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I recently had the pleasure of trying to figure out a friend’s terminal woes. His function keys weren’t behaving properly. It turns out that his terminal was sending escape codes that differed from the terminfo definition his terminal was using. I set out to find what the correct solution was. These are my results. (Note that I use Debian GNU/Linux. Some of this may be Debian-specific.) Most
I primarily use Unix-based computers, mostly Linux. On those computers, I live in text mode. This entry is an attempt to document the software I find most useful to my text-mode guerrilla lifestyle. Included are links to the programs I rely on, links to alternative programs, and links to my config files. screen (.screenrc, .screenrc-mithrandir). Simply indispensable. It slices and dices consol
These are an adaptation of the Ninety-Nine Prolog Problems written by Werner Hett at the Berne University of Applied Sciences in Berne, Switzerland. I (Phil! Gold) have altered them to be more amenable to programming in Scala. Feedback is appreciated, particularly on anything marked TODO. The problems have different levels of difficulty. Those marked with a single asterisk (*) are easy. If you
I’ve been evaluating the various Common Lisp testing frameworks. I have a large body of code in my Project Euler stuff, and I use unit testing extensively; extensively enough that the simplistic unit testing package I had been using was getting unwieldy. So I figured I’d take a look at what was available and see how everything stacked up. Since this page is long, I’ll present my summary up front
screen -dRR (Attaches to a screen session. If the session is attached elsewhere, detaches that other display. If no session exists, creates one. If multiple sessions exist, uses the first one.) All screen commands are prefixed by an escape key, by default C-a (that's Control-a, sometimes written ^a). To send a literal C-a to the programs in screen, use C-a a. This is useful when working with scree
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Screen is a text-based program usually described as a window manager or terminal multiplexer. While it does a great many things, its two biggest features are its detachability and its multiplexing. The detachability means that you can run programs from within screen, detach and logout, then log in later, reattach, and the programs will still be there. The multiplexing means that you can have multi
In which one geek demonstrates his zsh prompt, which (he hopes) should serve as an example of some of the more complicated aspects of zsh. A while back, Slashdot had an Ask Slashdot question about shell prompts. I responded, posting a link to an earlier Kuro5hin post I had made on the subject. Unlike that Kuro5hin post, the Slashdot post garnered some attention, so I decided to write up how my p
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