Hello all

Martin McCormick martin at dc.cis.okstate.edu
Wed Jul 5 12:54:22 EDT 2000


	If you set Kermit, for example, to a VT100 terminal and
then get your environmental TERM variable set to vt100, you
should be able to use vi or emacs.  I haven't taken the time to
learn emacs yet, but I think it works just fine if your terminal
types agree.

	Also, you can set environment variables for vi such as 

declare -x EXINIT="set wrapmargin=15"

in your .bash_profile and vi will automatically wrap at word
breaks much like a word processor only not nearly as smart, but
still nice.

	If you see a message from a UNIX system that goes
something like
"Don't know what kind of terminal type you are using.  Using open
mode."  You can be sure that either something isn't set right or
at all.  Somehow, the shell isn't understanding what kind of
terminal you want to use so vi is going in to the dummest
teletype mode it can to try to make it work for you.

Martin McCormick WB5AGZ  Stillwater, OK 
OSU Center for Computing and Information Services Data Communications Group


brent harding writes:
>I thought the only way to edit files effectiely through speech was directly
>at the keyboard, but maybe my old shell account didn't support the terminal
>type I was using, it often set things to dumb terminal type.




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