On 05/28/2011 03:28 PM, Helmut Schneider wrote:
> While from a shell you can put single quotation marks around the comman when
> you e.g. put your script into an alias or call it from another script there
> is/seems no way to do that successfully.
Your sentence here doesn't make much sense to me,
Please give me an example of exactly what you are trying to do that is
impossible.
On Sun, May 29, 2011 at 12:28:04AM +0200, Helmut Schneider wrote:
> Hi,
>
> http://www.mail-archive.com/tmux-users@lists.sourceforge.net/msg01037.html
>
> Has this ever been solved? Here[tm] this is a show stopp
Hi,
http://www.mail-archive.com/tmux-users@lists.sourceforge.net/msg01037.html
Has this ever been solved? Here[tm] this is a show stopper.
Imagine a shell script which takes command line options (e.g. using getopts)
and pass that script to tmux:
[helmut@BSDHelmut ~]$ tmux new /usr/local/bin/pa
* Chas. Owens [05-28-11 16:31]:
> snip
>
> At the very least it clashes with bash's emacs mode C-a command to
> move the cursor to the begging of the line.
yes, it is a great inconvenience to:
--
(paka)Patrick Shanahan Plainfield, Indiana, USA HOG # US1244711
http://wahoo.no-ip.or
On 28/5/2011, at 9:28pm, Chas. Owens wrote:
> On Sat, May 28, 2011 at 14:49, Stroller
> wrote:
>>
>> On 28/5/2011, at 9:24am, Julien Jehannet wrote:
...
I use CTRL-a, which is the same as screen's prefix key.
A lot of blogs and introductions to tmux suggest this, so I assumed it
On Sat, May 28, 2011 at 14:49, Stroller wrote:
>
> On 28/5/2011, at 9:24am, Julien Jehannet wrote:
>>> ...
>>> I use CTRL-a, which is the same as screen's prefix key.
>>> A lot of blogs and introductions to tmux suggest this, so I assumed it was
>>> what most people use.
>>
>> But with the same d
I don't know too much about tmux internals but I'm going to take a guess
here:
I think the if-shell command is forking and running asynchronously
and tmux is creating the first window before that command returns and sets
the global option.
Simply setting the option (with -g) does work as expected
On 28/5/2011, at 9:24am, Julien Jehannet wrote:
>> ...
>> I use CTRL-a, which is the same as screen's prefix key.
>> A lot of blogs and introductions to tmux suggest this, so I assumed it was
>> what most people use.
>
> But with the same drawback often complained by screen users then.
What dra
Hello there.
I am having issues with the if statements
I have a line in my .tmux.conf like this:
if '[ -n $DISPLAY ]' 'set -g default-terminal screen-256color'
But it only works if I open another window,else the terminal is still
screen..Is there any way to fix this?
---
Am 28.05.2011 10:24, schrieb Julien Jehannet:
> 2011/5/28 Stroller :
>>
>> On 27/5/2011, at 5:18pm, Shamaoke wrote:
>>> ...
>>> Then and up to now I've used "Ctrl-x" and, as you know, it clash
>>> with "edit-and-execute-command". Is there any "safe" key?
>>
>> I use CTRL-a, which is the same as scr
2011/5/28 Stroller :
>
> On 27/5/2011, at 5:18pm, Shamaoke wrote:
>> ...
>> I tackled with it. The problem was that I set the prefix key to "Ctrl-x"
>> and, of course, tmux "ate" it when I tried to run the shortcut. Hence
>> the next question: what is the best prefix key to use with tmux? I used
>>
On 27/5/2011, at 5:18pm, Shamaoke wrote:
> ...
> I tackled with it. The problem was that I set the prefix key to "Ctrl-x"
> and, of course, tmux "ate" it when I tried to run the shortcut. Hence
> the next question: what is the best prefix key to use with tmux? I used
> "Ctrl-b" before, but it c
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