024 05:51 -0500, from rowl...@access.net (Richard Owlett):
>> Ignoring the question about Emacs
>
> Emacs *CAN NOT* be ignored.
I did not say to ignore _Emacs_. I said that I was ignoring the
_question_ about Emacs, to instead...
>> and focusing on the goal (your
^^
On 29 Jun 2024 06:12 -0500, from rowl...@access.net (Richard Owlett):
>>> $ for v in $(seq 1 119); do sed -i 's,>> id="V'$v'">,,g' ./*.html; done
>>
>> Having done that (or similar), don't forget to change the relevant
>> closing tags to closing tags. However, there may be
>> other closing tags
On 2024-06-29 12:34, Max Nikulin wrote:
On 29/06/2024 11:48, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
Do M-x (hold Meta, most of the time your Alt key, then "x").
You get a command for a prompt. Enter "query-replace-regexp"
And to get help for this function
C-h f query-replace-regexp RET
To open user m
On 06/29/2024 06:51 AM, debian-u...@howorth.org.uk wrote:
Richard Owlett wrote:
On 06/28/2024 03:53 PM, Michael Kjörling wrote:
On 28 Jun 2024 14:04 -0500, from rowl...@access.net (Richard
Owlett):
I need to replace ANY occurrence of
thru [at most]
by
I'm reforma
On Sat, Jun 29, 2024 at 07:43:47 -0400, Dan Ritter wrote:
> The option "g" means that said should do this multiple times if
> it occurs in the same file (globally, like grep) instead of the
> default behavior which is to find the first match and just
> change that.
The g option in sed's s command
On Fri, Jun 28, 2024 at 21:23:03 -0600, Charles Curley wrote:
> On Fri, 28 Jun 2024 20:53:50 +
> Michael Kjörling wrote:
>
> > $ for v in $(seq 1 119); do sed -i 's, > id="V'$v'">,,g' ./*.html; done
> >
> > Be sure to have a copy in case something goes wrong; and diff(1) a few
> > files afte
Richard Owlett wrote:
> On 06/28/2024 03:53 PM, Michael Kjörling wrote:
> > On 28 Jun 2024 14:04 -0500, from rowl...@access.net (Richard Owlett):
> > > I need to replace ANY occurrence of
> > >
> > >thru [at most]
> > >
> > > by
> > >
> > >
> > > I'm reformatting a Bible
Richard Owlett wrote:
> On 06/28/2024 03:53 PM, Michael Kjörling wrote:
> > On 28 Jun 2024 14:04 -0500, from rowl...@access.net (Richard
> > Owlett):
> >> I need to replace ANY occurrence of
> >>
> >>thru [at most]
> >>
> >> by
> >>
> >>
> >> I'm reformatting a Bible st
On 06/28/2024 11:48 PM, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
On Fri, Jun 28, 2024 at 02:04:37PM -0500, Richard Owlett wrote:
Pluma is my editor of choice.
*BUT* it can NOT handle Search and Replace operations involving regular
expressions.
I would be *very* surprised if an editor, these days and age
can't
On 29/06/2024 11:48, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
Do M-x (hold Meta, most of the time your Alt key, then "x").
You get a command for a prompt. Enter "query-replace-regexp"
And to get help for this function
C-h f query-replace-regexp RET
To open user manual switch to the help buffer and press
On 06/28/2024 10:23 PM, Charles Curley wrote:
On Fri, 28 Jun 2024 20:53:50 +
Michael Kjörling wrote:
$ for v in $(seq 1 119); do sed -i 's,,,g' ./*.html; done
Be sure to have a copy in case something goes wrong; and diff(1) a few
files afterwards to make sure that the result is as you int
On 06/28/2024 03:53 PM, Michael Kjörling wrote:
On 28 Jun 2024 14:04 -0500, from rowl...@access.net (Richard Owlett):
I need to replace ANY occurrence of
thru [at most]
by
I'm reformatting a Bible stored in HTML format for a particular set of
vision impaired seniors (my
On 06/28/2024 02:33 PM, Van Snyder wrote:
On Fri, 2024-06-28 at 14:04 -0500, Richard Owlett wrote:
Pluma is my editor of choice.
*BUT* it can NOT handle Search and Replace operations involving
regular
expressions.
Emacs can. It has much verbose documentation.
But examples seem rather scarce.
On 06/28/2024 02:17 PM, didier gaumet wrote:
Le 28/06/2024 à 21:04, Richard Owlett a écrit :
Pluma is my editor of choice.
*BUT* it can NOT handle Search and Replace operations involving
regular expressions.
[...]
Hello Richard,
According to the Mate wiki, Pluma handles regular expressions t
On Fri, Jun 28, 2024 at 09:17:14PM +0200, didier gaumet wrote:
> Le 28/06/2024 à 21:04, Richard Owlett a écrit :
> > Pluma is my editor of choice.
> > *BUT* it can NOT handle Search and Replace operations involving regular
> > expressions.
> [...]
>
> Hello Richard,
>
> According to the Mate wiki
On Fri, Jun 28, 2024 at 02:04:37PM -0500, Richard Owlett wrote:
> Pluma is my editor of choice.
> *BUT* it can NOT handle Search and Replace operations involving regular
> expressions.
I would be *very* surprised if an editor, these days and age
can't do regular expressions. Really.
> Emacs can.
On Fri, 28 Jun 2024 20:53:50 +
Michael Kjörling wrote:
> $ for v in $(seq 1 119); do sed -i 's, id="V'$v'">,,g' ./*.html; done
>
> Be sure to have a copy in case something goes wrong; and diff(1) a few
> files afterwards to make sure that the result is as you intended.
Having done that (or
On 28 Jun 2024 14:04 -0500, from rowl...@access.net (Richard Owlett):
> I need to replace ANY occurrence of
>
> thru [at most]
>
> by
>
>
> I'm reformatting a Bible stored in HTML format for a particular set of
> vision impaired seniors (myself included). Each chapter is in it
On Fri, 2024-06-28 at 14:04 -0500, Richard Owlett wrote:
> Pluma is my editor of choice.
> *BUT* it can NOT handle Search and Replace operations involving
> regular
> expressions.
>
> Emacs can. It has much verbose documentation.
> But examples seem rather scarce.
nedit can handle regular expres
Le 28/06/2024 à 21:04, Richard Owlett a écrit :
Pluma is my editor of choice.
*BUT* it can NOT handle Search and Replace operations involving regular
expressions.
[...]
Hello Richard,
According to the Mate wiki, Pluma handles regular expressions the Perl way:
https://wiki.mate-desktop.org/mat
Pluma is my editor of choice.
*BUT* it can NOT handle Search and Replace operations involving regular
expressions.
Emacs can. It has much verbose documentation.
But examples seem rather scarce.
I need to replace ANY occurrence of
thru [at most]
by
I'm reformatting a Bible
On Sun, Oct 8, 2023 at 14:39 Thomas Schmitt wrote:
> Hi,
Thanks, Thomas.
I did get the signers key fingeprints from their personal github pages. I
would go the full security route if it were only my use I'm concerned with,
but I'm working on a Raku module for others and I don't want them to be
"Thomas Schmitt" wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Tom Browder wrote:
> > I'm willing to trust published PGP key fingerprints for signers of
> > Rakudo downloadable files.
>
> Do i get it right that you talk about https://rakudo.org/downloads ?
>
> > Question: How can I get the fingerprint from the downloads
Hi,
Tom Browder wrote:
> I found a usable answer. Run "gpg file.asc" and the output shows the two
> fingerprints: the primary key fingerprint and the subkey fingerprint.
Wow, that's surprising.
But indeed the man page says:
COMMANDS
...
gpg may be run with no commands, in which case i
On Sun, Oct 8, 2023 at 05:13 Tom Browder wrote:
> On Sun, Oct 8, 2023 at 3:29 AM DdB
> wrote:
> > Am 08.10.2023 um 01:16 schrieb Tom Browder:
> > > I'm willing to trust published PGP key fingerprints for signers of
> > > Rakudo downloadable files.
> > > Question: How can I get the fingerprint f
Hi,
maybe
gpg --keyid-format long --verify signature_file.asc /some/dummy/file
this gives me the last 16 characters of the fingerprint. Like:
gpg:using key E9CBDFC0ABC0A854
with a matching payload file i get something like:
Primary key fingerprint: 44BC 9FD0 D688 EB
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