Nicholas Marriott writes:
> Yeah we need to set the environment properly for job commands, there
> is an XXX in job.c for it.
Normally the environment is inherited from the parent process, but I see
you're using execle and explicitly passing an environment. Why?
Wouldn't it be simpler to tell
clemens fischer writes:
> which of emacs/xemacs do you prefer?
I, and most of Freenode's #emacs denizens, use GNU Emacs. XEmacs seems
to mostly be restricted to those who started with Xemacs 19 rather than
previous or subsequent generations.
> I guess the subject says it all. My Emacs fu is r
Nicholas Marriott writes:
> On Sun, Feb 14, 2010 at 01:22:02PM +1100, Trent W. Buck wrote:
>> Having said that, I'm haven't worked out how to make "setw -g
>> remain-on-exit on" only apply when the application returns a non-zero
>> exit status (the "onerror" in Screen's ":zombie kr onerror").
>
>
[I'm playing catch-up in the archives again...]
Nicholas Marriott writes:
> On Wed, Feb 10, 2010 at 03:01:18PM -0800, Robin Lee Powell wrote:
>> A friend of mine has "per-pane status lines" as a requirement before
>> he starts using tmux; then you could title each pane appropriately.
>> Been mea
AIUI tmux won't implement screen's support for serial ttys.
What, then, do tmux users do for these?
screen /dev/pts/4
screen /dev/ttyS0 38400
screen /dev/ttyUSB0 115200
I tried minicom yesterday, and it's bloody confusing. I couldn't even
work out how to make it use /dev/ttyS0 instea
"Levesque, Jean-Yves" writes:
> I know this can probably not be done by default but is this possible
> for instance by using the terminal overrides strings? What I would
> like to do is to black on white for window 1 and blue on yellow for window
You may wish to play with tput. For example, in
Because screen doesn't implement -c like a normal shell, I can't use it
as my login shell without breaking scp(1) and suchlike. Thus for some
time I've had this in my .bash_profile:
## The naive "chsh -s /usr/bin/screen" breaks scp (and other things).
## Have sh start screen automatically
Nicholas Marriott writes:
> OpenBSD is the primary repository at the moment because it is easier
> for me, SF is sync'd up fairly often by tcunha.
Do you have any plans to switch to a different VCS (e.g. git, svn) for
the primary repo?
--
Being accustomed to xmonad's layout model, I find the tmux one a little
confusing. In xmonad (at least as _I_ use it), one has a set of apps[0]
open, and these are automatically tiled according to some layout
heuristic[1], such as "divide apps equally, side-by-side".
However, in xmonad, an app mi
Micah Cowan writes:
> I added the following line in my .tmux.conf:
>
> if 'test "$(tput colors)" = "256"' 'set -g default-terminal screen-256color'
When I investigated such an approach (for Screen instead of tmux), I
rejected it because one can create a screen on an eight-bit terminal
(e.g. xter
"Levesque, Jean-Yves" writes:
> I am using mrxvt and I like to set different backgrounds depending on
> the window. However, this also does not work inside tmux where it
> works within screen. I am using mrxvtset.pl -pixmap xxx.xpm but
> nothing happens.
To answer that, we need to understand mrxv
While I use Emacs-style bindings in Emacs and libreadline, I also use
a handful of vi-style bindings in screen, ed, less, w3m, etc.
It's cognitively dissonant for me to type, say, G in tmux's copy mode
and have nothing happen. I expect to be taken to the bottom of the
scrollback, and the confusio
It seems that tmux is more clever than I am.
I open a new window (running bash). Therein, I run emacs -Q -f ielm.
At this point, tmux says the title is "emacs". Good! Now, I attempt to
have emacs set the window title to something more meaningful than
"emacs", such as the name of the file being
t...@cybersource.com.au (Trent W. Buck) writes:
> But: confusion! There is no "just one app" layout in tmux! My first
> guess is that there must be some way to move apps out of the current
> window (without killing them), such that "just one app" is simply to
> move all but the current app into
*major caveat*: I just started building tmux from the source. Trying
to answer this question was my first dive into the source.
From looking at the source (grep "set_title"), it looks like the title
is automatically updated [server_client_set_title()] if you have the
"set-titles" option on. Ala
Trent W. Buck wrote:
> Nicholas Marriott writes:
>
>> OpenBSD is the primary repository at the moment because it is easier
>> for me, SF is sync'd up fairly often by tcunha.
>
> Do you have any plans to switch to a different VCS (e.g. git, svn) for
> the primary repo?
He doesn't. But Thomas Ada
Je ne parle qu'en mon nom.
I am only speaking for myself.
On Fri, Feb 26, 2010 at 07:06, Trent W. Buck wrote:
> "Levesque, Jean-Yves" writes:
> > I am using mrxvt and I like to set different backgrounds depending on
> > the window. However, this also does not work inside tmux where it
> > work
Trent W. Buck wrote:
> t...@cybersource.com.au (Trent W. Buck) writes:
>
>> But: confusion! There is no "just one app" layout in tmux! My first
>> guess is that there must be some way to move apps out of the current
>> window (without killing them), such that "just one app" is simply to
>> move
Trent W. Buck wrote:
> It seems that tmux is more clever than I am.
>
> I open a new window (running bash). Therein, I run emacs -Q -f ielm.
> At this point, tmux says the title is "emacs". Good! Now, I attempt to
> have emacs set the window title to something more meaningful than
> "emacs", su
On Fri, Feb 26, 2010 at 10:34:33PM +1100, Trent W. Buck wrote:
> Now, I come to tmux, which has windows *and* panes. It looked like I
> can get something very like xmonad by simply using only one window, and
> always creating frames, e.g. using ^B" instead of ^Bc. I can then use
> :next-layout to
On Fri, Feb 26, 2010 at 09:24:54PM +1100, Trent W. Buck wrote:
> AIUI tmux won't implement screen's support for serial ttys.
> What, then, do tmux users do for these?
>
> screen /dev/pts/4
> screen /dev/ttyS0 38400
> screen /dev/ttyUSB0 115200
I've never felt the need for these, and t
Trent W. Buck wrote:
> If you hate elisp, you may wish to investigate climacs (CL), edwin
> (MIT Scheme), jEdit (Java) or yi (Haskell). They allegedly try to be
> editors in the same vein as Emacs, but personally I found the lack of
> apps, libraries and general functionality to be enough of a tu
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