and
rattus ~ # esearch x11-terms/rxvt-unicode
[ Results for search key : x11-terms/rxvt-unicode ]
[ Applications found : 1 ]
* x11-terms/rxvt-unicode
Latest version available: 9.21
Latest version installed: [ Not Installed ]
Size of downloaded files: 903 kB
Homepage: ht
* Ian Zimmerman [2019-06-21 10:27:58 -0700]:
Is there a command to show the fields like DESCRIPTION and HOMEPAGE from
an installed ebuild, or is this one of the annoying gaps in the
framework that must be (and can be) trivially worked around?
You could use portageq
portageq metadata /usr/por
On 6/21/19 5:03 PM, Jorge Almeida wrote:
## equery uses x11-terms/xterm
[ Legend : U - final flag setting for installation]
[: I - package is installed with flag ]
[ Colors : set, unset ]
* Found these USE flags for x11-terms/xterm-337:
U I
- - Xaw3d
On Fri, Jun 21, 2019 at 11:38 PM Grant Taylor
wrote:
>
> On 6/21/19 4:20 PM, Jorge Almeida wrote:
> > Nope. Just plain xterm (which I use a lot). BTW: it also works
> > remotely, via ssh. $TERM is "xterm".
>
> What use terms do you have enabled (that impact XTerm)?
>
> Please post the output of eq
On 6/21/19 4:20 PM, Jorge Almeida wrote:
Nope. Just plain xterm (which I use a lot). BTW: it also works
remotely, via ssh. $TERM is "xterm".
What use terms do you have enabled (that impact XTerm)?
Please post the output of equery uses x11-terms/xterm.
XTerm(337)
I think that's the current
On Fri, Jun 21, 2019 at 9:16 PM Grant Taylor
wrote:
>
> On 6/21/19 2:04 PM, Jorge Almeida wrote:
> > My xterm wraps & resizes just fine (e.g., a long line wraps;
> > on maximizing the window, contents are redrawn and use just one
> > line, if it fits). I don't think I did anything special for this
On 6/21/19 3:59 PM, Ian Zimmerman wrote:
No description. It clearly gets the homepage info from the .ebuild
file (it doesn't exist anywhere else) so why it cannot also get the
description is beyond me.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
That's what I meant by "trivially worked around" :-)
;-)
BTW, does your pro
On 2019-06-21 11:41, Grant Taylor wrote:
> > Is there a command to show the fields like DESCRIPTION and HOMEPAGE
> > from an installed ebuild, or is this one of the annoying gaps in the
> > framework that must be (and can be) trivially worked around?
>
> Does equery meta not show what you want?
On 6/21/19 2:04 PM, Jorge Almeida wrote:
My xterm wraps & resizes just fine (e.g., a long line wraps;
on maximizing the window, contents are redrawn and use just one
line, if it fits). I don't think I did anything special for this
to work.
That surprises me.
Are you automatically running scr
On Fri, Jun 21, 2019 at 8:37 PM Grant Taylor
wrote:
>
> On 6/21/19 12:03 PM, Mick wrote:
> > However, lines do not wrap around when I resize the xterm window. :(
>
> I've never seen this work inside of XTerm.
>
> XTerm (and many other consoles) only display the output as it was given
> to them.
On 6/21/19 12:03 PM, Mick wrote:
I seem to have this enabled, as far as the GUI shows, along with reverse
wraparound
If it's enabled (checked) in XTerm's menu, then the feature is enabled.
not sure what the reverse wraparound does.
"reverse wraparound" is when you backspace off the left sid
On Friday, 21 June 2019 19:29:36 BST Jorge Almeida wrote:
> In case it is a bash thing:
> Do you have a line
> shopt -s checkwinsize
> in ~/.bashrc ?
> If not, add it and then experiment with a new xterm window
> (maybe rxvt doesn't require it, for some reason...)
Thanks again for persevering Jor
On 6/21/19 7:27 PM, Ian Zimmerman wrote:
Is there a command to show the fields like DESCRIPTION and HOMEPAGE from
an installed ebuild, or is this one of the annoying gaps in the
framework that must be (and can be) trivially worked around?
...
Eix is faster for such things. You can format the ou
On Fri, Jun 21, 2019 at 7:03 PM Mick wrote:
>
In case it is a bash thing:
Do you have a line
shopt -s checkwinsize
in ~/.bashrc ?
If not, add it and then experiment with a new xterm window
(maybe rxvt doesn't require it, for some reason...)
Regards,
Jorge
Thanks Jorge,
On Friday, 21 June 2019 18:43:56 BST Jorge Almeida wrote:
> On Fri, Jun 21, 2019 at 5:32 PM Mick wrote:
> > On Friday, 21 June 2019 13:57:23 BST Mick wrote:
> > In case what I am asking for is not clear: How can I make xterm/konsole
> > behave like rxvt-unicode does and redraw the
On Fri, Jun 21, 2019 at 5:32 PM Mick wrote:
>
> On Friday, 21 June 2019 13:57:23 BST Mick wrote:
> window width.
> >
> > In xterm and friends the lines remain at the same original fixed width,
> > whether the window is resized to a wider setting or not. In other words the
> > line of code does n
On Friday, 21 June 2019 18:27:58 BST Ian Zimmerman wrote:
> Is there a command to show the fields like DESCRIPTION and HOMEPAGE from
> an installed ebuild, or is this one of the annoying gaps in the
> framework that must be (and can be) trivially worked around?
>
> Example: I have installed x11-te
On 6/21/19 11:27 AM, Ian Zimmerman wrote:
Is there a command to show the fields like DESCRIPTION and HOMEPAGE
from an installed ebuild, or is this one of the annoying gaps in the
framework that must be (and can be) trivially worked around?
Does equery meta not show what you want?
% equery met
Is there a command to show the fields like DESCRIPTION and HOMEPAGE from
an installed ebuild, or is this one of the annoying gaps in the
framework that must be (and can be) trivially worked around?
Example: I have installed x11-terms/rxvt-unicode. I don't know what it
is (no, really! :-P ) and I
On 6/21/19 6:57 AM, Mick wrote:
Is there some setting I can apply to address this annoying phenomenon?
I'm not aware of such a setting for XTerm.
Note: My ignorance of such a setting does not preclude it from existing.
On Friday, 21 June 2019 13:57:23 BST Mick wrote:
> I'm not sure I use the correct terminology below, but please bear with me
> while I try to describe a long standing problem I'm trying to solve:
>
> I've been mostly using x11-terms/rxvt-unicode as a terminal emulator in X.
> When resizing its win
Peter Humphrey wrote:
> On Friday, 21 June 2019 04:08:03 BST Dale wrote:
>
>> The reason I have to add --exclude gentoo-sources to --depclean is so that
>> it won't remove kernels I still have installed and may even be using or
>> keeping as a fall back.
> Depclean won't remove your kernels - only
I'm not sure I use the correct terminology below, but please bear with me
while I try to describe a long standing problem I'm trying to solve:
I've been mostly using x11-terms/rxvt-unicode as a terminal emulator in X.
When resizing its window to a larger width, long lines of code which had
wra
On Thu, 20 Jun 2019 22:08:03 -0500
Dale wrote:
> Daniel Frey wrote:
> > Yep. --select and --noreplace both record the package specified in
> > the world file. The difference is you use --noreplace when the
> > package specified is already installed, this prevents it from being
> > reinstalled (i
On 2019-06-21 10:44, Mick wrote:
On Friday, 21 June 2019 08:56:34 BST Kai Peter wrote:
Hi,
I couldn't find an appropriate documentation for this, so it is not
clear to me how a __no-multilib__ layout looks like with 17.1
profiles.
All for amd64.
With 17.0-no-multilib '/lib' is a symlink to '
On Friday, 21 June 2019 04:08:03 BST Dale wrote:
> The reason I have to add --exclude gentoo-sources to --depclean is so that
> it won't remove kernels I still have installed and may even be using or
> keeping as a fall back.
Depclean won't remove your kernels - only the sources to build them fro
On Friday, 21 June 2019 08:56:34 BST Kai Peter wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I couldn't find an appropriate documentation for this, so it is not
> clear to me how a __no-multilib__ layout looks like with 17.1 profiles.
> All for amd64.
>
> With 17.0-no-multilib '/lib' is a symlink to '/lib64'. For
> 17.1-no-m
Hi,
I couldn't find an appropriate documentation for this, so it is not
clear to me how a __no-multilib__ layout looks like with 17.1 profiles.
All for amd64.
With 17.0-no-multilib '/lib' is a symlink to '/lib64'. For
17.1-no-multilib I see 4 possibilities:
1. no change
2. both '/lib' and
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