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22272: 4.3.0-dev-4
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@ -1,3 +1,8 @@
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2006-02-16 Peter Stephenson <pws@csr.com>
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* 22272: INSTALL, README, Config/version.mk, Etc/CONTRIBUTORS,
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Etc/FAQ.yo: 4.3.0-dev-4.
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2006-02-15 Wayne Davison <wayned@users.sourceforge.net>
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* 22270; Src/subst.c, Test/D04parameter.ztst: fixed a long-standing
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@ -27,5 +27,5 @@
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# This must also serve as a shell script, so do not add spaces around the
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# `=' signs.
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VERSION=4.3.0-dev-3
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VERSION_DATE='February 6, 2006'
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VERSION=4.3.0-dev-4
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VERSION_DATE='February 15, 2006'
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@ -12,8 +12,22 @@ See the ChangeLog files for a complete list of people who have submitted
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patches. Note that email addresses below and in the ChangeLog file
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are included for disambiguation purposes only, and are not guaranteed
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to be currently accurate. If you feel that you or someone else have
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been unfairly omitted from this list please mail the current maintainer
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at <coordinator@zsh.org>.
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been unfairly omitted from this list please mail the list
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<zsh-workers@sunsite.dk>.
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Version 4.3
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-----------
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Contributors to the main shell include Clint Adams, Andrey Borzenkov, Dan
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Bullok, Thorsten Dahlheimer, Wayne Davison, Oliver Kiddle, Matthias
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Kopferman, Dan Nelson, Toby Peterson, R. Ramkumar, Bart Schaefer, Joerg
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Sonnenberger, Peter Stephenson, Philippe Troin, Geoff Wing.
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Contributors to completion functions include those above plus Zack Cerza,
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Danek Duvall, Tobias Gruetzmacher, Dough Kearns, Hannu Koivisto, Henryk
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Konsek, Scott Murray, Carlos Phillips, Haakon Riiser, Felix Rosencrantz,
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Stephen Rüger, Kris Shannon, Travis Spencer, Mårten Svantesson, Motoi
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Washida, Jess Weinstein.
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Version 4.2
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-----------
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58
Etc/FAQ.yo
58
Etc/FAQ.yo
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@ -95,7 +95,7 @@ Chapter 3: How to get various things to work
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3.2. In which startup file do I put...?
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3.3. What is the difference between `export' and the ALL_EXPORT option?
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3.4. How do I turn off spelling correction/globbing for a single command?
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3.5. How do I get the meta key to work on my xterm?
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3.5. How do I get the Meta key to work on my xterm?
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3.6. How do I automatically display the directory in my xterm title bar?
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3.7. How do I make the completion list use eight bit characters?
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3.8. Why do the cursor (arrow) keys not work?
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@ -1163,13 +1163,20 @@ sect(How do I turn off spelling correction/globbing for a single command?)
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be expanded before the rest of the command line is parsed.
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sect(How do I get the meta key to work on my xterm?)
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sect(How do I get the Meta key to work on my xterm?)
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label(35)
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As stated in the manual, zsh needs to be told about the meta key by
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The Meta key isn't present on a lot of keyboards, but on some
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the Alt key has the same effect. If a character is typed on the
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keyboard while the Meta key is held down, the characters is sent
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as terminal input with its eighth bit set. For example, ASCII
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mytt(A), hex 65, becomes hex E5. This is sometimes used to provide
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extra editing commands.
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As stated in the manual, zsh needs to be told about the Meta key by
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using mytt(bindkey -me) or mytt(bindkey -mv) in your .zshrc or on the
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command line. You probably also need to tell the terminal driver to
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allow the `meta' bit of the character through; mytt(stty pass8) is the
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allow the `Meta' bit of the character through; mytt(stty pass8) is the
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usual incantation. Sample .zshrc entry:
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verb(
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[[ $TERM = "xterm" ]] && stty pass8 && bindkey -me
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@ -1186,7 +1193,12 @@ label(35)
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have tinkered with it.
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You don't need the mytt(bindkey) to be able to define your own sequences
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with the meta key, though you still need the mytt(stty).
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with the Meta key, though you still need the mytt(stty).
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If you are using multibyte input directly from the keyboard you
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probably don't want to use this feature since the eighth bit in
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each byte is used to indicate a part of a multibyte character. See
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link(chapter 5)(c5).
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sect(How do I automatically display the directory in my xterm title bar?)
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@ -1953,6 +1965,7 @@ sect(Suppose I want to complete all files during a special completion?)
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chapter(Multibyte input)
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label(c5)
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sect(What is multibyte input?)
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@ -1994,7 +2007,7 @@ sect(What is multibyte input?)
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characters. However, in the case of Unicode, UTF-8 is the only one you
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are likely to enounter.
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(In case you're confused: Unicode is the characters set, while UTF-8 is
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(In case you're confused: Unicode is the character set, while UTF-8 is
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an encoding of it. You might hear about other encodings, such as UCS-2
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and UCS-4 which are basically the character's index in the character set
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as a two-octet or four-octet integer. You might see files encoded this
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has been compiled with the appropriate definitions. This will happen
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automatically if the compiler defines __STDC_ISO_10646__, which is true
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for many recent GNU-based systems. On other systems you must configure
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zsh with the argument --enable-multibyte to configure. (The reason for
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this is that the presence of __STDC_ISO_10646__ ensures all the required
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library support is present, short-circuiting a large number of
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configuration tests.) Explicit use of --enable-multibyte should work on
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many other recent UNIX systems; if it works on yours, and that's not
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mentioned in the shell documentation, please report this to
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zsh-workers@sunsite.dk, and if it doesn't but you can work out why not
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we'd also be interested in hearing.
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zsh with the argument --enable-multibyte to configure. Explicit use of
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--enable-multibyte should work on many other recent UNIX systems; if it
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works on yours, and that's not mentioned in the shell documentation,
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please report this to zsh-workers@sunsite.dk, and if it doesn't but you
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can work out why not we'd also be interested in hearing.
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(The reason for the test for __STDC_ISO_10646__ is that its presence
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happens to indicate that the required library support is likely to be
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present, short-circuiting a large number of configuration tests. This
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isn't strictly guaranteed, since the definition indicates the rather more
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limited fact that the wide character representation used internally by
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the shell is Unicode. However, in practice such systems provide the
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right level of support for zsh to use. It would be better to test
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individually for the library features the shell needs; unfortunately
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there are a lot of them.)
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You can test if multibyte handling is compiled into your version of the
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shell by running:
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Unicode characters than others.
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)
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As mentioned in the previous section, mytt(bindkey -m) now outputs
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a warning message telling you that multibyte input from the terminal
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is likely not to work. (See link(3.5)(35) if you don't know what
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this feature does.) If your terminal doesn't have characters
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that need to be input as multibyte, however, you can still use
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the meta bindings and can ignore the warning message. Use
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mytt(bindkey -m 2>/dev/null) to suprress it.
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sect(How can I input characters that aren't on my keyboard?)
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tt(insert-composed-char) is followed by two characters that
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are a mnemonic for a multibyte character. For example mytt(a:)
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is a with an umlaut; mytt(cH) is the symbol for hearts on a playing
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is a with an Umlaut; mytt(cH) is the symbol for hearts on a playing
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card. Various accented characters, European and related alphabets,
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and punctuation and mathematical symbols are available. The
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mnemonics are mostly those given by RFC 1345, see
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6
INSTALL
6
INSTALL
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Support for multibyte character sets that extend ASCII, such as UTF-8, is
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under development but the code in the line editor is sufficiently stable to
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be turned on by default in environments that provide full ISO 10646 support
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including the preprocessor definition __STDC_ISO_10646__.
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including the preprocessor definition __STDC_ISO_10646__. In principle
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this definition does not guarantee the full environment, but in practice
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systems with this defined also provide suitable library support. The shell
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does not probe for all the features, so on other systems use of multibyte
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support must be explicitly enabled when it is available.
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The support can be explicitly enabled or disable with --enable-multibyte or
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--disable-multibyte. Reports of systems where multibyte support was not
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11
README
11
README
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@ -26,6 +26,17 @@ Possible incompatibilities
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Since 4.2:
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The option SH_WORD_SPLIT, used in Bourne/Korn/Posix shell compatibility
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mode, has been made more like other shells in the case of substitutions of
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the form ${1+"$@"} (a common trick used to work around problems in older
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Bourne shells) or any of the related forms with the + replaced by - or =
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with an optional colon following. Previously, with SH_WORD_SPLIT in
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effect, this expression would cause splitting on all white space in the
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shell arguments. (This was always regarded as a bug but was long-standing
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behaviour.) Now it is treated identically to "$@". The same change
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applies to expressions with forced splitting such as ${=1+"$@"}, but
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otherwise the case where SH_WORD_SPLIT is not set is unaffected.
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The "unset" builtin now does not regard the unsetting of non-existent
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variables as an error, so can still return status 0 (depending on the
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handling of other arguments). This appears to be the standard shell
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