Copy ee 1.4.2 into the contrib directory.

This allows me to merge our custom changes to ee(1) back on top of
original sources, with correct mergeinfo.
This commit is contained in:
Ed Schouten 2009-05-26 20:13:17 +00:00
commit 72fcea8cb7
Notes: svn2git 2020-12-20 02:59:44 +00:00
svn path=/head/; revision=192850
12 changed files with 10842 additions and 0 deletions

117
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The "Artistic License"
Preamble
The intent of this document is to state the conditions under which a
Package may be copied, such that the Copyright Holder maintains some
semblance of artistic control over the development of the package,
while giving the users of the package the right to use and distribute
the Package in a more-or-less customary fashion, plus the right to make
reasonable modifications.
Definitions:
"Package" refers to the collection of files distributed by the
Copyright Holder, and derivatives of that collection of files
created through textual modification.
"Standard Version" refers to such a Package if it has not been
modified, or has been modified in accordance with the wishes
of the Copyright Holder.
"Copyright Holder" is whoever is named in the copyright or
copyrights for the package.
"You" is you, if you're thinking about copying or distributing
this Package.
"Reasonable copying fee" is whatever you can justify on the
basis of media cost, duplication charges, time of people involved,
and so on. (You will not be required to justify it to the
Copyright Holder, but only to the computing community at large
as a market that must bear the fee.)
"Freely Available" means that no fee is charged for the item
itself, though there may be fees involved in handling the item.
It also means that recipients of the item may redistribute it
under the same conditions they received it.
1. You may make and give away verbatim copies of the source form of the
Standard Version of this Package without restriction, provided that you
duplicate all of the original copyright notices and associated disclaimers.
2. You may apply bug fixes, portability fixes and other modifications
derived from the Public Domain or from the Copyright Holder. A Package
modified in such a way shall still be considered the Standard Version.
3. You may otherwise modify your copy of this Package in any way, provided
that you insert a prominent notice in each changed file stating how and
when you changed that file, and provided that you do at least ONE of the
following:
a) place your modifications in the Public Domain or otherwise make them
Freely Available, such as by posting said modifications to Usenet or
an equivalent medium, or placing the modifications on a major archive
site such as uunet.uu.net, or by allowing the Copyright Holder to include
your modifications in the Standard Version of the Package.
b) use the modified Package only within your corporation or organization.
c) rename any non-standard executables so the names do not conflict
with standard executables, which must also be provided, and provide
a separate manual page for each non-standard executable that clearly
documents how it differs from the Standard Version.
d) make other distribution arrangements with the Copyright Holder.
4. You may distribute the programs of this Package in object code or
executable form, provided that you do at least ONE of the following:
a) distribute a Standard Version of the executables and library files,
together with instructions (in the manual page or equivalent) on where
to get the Standard Version.
b) accompany the distribution with the machine-readable source of
the Package with your modifications.
c) accompany any non-standard executables with their corresponding
Standard Version executables, giving the non-standard executables
non-standard names, and clearly documenting the differences in manual
pages (or equivalent), together with instructions on where to get
the Standard Version.
d) make other distribution arrangements with the Copyright Holder.
5. You may charge a reasonable copying fee for any distribution of this
Package. You may charge any fee you choose for support of this Package.
You may not charge a fee for this Package itself. However,
you may distribute this Package in aggregate with other (possibly
commercial) programs as part of a larger (possibly commercial) software
distribution provided that you do not advertise this Package as a
product of your own.
6. The scripts and library files supplied as input to or produced as
output from the programs of this Package do not automatically fall
under the copyright of this Package, but belong to whomever generated
them, and may be sold commercially, and may be aggregated with this
Package.
7. C subroutines supplied by you and linked into this Package in order
to emulate subroutines and variables of the language defined by this
Package shall not be considered part of this Package, but are the
equivalent of input as in Paragraph 6, provided these subroutines do
not change the language in any way that would cause it to fail the
regression tests for the language.
8. The name of the Copyright Holder may not be used to endorse or promote
products derived from this software without specific prior written permission.
9. THIS PACKAGE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND WITHOUT ANY EXPRESS OR
IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, THE IMPLIED
WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
The End

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# This is the make file for ee, the "easy editor".
#
# A file called 'make.local' will be generated which will contain information
# specific to the local system, such as if it is a BSD or System V based
# version of UNIX, whether or not it has catgets, or select.
#
# The "install" target ("make install") will copy the ee binary to
# the /usr/local/bin directory on the local system. The man page (ee.1)
# will be copied into the /usr/local/man/man1 directory.
#
# The "clean" target ("make clean") will remove the ee and new_curse.o
# object files, and the ee binary.
#
all : localmake buildee
buildee :
make -f make.local
localmake:
@./create.make
install :
cp ee /usr/local/bin/ee
cp ee.1 /usr/local/man/man1/ee.1
clean :
rm -f ee.o new_curse.o ee

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THIS MATERIAL IS PROVIDED "AS IS". THERE ARE NO WARRANTIES OF
ANY KIND WITH REGARD TO THIS MATERIAL, INCLUDING, BUT NOT
LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND
FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. Neither Hewlett-Packard nor
Hugh Mahon shall be liable for errors contained herein, nor for
incidental or consequential damages in connection with the
furnishing, performance or use of this material. Neither
Hewlett-Packard nor Hugh Mahon assumes any responsibility for
the use or reliability of this software or documentation. This
software and documentation is totally UNSUPPORTED. There is no
support contract available. Hewlett-Packard has done NO
Quality Assurance on ANY of the program or documentation. You
may find the quality of the materials inferior to supported
materials.
This software may be distributed under the terms of Larry Wall's
Artistic license, a copy of which is included in this distribution.
This notice must be included with this software and any
derivatives.
Any modifications to this software by anyone but the original author
must be so noted.
The editor 'ee' (easy editor) is intended to be a simple, easy to use
terminal-based screen oriented editor that requires no instruction to
use. Its primary use would be for people who are new to computers, or who
use computers only for things like e-mail.
ee's simplified interface is highlighted by the use of pop-up menus which
make it possible for users to carry out tasks without the need to
remember commands. An information window at the top of the screen shows
the user the operations available with control-keys.
ee allows users to use full eight-bit characters. If the host system has
the capabilities, ee can use message catalogs, which would allow users to
translate the message catalog into other languages which use eight-bit
characters. See the file ee.i18n.guide for more details.
ee relies on the virtual memory abilities of the platform it is running on
and does not have its own memory management capabilities.
I am releasing ee because I hate to see new users and non-computer types
get frustrated by vi, and would like to see more intuitive interfaces for
basic tools (both character-based and graphical) become more pervasive.
Terminal capabilities and communication speeds have evolved considerably
since the time in which vi's interface was created, allowing much more
intuitive interfaces to be used. Since character-based I/O won't be
completely replaced by graphical user interfaces for at least a few more
years, I'd like to do what I can to make using computers with less
glamorous interfaces as easy to use as possible. If terminal interfaces
are still used in ten years, I hope neophytes won't still be stuck with
only vi.
For a text editor to be easy to use requires a certain set of abilities. In
order for ee to work, a terminal must have the ability to position the cursor
on the screen, and should have arrow keys that send unique sequences
(multiple characters, the first character is an "escape", octal code
'\033'). All of this information needs to be in a database called "terminfo"
(System V implementations) or "termcap" (usually used for BSD systems). In
case the arrow keys do not transmit unique sequences, motion operations are
mapped to control keys as well, but this at least partially defeats the
purpose. The curses package is used to handle the I/O which deals with the
terminal's capabilities.
While ee is based on curses, I have included here the source code to
new_curse, a subset of curses developed for use with ee. 'curses' often
will have a defect that reduces the usefulness of the editor relying upon
it.
The file new_curse.c contains a subset of 'curses', a package for
applications to use to handle screen output. Unfortunately, curses
varies from system to system, so I developed new_curse to provide
consistent behavior across systems. It works on both SystemV and BSD
systems, and while it can sometimes be slower than other curses packages,
it will get the information on the screen painted correctly more often
than vendor supplied curses. Unless problems occur during the building
of ee, it is recommended that you use new_curse rather than the curses
supplied with your system.
If you experience problems with data being displayed improperly, check
your terminal configuration, especially if you're using a terminal
emulator, and make sure that you are using the right terminfo entry
before rummaging through code. Terminfo entries often contain
inaccuracies, or incomplete information, or may not totally match the
terminal or emulator the terminal information is being used with.
Complaints that ee isn't working quite right often end up being something
else (like the terminal emulator being used).
Both ee and new_curse were developed using K&R C (also known as "classic
C"), but it can also be compiled with ANSI C. You should be able to
build ee by simply typing "make". A make file which takes into account
the characteristics of your system will be created, and then ee will be
built. If there are problems encountered, you will be notified about
them.
ee is the result of several conflicting design goals. While I know that it
solves the problems of some users, I also have no doubt that some will decry
its lack of more features. I will settle for knowing that ee does fulfill
the needs of a minority (but still large number) of users. The goals of ee
are:
1. To be so easy to use as to require no instruction.
2. To be easy to compile and, if necessary, port to new platforms
by people with relatively little knowledge of C and UNIX.
3. To have a minimum number of files to be dealt with, for compile
and installation.
4. To have enough functionality to be useful to a large number of
people.
Hugh Mahon |___|
h_mahon@fc.hp.com | |
|\ /|
| \/ |

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#!/bin/sh
#
# This script will determine if the system is a System V or BSD based
# UNIX system and create a makefile for ee appropriate for the system.
#
# $Header: /home/hugh/sources/old_ae/RCS/create.make,v 1.7 2001/01/20 04:57:17 hugh Exp hugh $
#
# test for existence of termcap (exists on both BSD and SysV systems)
if [ -f /etc/termcap -o -f /usr/share/lib/termcap -o -f /usr/share/misc/termcap ]
then
termcap_exists="TRUE"
else
termcap_exists=""
fi
# test for terminfo directory (exists on SysV systems)
if [ -d /usr/lib/terminfo -o -d /usr/share/lib/terminfo -o -d /usr/share/terminfo ]
then
terminfo_exists=""
else
terminfo_exists="-DCAP"
fi
# test for existence of termio header (on SysV systems)
if [ -f /usr/include/termio.h ]
then
termio="-DSYS5"
else
termio=""
fi
# test for sgtty header (on BSD systems)
if [ -f /usr/include/sgtty.h ]
then
sgtty="TRUE"
else
sgtty=""
fi
# look for select call in headers, make sure headers exist
HEADER_FILES=""
if [ -f /usr/include/sys/time.h ]
then
HEADER_FILES="/usr/include/sys/time.h "
fi
if [ -f /usr/include/sys/types.h ]
then
HEADER_FILES="$HEADER_FILES /usr/include/sys/types.h"
fi
# check for unistd.h
if [ -f /usr/include/unistd.h ]
then
HAS_UNISTD=-DHAS_UNISTD
HEADER_FILES="$HEADER_FILES /usr/include/unistd.h"
else
HAS_UNISTD=""
fi
if [ -n "$HEADER_FILES" ]
then
string="`grep select $HEADER_FILES`"
if [ -n "$string" ]
then
BSD_SELECT="-DBSD_SELECT"
else
BSD_SELECT=""
fi
fi
# check for existence of select.h (on AIX)
if [ -f /usr/include/sys/select.h ]
then
select_hdr="-DSLCT_HDR"
else
select_hdr=""
fi
# check for stdlib.h
if [ -f /usr/include/stdlib.h ]
then
HAS_STDLIB=-DHAS_STDLIB
else
HAS_STDLIB=""
fi
# check for stdarg.h
if [ -f /usr/include/stdarg.h ]
then
HAS_STDARG=-DHAS_STDARG
else
HAS_STDARG=""
fi
# check for ctype.h
if [ -f /usr/include/ctype.h ]
then
HAS_CTYPE=-DHAS_CTYPE
else
HAS_CTYPE=""
fi
# check for sys/ioctl.h
if [ -f /usr/include/sys/ioctl.h ]
then
HAS_SYS_IOCTL=-DHAS_SYS_IOCTL
else
HAS_SYS_IOCTL=""
fi
# check for sys/wait.h
if [ -f /usr/include/sys/wait.h ]
then
HAS_SYS_WAIT=-DHAS_SYS_WAIT
else
HAS_SYS_WAIT=""
fi
# check for localization headers
if [ -f /usr/include/locale.h -a -f /usr/include/nl_types.h ]
then
catgets=""
else
catgets="-DNO_CATGETS"
fi
# make decisions about use of new_curse.c (use of new_curse is recommended
# rather than local curses)
if [ -n "$terminfo_exists" -a -z "$termcap_exists" ]
then
echo "Neither terminfo or termcap are on this system! "
if [ -f /usr/include/curses.h ]
then
echo "Relying on local curses implementation."
else
cat <<-EOF
Don't know where to find curses, you'll need to modify
source code to be able to build!
Modify the file make.default and build ee by typing:
make -f make.default
EOF
exit 1
fi
TARGET="curses"
curses=""
else
curses="-DNCURSE"
TARGET="ee"
fi
if [ -z "$termio" -a -z "$sgtty" ]
then
echo "Neither termio.h or sgtty.h are on this system! "
if [ -f /usr/include/curses.h ]
then
echo "Relying on local curses implementation."
else
cat <<-EOF
Don't know where to find curses, you'll need to modify
source code to be able to build!
Modify the file make.default and build ee by typing:
make -f make.default
EOF
exit 1
fi
TARGET="curses"
curses=""
fi
# check if this is a SunOS system
if [ -d /usr/5include ]
then
five_include="-I/usr/5include"
else
five_include=""
fi
if [ -d /usr/5lib ]
then
five_lib="-L/usr/5lib"
else
five_lib=""
fi
if [ -n "$CFLAGS" ]
then
if [ -z "`echo $CFLAGS | grep '[-]g'`" ]
then
other_cflags="${CFLAGS} -s"
else
other_cflags="${CFLAGS}"
fi
else
other_cflags="-s"
fi
# time to write the makefile
echo "Generating make.local"
if [ -f make.local ]
then
mv make.local make.lcl.old
fi
echo "DEFINES = $termio $terminfo_exists $BSD_SELECT $catgets $select $curses " > make.local
echo "" >> make.local
echo "CFLAGS = $HAS_UNISTD $HAS_STDARG $HAS_STDLIB $HAS_CTYPE $HAS_SYS_IOCTL $HAS_SYS_WAIT $five_lib $five_include $select_hdr $other_cflags" >> make.local
echo "" >> make.local
echo "" >> make.local
echo "all : $TARGET" >> make.local
cat >> make.local << EOF
curses : ee.c
cc ee.c -o ee \$(CFLAGS) -lcurses
ee : ee.o new_curse.o
cc -o ee ee.o new_curse.o \$(CFLAGS)
ee.o : ee.c new_curse.h
cc -c ee.c \$(DEFINES) \$(CFLAGS)
new_curse.o : new_curse.c new_curse.h
cc new_curse.c -c \$(DEFINES) \$(CFLAGS)
EOF
if [ -f make.lcl.old ]
then
diffs="`cmp make.lcl.old make.local`"
if [ -n "${diffs}" ]
then
rm -f ee.o new_curse.o ee
fi
rm -f make.lcl.old
fi

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.\"
.\"
.\" To format this reference page, use the command:
.\"
.\" nroff -man ee.1
.\"
.\" $Header: /home/hugh/sources/old_ae/RCS/ee.1,v 1.19 1995/11/29 04:03:15 hugh Exp hugh $
.\"
.\"
.TH ee 1 "" "" "" ""
.SH NAME
ee \- easy editor
.SH SYNOPSIS
.nf
ee [-e] [-i] [-h] [+#] [\fIfile\fR ...]
ree [-e] [-i] [-h] [+#] [\fIfile\fR ...]
.ta
.fi
.ad b
.SH DESCRIPTION
The command
.I ee
is a simple screen oriented text editor. It is always in text insertion
mode unless there is a prompt at the bottom of the terminal, or a
menu present (in a box in the middle of the terminal). The command
.I ree
is the same as
.I ee,
but restricted to editing the named
file (no file operations, or shell escapes are allowed).
.PP
For
.I ee
to work properly, the environment variable
.SM TERM
must be set to indicate the type of terminal being used. For
example, for an
.SM HP 700/92
terminal, the
.SM TERM
variable should be set to "70092". See your System Administrator if
you need more information.
.\"
.\" options
.\"
.SS Options
The following options are available from the command line:
.PP
.TP 4
.B -e
Turns off expansion of tab character to spaces.
.TP
.B -i
Turns off display of information window at top of terminal.
.TP
.B -h
Turns off highlighting of borders of windows and menus (improves
performance on some terminals).
.TP
.B +#
Moves the cursor to line '#' at startup.
.br
.\"
.\" control keys
.\"
.SS "Control keys"
To do anything other than insert text, the user must use the control
keys (the
.B Control
key, represented by a "^", pressed in conjunction with an
alphabetic key, e.g., ^a) and function keys available on the keyboard
(such as
.BR "Next Page" ", " "Prev Page" ,
arrow keys, etc.).
.PP
Since not all terminals have function keys,
.I ee
has the basic cursor movement functions assigned to control keys as
well as more intuitive keys on the keyboard when available. For
instance, to move the cursor up, the user can use the up arrow key,
or
.BR ^u .
.RS 4
.nf
.ta 1.4i
.sp
^a Prompt for the decimal value of a character to insert.
^b Move to the bottom of the text.
^c Get the prompt for a command.
^d Move the cursor down.
^e Prompt for the string to search for.
^f Undelete the last deleted character.
^g Move to the beginning of the line.
^h Backspace.
^i Tab.
^j Insert a newline.
^k Delete the character the cursor is sitting on.
^l Move the cursor left.
^m Insert a newline.
^n Move to the next page.
^o Move to the end of the line.
^p Move to the previous page.
^r Move the cursor to the right.
^t Move to the top of the text.
^u Move the cursor up.
^v Undelete the last deleted word.
^w Delete the word beginning at the cursor position.
^x Search.
^y Delete from the cursor position to the end of line.
^z Undelete the last deleted line.
^[ (ESC) Pop up menu.
.ta
.fi
.RE
.sp
.SS "EMACS keys mode"
.PP
Since many shells provide an Emacs mode (for cursor movement and other editing
operations), some bindings that may be more useful for people familiar with
those bindings have been provided. These are accessible via the
.B settings
menu, or via the initialization file (see below). The mappings are as follows:
.RS
.nf
.ta 1.4i
^a Move to the beginning of the line.
^b Back 1 character.
^c Command prompt.
^d Delete character the cursor is sitting on.
^e End of line.
^f Forward 1 character.
^g Go back 1 page.
^h Backspace.
^i Tab.
^j Undelete last deleted character.
^k Delete line.
^l Undelete last deleted line.
^m Insert a newline.
^n Move to the next line.
^o Prompt for the decimal value of a character to insert.
^p Previous line.
^r Restore last deleted word.
^t Move to the top of the text.
^u Move to the bottom of the text.
^v Move to the next page.
^w Delete the word beginning at the cursor position.
^y Prompt for the string to search for.
^z Next word.
^[ (ESC) Pop up menu.
.ta
.fi
.RE
.sp
.\"
.\" function keys
.\"
.SS "Function Keys"
.RS 4
.IP "\fBNext Page\fR"
Move to the next page.
.IP "\fBPrev Page\fR"
Move to the previous page.
.IP "\fBDelete Char\fR"
Delete the character the cursor is on.
.IP "\fBDelete Line\fR"
Delete from the cursor to the end of line.
.IP "\fBInsert line\fR"
Insert a newline at the cursor position.
.IP "\fBArrow keys\fR"
Move the cursor in the direction indicated.
.RE
.\"
.\" commands
.\"
.SS Commands
.PP
Some operations require more information than a single keystroke can
provide. For the most basic operations, there is a menu that can be
obtained by pressing the
.SM \fBESC\fR
key. The same operations, and more can be performed by obtaining the
command prompt (^c) and typing in one of the commands below.
.RS 4
.IP "!\fBcmd\fR"
Execute \fBcmd\fR in a shell.
.IP "\fB0-9\fR"
Move to the line indicated.
.IP "\fBcase\fR"
Make searches case sensitive.
.IP "\fBcharacter\fR"
Display the ascii value of the character at the cursor.
.IP "\fBexit\fR"
Save the edited text, and leave the editor.
.IP "\fBexpand\fR"
Expand tabs to spaces.
.IP "\fBfile\fR"
Print the name of the file.
.IP "\fBhelp\fR"
Display help screen.
.IP "\fBline\fR"
Display the current line number.
.IP "\fBnocase\fR
Make searches insensitive to case (the default).
.IP "\fBnoexpand\fR"
Don't expand tab to spaces when the TAB key is pressed.
.IP "\fBquit\fR"
Leave the editor without saving changes.
.IP "\fBread\fR \fIfile\fR"
Read the named \fIfile\fR.
.IP "\fBwrite\fR \fIfile\fR"
Write the text to the named \fIfile\fR.
.RE
.\"
.\" menu operations
.\"
.SS "Menu Operations"
.PP
Pop-up menus can be obtained by pressing the
.B escape
key (or
.B ^[
if no
.B escape
key is present). When in the menu, the escape key can be
used to leave the menu without performing any operations. Use the up and
down arrow keys, or
.B ^u
for moving up and
.B ^d
for moving down to move to the desired items in the menu, then press
.B return
to perform the indicated task.
.PP
To the left of each menu item is a letter, which if the corresponding
letter is pressed on the keyboard selects that menu entry.
.PP
The main menu in \fIee\fR is as follows:
.RS 4
.IP "\fBleave editor\fR"
If changes have been made, the user will get a menu prompting whether or
not the changes should be saved.
.IP "\fBhelp\fR"
Displays a help screen, with all of the keyboard operations and commands.
.IP "\fBfile operations\fR"
Pops up a menu for selecting whether to read a file, write to a file, or
save the current contents of the editor, as well as send the contents of
the editor to a print command (see the section \fBInitializing ee from a
file\fR).
.IP "\fBredraw screen\fR"
Provides a means to repaint the screen if the screen has been corrupted.
.IP "\fBsettings\fR"
Shows the current values of the operating modes, and right margin. By
pressing return when the cursor is on a particular item, the value can be
changed. To leave this menu, press the \fBescape\fR key. (See \fBModes\fR
below.)
.IP "\fBsearch\fR"
.br
Pops up a menu in which the user may choose to enter a string to search
for, or search for a string already entered.
.IP "\fBmiscellaneous\fR"
Pops up a menu that allows the user to format the current paragraph,
execute a shell command, or check the spelling of the text in the editor.
.RE
.\"
.\" paragraph formatting
.\"
.SS "Paragraph Formatting"
.PP
Paragraphs are defined for \fIee\fR by a block of text bounded by:
.sp
.RS 8
.IP \(bu
Begin or end of file.
.IP \(bu
Line with no characters, or only spaces and/or tabs.
.IP \(bu
Line starting with a period ('.') or right angle bracket ('>').
.RE
.PP
A paragraph may be formatted two ways: explicitly by choosing the
\fBformat paragraph\fR menu item, or by setting \fIee\fR to automatically
format paragraphs. The automatic mode may be set via a menu, or via the
initialization file.
.PP
There are three states for text operation in \fIee\fR: free-form, margins,
and automatic formatting.
.PP
"Free-form" is best used for things like programming. There are no
restrictions on the length of lines, and no formatting takes place.
.PP
"Margins" allows the user to type in text without having to worry about going
beyond the right margin (the right margin may be set in the \fBsettings\fR
menu, the default is for the margin to be the right edge of the
terminal). This is the mode that allows the \fBformat paragraph\fR menu
item to work.
.PP
"Automatic formatting" provides word-processor-like behavior. The user
may type in text, while \fIee\fR will make sure the entire paragraph fits
within the width of the terminal every time the user inserts a space after
typing or deleting text. Margin observation must also be enabled in order for
automatic formatting to occur.
.\"
.\" modes
.\"
.SS Modes
.PP
Although ee is a 'modeless' editor (it is in text insertion mode all the
time), there are modes in some of the things it does. These include:
.RS 4
.IP "\fBtab expansion\fR"
Tabs may be inserted as a single tab character, or replaced with spaces.
.IP "\fBcase sensitivity\fR"
The search operation can be sensitive to whether characters are upper- or
lower-case, or ignore case completely.
.IP "\fBmargins observed\fR"
Lines can either be truncated at the right margin, or extend on forever.
.IP "\fBauto paragraph formatting\fR"
While typing in text, the editor can try to keep it looking reasonably well
within the width of the screen.
.IP "\fBeightbit characters\fR"
Toggles whether eight bit characters are displayed as their value in angle
brackets (e.g. "<220>") or as a character.
.IP "\fBinfo window\fR"
A window showing the keyboard operations that can be performed can be
displayed or not.
.IP "\fBemacs keys\fR"
Control keys may be given bindings similar to emacs, or not.
.IP "\f16 bit characters\fR"
Toggles whether sixteen bit characters are handled as one 16-bit quantities or
two 8-bit quantities. This works primarily with the Chinese Big 5 code set.
.RE
.PP
You may set these modes via the initialization file (see below), or with a
menu (see above).
.\"
.\" spell checking
.\"
.SS "Spell Checking"
.PP
There are two ways to have the spelling in the text checked from \fIee\fR.
One is by the traditional \fIspell\fR(1) command, the other is with the
optional \fIispell\fR(1) command.
.PP
Using \fIspell\fR, the words that are not recognized will be placed at the top
of the file. For the \fIispell\fR option, the file is written to disk,
then \fIispell\fR run on the file, and the file read back in once
\fIispell\fR has completed making changes to the file.
.\"
.\" printing
.\"
.SS "Printing the contents of the editor"
.PP
The user may select a menu item which prints the contents of the editor.
.I ee
pipes the text in the editor to the command specified by the
initialization command
.B printcommand
(see the section
.B Initializing ee from a file
below). The default is to send the contents to "lp".
.PP
Whatever the user assigns to
.B printcommand
must take input from
standard input. See your system administrator for more details.
.\"
.\" shell operations
.\"
.SS "Shell operations"
.PP
Shell commands can be executed from within
.I ee
by selecting the
.B shell command
item in the
.B miscellaneous
menu, or by placing an exclamation mark ("!") before the command to
execute at the
.B command:
prompt. Additionally, the user may direct the contents of the edit buffer
out to a shell operation (via a pipe) by using the left angle bracket
(">"), followed by a "!" and the shell command to execute. The output of
a shell operation can also be directed into the edit buffer by using a
right angle bracket ("<") before the exclamation mark. These can even be
used together to send output to a shell operation and read back the
results into the editor. So, if the editor contained a list of words
to be sorted, they could be sorted by typing the following at the command
prompt:
.RS 4
.sp
><!sort
.sp
.RE
This would send the contents of the editor to be piped into the
.I sort
utility and the result would be placed into the edit buffer at the current
cursor location. The old information would have to be deleted by the user.
.\"
.\" initializing ee from a file
.\"
.SS "Initializing ee from a file"
.PP
Since different users have different preferences, \fIee\fR allows some
slight configurability. There are three possible locations for an
initialization file for ee: the file \fI/usr/local/lib/init.ee\fR, the
file \fI.init.ee\fR in the user's home directory, or the file \fI.init.ee\fR
in the current directory (if different from the home
directory). This allows system administrators to set some preferences for
the users on a system-wide basis (for example, the \fBprint\fR command),
and the user to customize settings for particular directories (like one
for correspondence, and a different directory for programming).
.PP
The file \fI\/usr/local/lib/init.ee\fR is read first, then
\fI$HOME/.init.ee\fR, then \fI.init.ee\fR, with the settings specified by the
most recent file read taking precedence.
.PP
The following items may be entered in the initialization file:
.RS 4
.IP \fBcase\fR
Sets searches to be case sensitive.
.IP \fBnocase\fR
Sets searches to be insensitive to case (default).
.IP \fBexpand\fR
Causes \fIee\fR to expand tabs to spaces (default).
.IP \fBnoexpand\fR
Causes \fIee\fR to insert tabs as a single character.
.IP \fBinfo\fR
A small information window is displayed at the top of the terminal
(default).
.IP \fBnoinfo\fR
Turns off the display of the information window.
.IP \fBmargins\fR
Causes \fIee\fR to truncate lines at the right margin when the
cursor passes beyond the right margin as set by the user
while text is being inserted
(default).
.IP \fBnomargins\fR
Allows lines to extend beyond the right margin.
.IP \fBautoformat\fR
Causes \fIee\fR to automatically try to format the current paragraph while
text insertion is occurring.
.IP \fBnoautoformat\fR
Turns off automatic paragraph formatting (default).
.IP \fBprintcommand\fR
Allows the setting of the print command (default: "lp").
.IP \fBrightmargin\fR
The user can select a value for the right margin (the first column on the
screen is zero).
.IP \fBhighlight\fR
Turns on highlighting border of information window and menus (default).
.IP \fBnohighlight\fR
Turns off highlighting of border of information window and menus.
.IP \fBeightbit\fR
Turns on display of eight bit characters.
.IP \fBnoeightbit\fR
Turns off display of eight bit characters (they are displayed as their decimal
value inside angle brackets, e.g., "<220>").
.IP \fB16bit\fR
Turns on handling of 16-bit characters.
.IP \fbno16bit\fR
Turns off handling of 16-bit characters.
.IP \fBemacs\fR
Turns on emacs key bindings.
.IP \fBnoemacs\fR
Turns off emacs key bindings.
.RE
.\"
.\" save editor configuration
.\"
.SS "Save Editor Configuration"
.PP
When using this entry from the
.B settings
menu, the user may choose to save the current configuration of
the editor (see \fBInitializing ee from a
file\fR above) to a file named
.I .init.ee
in the current directory or the user's home directory. If a file named
.I .init.ee
already exists, it will be renamed
.IR .init.ee.old .
.\"
.\" Caveats
.\"
.SH CAVEATS
.PP
THIS MATERIAL IS PROVIDED "AS IS". THERE ARE
NO WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND WITH REGARD TO THIS
MATERIAL, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND
FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. Neither
Hewlett-Packard nor Hugh Mahon shall be liable
for errors contained herein, nor for
incidental or consequential damages in
connection with the furnishing, performance or
use of this material. Neither Hewlett-Packard
nor Hugh Mahon assumes any responsibility for
the use or reliability of this software or
documentation. This software and
documentation is totally UNSUPPORTED. There
is no support contract available. Hewlett-Packard
has done NO Quality Assurance on ANY
of the program or documentation. You may find
the quality of the materials inferior to
supported materials.
.PP
Always make a copy of files that cannot be easily reproduced before
editing. Save files early, and save often.
.SS "International Code Set Support"
.I ee
supports single-byte character code sets (eight-bit clean), or the
Chinese Big-5 code set. (Other multi-byte code sets may function, but the
reason Big-5 works is that a two-byte character also takes up two columns on
the screen.)
.SH WARNINGS
The automatic paragraph formatting operation
may be too slow for slower systems.
.SH FILES
.PP
.I /usr/local/lib/init.ee
.br
.I $HOME/.init.ee
.br
.I .init.ee
.SH AUTHOR
.PP
The software
.I ee
was developed by Hugh Mahon.
.PP
This software and documentation contains
proprietary information which is protected by
copyright. All rights are reserved.
.PP
Copyright (c) 1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1995, 1996 Hugh Mahon.
.SH "SEE ALSO"
.PP
termcap(4), terminfo(4), environ(5), spell(1), ispell(1), lp(1)

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Easy Editor ("ee") provides the ability to translate the messages
displayed to the user and the commands entered. This is done via message
catalogs, following X/Open standards. ee supports eight bit characters,
as well as 16-bit characters. The Chinese Big 5 code set is the 16-bit
code set that ee was modified to handle, as it is relatively easy to
support since two byte characters also take up two columns on the screen,
thereby simplifying the screen position calculations. Other multibyte
code sets may function, but have not been tested.
(The name ee.i18n.guide is for "ee internationalization guide". The i18n
abbreviation is used because there are 18 characters between the first
letter ("i") and last ("n") of "internationalization".)
All of the messages, warnings, information, and commands, are contained
in the message catalog. Each numbered entry represents an individual
string used by ee. Some strings contain formatting information for
formatted print statements, which are of the form "%s", or "%d", these
must be preserved in the translation, or the correct information will not
be displayed. For those strings containing multiple formatting codes,
the order of each item must be preserved as well.
Message content
1 title for modes, or settings menu
2 - 8 entries for modes menu, each line should be the same length
(padded with spaces)
9 - 34 other menu titles and entries
35 - 56 help screen
57 - 61 actions assigned to control keys
62 - 66 commands information
67 message displayed when info window turned off
68 indication that no file name was entered when invoking ee
69 prompt for decimal value of character to be entered
70 message displaying the print command being invoked
71 prompt for command
72 prompt for name of file to be written
73 prompt for name of file to be read
74 string used to display the decimal value of the character
the cursor is on
75 string displaying an unrecognized command
76 string indicating that the command entered is not a unique
substring of a valid command
77 string indicating the current line number
78 string for displaying the length of the line
79 string for displaying the name of the file
80 - 83 strings showing how to invoke ee, and its options
84 message indicating that the file entered is a directory, not a
text file
85 message informing that the entered file does not yet exist
86 message informing that the file can't be opened (because of
permission problems)
87 message after file has been read with the file name and number
of lines read
88 message indicating that the file has been read
89 message indicating that the file is being read
90 message indicating that permissions only allow the file to be
read, not written
91 message after file has been read with the file name and number
of lines read
92 prompt for name of file to be saved (used when no name was
entered for a file to edit)
93 message indicating that the file was not written, since no
name was entered at the prompt
94 prompt asking user if changes should not be saved ("yes_char"
will be expected for affirmative response)
95 "yes" character, single character expected to confirm action
(can be upper or lower case, will be converted to upper-case
during test)
96 prompt
97 error message
98 message indicating that the named file is being written
99 message indicating the name of the file written, the number of
lines, and the number of characters (order of items must be
maintained)
100 search in progress message
101 message that the string was not found
102 prompt for search
103 message that string could not be executed
104 self-explanatory
105 message for menus, indicating that the Escape character will
allow the user to exit the menu
106 error message indicating the menu won't fit on the screen
107 self-explanatory
108 prompt for shell command
109 message displayed while formatting a paragraph
110 string which places message for spell checking at top of
buffer (the portions 'list of unrecognized words' and
'-=-=-=-=-=-' may be replaced, but the rest must remain the
same)
111 message informing that spell checking is in progress
112 prompt for right margin
113 error informing user that operation is not permitted in ree
114 string indicating mode is turned 'on' in modes menu
115 string indicating mode is turned 'off' in modes menu
116 - 131 strings used for commands (some also used for initialization)
132 - 144 strings used for initialization
145 entry for settings menu for emacs key bindings settings
146 - 153 help screen entries for emacs key bindings info
154 - 158 info window entries for emacs key bindings info
159 string for turning on emacs key bindings in the init file
160 string for turning off emacs key bindings in the init file
161 fifth line of usage statement
162 error message when unable to save configuration file
163 positive feedback about saving the configuration file
164 - 167 menu items for saving editor configuration
168 error message when unable to save configuration file
169 error message for ree when not specifying the file
180 self-explanatory
181 - 182 indicators of more information in menu (for when scrolling
menus because menu contents won't fit vertically on screen)
183 menu entry for modes menu for 16 bit characters
184 - 185 strings for initialization to turn on or off 16 bit
character handling
Care should be taken when translating commands and initialization keywords
because the algorithm used for detecting uniqueness of entered commands
will not be able to distinguish words that are not unique before the end
of the shorter word, for example, it would not be able to distinguish the
command 'abcd' from 'abcde'.
After translating the messages, use the 'gencat' command to create the compiled
catalog used when running the software. The standard syntax would be:
gencat ee.cat ee.msg
Where ee.msg is the file containing the translations, and ee.cat is the
compiled catalog. If the file ee.cat does not exist, it will be created.
Check the documentation for your system for proper syntax.
Message catalog placement varies from system to system. A common location
for message catalogs is in /usr/lib/nls. In this directory are
directories with the names of other languages. The default language is
'C'. There is also an environment variable, named NLSPATH used to
determine where message catalogs can be found. This variable is similar
to the PATH variable used for commands, but with some differences. The
NLSPATH variable must have the ability to handle different names for
languages and the catalog files, so it has field descriptors for these. A
typical setting for NLSPATH could be:
NLSPATH=/usr/lib/nls/%L/%N.cat:/usr/local/lib/nls/%L/%N.cat
Where "%L" is the field descriptor for the language (obtained from the
LANG environment variable) and "%N" is the name of the file (with the
".cat" appended by the path variable, it is not passed from the requesting
program). The colon (:) is used to separate paths, so in the above
example there are two paths possible for message catalogs. You may wish
to maintain catalogs for applications that are not supported by your
system vendor in a location unique for you, and this is facilitated by the
NLSPATH variable. Remember to set and export both the LANG and NLSPATH
variables for each user that expects to use localization either in a
system-wide profile or in each user's profile. See your system
documentation for more information.
The message catalog supplied with ee also uses the '$quote' directive to
specify a quote around strings to ensure proper padding. This directive
may not be supported on all systems, and lead to quotes being included in
the string used in ee, which will cause incorrect behavior. If the
'$quote' directive is not supported by your system's gencat command, edit
the msg file to remove the leading and trailing quotation marks.

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$ This file contains the messages for ee ("easy editor"). See the file
$ ee.i18n.guide for more information
$
$ For ee patchlevel 3
$
$ $Header: /home/hugh/sources/old_ae/RCS/ee.msg,v 1.8 1996/11/30 03:23:40 hugh Exp $
$
$
$set 1
$quote "
1 "modes menu"
2 "tabs to spaces "
3 "case sensitive search"
4 "margins observed "
5 "auto-paragraph format"
6 "eightbit characters "
7 "info window "
8 "right margin "
9 "leave menu"
10 "save changes"
11 "no save"
12 "file menu"
13 "read a file"
14 "write a file"
15 "save file"
16 "print editor contents"
17 "search menu"
18 "search for ..."
19 "search"
20 "spell menu"
21 "use 'spell'"
22 "use 'ispell'"
23 "miscellaneous menu"
24 "format paragraph"
25 "shell command"
26 "check spelling"
27 "main menu"
28 "leave editor"
29 "help"
30 "file operations"
31 "redraw screen"
32 "settings"
33 "search"
34 "miscellaneous"
35 "Control keys: "
36 "^a ascii code ^i tab ^r right "
37 "^b bottom of text ^j newline ^t top of text "
38 "^c command ^k delete char ^u up "
39 "^d down ^l left ^v undelete word "
40 "^e search prompt ^m newline ^w delete word "
41 "^f undelete char ^n next page ^x search "
42 "^g begin of line ^o end of line ^y delete line "
43 "^h backspace ^p prev page ^z undelete line "
44 "^[ (escape) menu "
45 " "
46 "Commands: "
47 "help : get this info file : print file name "
48 "read : read a file char : ascii code of char "
49 "write : write a file case : case sensitive search "
50 "exit : leave and save nocase : case insensitive search "
51 "quit : leave, no save !cmd : execute \"cmd\" in shell "
52 "line : display line # 0-9 : go to line \"#\" "
53 "expand : expand tabs noexpand: do not expand tabs "
54 " "
55 " ee [+#] [-i] [-e] [-h] [file(s)] "
56 "+# :go to line # -i :no info window -e : don't expand tabs -h :no highlight"
57 "^[ (escape) menu ^e search prompt ^y delete line ^u up ^p prev page "
58 "^a ascii code ^x search ^z undelete line ^d down ^n next page "
59 "^b bottom of text ^g begin of line ^w delete word ^l left "
60 "^t top of text ^o end of line ^v undelete word ^r right "
61 "^c command ^k delete char ^f undelete char "
62 "help : get help info |file : print file name |line : print line # "
63 "read : read a file |char : ascii code of char |0-9 : go to line \"#\""
64 "write: write a file |case : case sensitive search |exit : leave and save "
65 "!cmd : shell \"cmd\" |nocase: ignore case in search |quit : leave, no save"
66 "expand: expand tabs |noexpand: do not expand tabs "
67 " press Escape (^[) for menu"
68 "no file"
69 "ascii code: "
70 "sending contents of buffer to \"%s\" "
71 "command: "
72 "name of file to write: "
73 "name of file to read: "
74 "character = %d"
75 "unknown command \"%s\""
76 "entered command is not unique"
77 "line %d "
78 "length = %d"
79 "current file is \"%s\" "
80 "usage: %s [-i] [-e] [-h] [+line_number] [file(s)]\n"
81 " -i turn off info window\n"
82 " -e do not convert tabs to spaces\n"
83 " -h do not use highlighting\n"
84 "file \"%s\" is a directory"
85 "new file \"%s\""
86 "can't open \"%s\""
87 "file \"%s\", %d lines"
88 "finished reading file \"%s\""
89 "reading file \"%s\""
90 ", read only"
91 "file \"%s\", %d lines"
92 "enter name of file: "
93 "no filename entered: file not saved"
94 "changes have been made, are you sure? (y/n [n]) "
95 "y"
96 "file already exists, overwrite? (y/n) [n] "
97 "unable to create file \"%s\""
98 "writing file \"%s\""
99 "\"%s\" %d lines, %d characters"
100 " ...searching"
101 "string \"%s\" not found"
102 "search for: "
103 "could not exec %s\n"
104 "press return to continue "
105 "press Esc to cancel"
106 "menu too large for window"
107 "press any key to continue "
108 "shell command: "
109 "...formatting paragraph..."
110 "<!echo 'list of unrecognized words'; echo -=-=-=-=-=-"
111 "sending contents of edit buffer to 'spell'"
112 "right margin is: "
113 "restricted mode: unable to perform requested operation"
114 "ON"
115 "OFF"
116 "HELP"
117 "WRITE"
118 "READ"
119 "LINE"
120 "FILE"
121 "CHARACTER"
122 "REDRAW"
123 "RESEQUENCE"
124 "AUTHOR"
125 "VERSION"
126 "CASE"
127 "NOCASE"
128 "EXPAND"
129 "NOEXPAND"
130 "EXIT"
131 "QUIT"
132 "INFO"
133 "NOINFO"
134 "MARGINS"
135 "NOMARGINS"
136 "AUTOFORMAT"
137 "NOAUTOFORMAT"
138 "ECHO"
139 "PRINTCOMMAND"
140 "RIGHTMARGIN"
141 "HIGHLIGHT"
142 "NOHIGHLIGHT"
143 "EIGHTBIT"
144 "NOEIGHTBIT"
145 "emacs key bindings "
146 "^a beginning of line ^i tab ^r restore word "
147 "^b back 1 char ^j undel char ^t top of text "
148 "^c command ^k delete line ^u bottom of text "
149 "^d delete char ^l undelete line ^v next page "
150 "^e end of line ^m newline ^w delete word "
151 "^f forward 1 char ^n next line ^x search "
152 "^g go back 1 page ^o ascii char insert ^y search prompt "
153 "^h backspace ^p prev line ^z next word "
154 "^[ (escape) menu ^y search prompt ^k delete line ^p prev li ^g prev page"
155 "^o ascii code ^x search ^l undelete line ^n next li ^v next page"
156 "^u end of file ^a begin of line ^w delete word ^b back 1 char "
157 "^t top of text ^e end of line ^r restore word ^f forward 1 char "
158 "^c command ^d delete char ^j undelete char ^z next word "
159 "EMACS"
160 "NOEMACS"
161 " +# put cursor at line #\n"
162 "unable to open .init.ee for writing, no configuration saved!"
163 "ee configuration saved in file %s"
164 "save editor configuration"
165 "save ee configuration"
166 "save in current directory"
167 "save in home directory"
168 "ee configuration not saved"
169 "must specify a file when invoking ree"
180 "menu too large for window"
181 "^^more^^"
182 "VVmoreVV"
183 "16 bit characters "
184 "16BIT"
185 "NO16BIT"

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#!/bin/sh
set -x
if [ $# -lt 2 ]
then
echo usage $0 source_file dest_file
exit 1
fi
trap 'rm -f /tmp/$$.out; exit 0' 0 # set up traps to clean up
trap 'rm -f /tmp/$$.out; exit 1' 1 2 3 15 # on errors AND normal exit
if [ -f $2 ]
then
rm $2
fi
cat $1 | grep 'catgetlocal.*\"*\"' |
sed -e 's/^.*catgetlocal(//' |
sed -e 's/^[ ]*//' |
sed -e 's/, \"/ \"/' |
sed -e 's/);//' > /tmp/$$.out
cat > $2 <<EOF
\$
\$
\$set 1
\$quote "
EOF
sort -n < /tmp/$$.out >> $2

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# This is the make file for ee, the "easy editor".
#
# If building ee using curses, type "make curses", otherwise new_curse (a
# subset of curses that supports ee) will be built and ee will use new_curse
# instead of curses.
#
# The "install" target ("make install") will copy the ee binary to
# the /usr/local/bin directory on the local system. The man page (ee.1)
# will be copied into the /usr/local/man/man1 directory.
#
# The "clean" target ("make clean") will remove the ee and new_curse.o
# object files, and the ee binary.
#
# If the system does not have localization routines, use the -DNO_CATGETS
# define. If the system supports setlocale(), catopen(), and catgets() and
# localization is desired, do not use -DNO_CATGETS.
#
# DEFINES is used for new_curse.c, and CFLAGS is used for ee.c.
#
# for System V, using new_curse with terminfo
DEFINES = -DSYS5 -DNCURSE
# for BSD, using new_curse with termcap
#DEFINES = -DCAP -DNCURSE
# for BSD systems with select(), using new_curse with termcap, use:
#DEFINES = -DCAP -DNCURSE -DBSD_SELECT
# flags for compilation
CFLAGS = -s -DNO_CATGETS
# For Sun systems, remove the '#' from the front of the next two lines:
#DEFINES = -DSYS5 -DNCURSE
#CFLAGS = -I/usr/5include -L/usr/5lib -DNO_CATGETS -s
all : ee
curses : ee.c
cc ee.c -o ee $(CFLAGS) -lcurses
ee : ee.o new_curse.o
cc -o ee ee.o new_curse.o $(CFLAGS)
ee.o : ee.c new_curse.h
cc -c ee.c $(DEFINES) $(CFLAGS)
new_curse.o : new_curse.c new_curse.h
cc new_curse.c -c $(DEFINES) $(CFLAGS)
install :
cp ee /usr/local/bin/ee
cp ee.1 /usr/local/man/man1/ee.1
clean :
rm -f ee.o new_curse.o ee

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/*
| new_curse.h
|
| A subset of curses developed for use with ae.
|
| written by Hugh Mahon
|
| THIS MATERIAL IS PROVIDED "AS IS". THERE ARE
| NO WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND WITH REGARD TO THIS
| MATERIAL, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
| IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND
| FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. Neither
| Hewlett-Packard nor Hugh Mahon shall be liable
| for errors contained herein, nor for
| incidental or consequential damages in
| connection with the furnishing, performance or
| use of this material. Neither Hewlett-Packard
| nor Hugh Mahon assumes any responsibility for
| the use or reliability of this software or
| documentation. This software and
| documentation is totally UNSUPPORTED. There
| is no support contract available. Hewlett-
| Packard has done NO Quality Assurance on ANY
| of the program or documentation. You may find
| the quality of the materials inferior to
| supported materials.
|
| This software is not a product of Hewlett-Packard, Co., or any
| other company. No support is implied or offered with this software.
| You've got the source, and you're on your own.
|
| This software may be distributed under the terms of Larry Wall's
| Artistic license, a copy of which is included in this distribution.
|
| This notice must be included with this software and any derivatives.
|
| Copyright (c) 1986, 1987, 1988, 1991, 1995 Hugh Mahon
| All are rights reserved.
|
*/
#include <stdio.h>
#ifdef SYS5
#include <termio.h>
#else
#include <sgtty.h>
#include <fcntl.h>
#endif
#define KEY_BREAK 0401
#define KEY_DOWN 0402
#define KEY_UP 0403
#define KEY_LEFT 0404
#define KEY_RIGHT 0405
#define KEY_HOME 0406
#define KEY_BACKSPACE 0407
#define KEY_F0 0410
#define KEY_F(n) (KEY_F0+(n))
#define KEY_DL 0510
#define KEY_IL 0511
#define KEY_DC 0512
#define KEY_IC 0513
#define KEY_EIC 0514
#define KEY_CLEAR 0515
#define KEY_EOS 0516
#define KEY_EOL 0517
#define KEY_SF 0520
#define KEY_SR 0521
#define KEY_NPAGE 0522
#define KEY_PPAGE 0523
#define KEY_STAB 0524
#define KEY_CTAB 0525
#define KEY_CATAB 0526
#define KEY_ENTER 0527
#define KEY_SRESET 0530
#define KEY_RESET 0531
#define KEY_PRINT 0532
#define KEY_LL 0533
#define KEY_A1 0534
#define KEY_A3 0535
#define KEY_B2 0536
#define KEY_C1 0537
#define KEY_C3 0540
#define KEY_BTAB 0541
#define KEY_BEG 0542
#define KEY_CANCEL 0543
#define KEY_CLOSE 0544
#define KEY_COMMAND 0545
#define KEY_COPY 0546
#define KEY_CREATE 0547
#define KEY_END 0550
#define KEY_EXIT 0551
#define KEY_FIND 0552
#define KEY_HELP 0553
#define KEY_MARK 0554
#define KEY_MESSAGE 0555
#define KEY_MOVE 0556
#define KEY_NEXT 0557
#define KEY_OPEN 0560
#define KEY_OPTIONS 0561
#define KEY_PREVIOUS 0562
#define KEY_REDO 0563
#define KEY_REFERENCE 0564
#define KEY_REFRESH 0565
#define KEY_REPLACE 0566
#define KEY_RESTART 0567
#define KEY_RESUME 0570
#define KEY_SAVE 0571
#define KEY_SBEG 0572
#define KEY_SCANCEL 0573
#define KEY_SCOMMAND 0574
#define KEY_SCOPY 0575
#define KEY_SCREATE 0576
#define KEY_SDC 0577
#define KEY_SDL 0600
#define KEY_SELECT 0601
#define KEY_SEND 0602
#define KEY_SEOL 0603
#define KEY_SEXIT 0604
#define KEY_SFIND 0605
#define KEY_SHELP 0606
#define KEY_SHOME 0607
#define KEY_SIC 0610
#define KEY_SLEFT 0611
#define KEY_SMESSAGE 0612
#define KEY_SMOVE 0613
#define KEY_SNEXT 0614
#define KEY_SOPTIONS 0615
#define KEY_SPREVIOUS 0616
#define KEY_SPRINT 0617
#define KEY_SREDO 0620
#define KEY_SREPLACE 0621
#define KEY_SRIGHT 0622
#define KEY_SRSUME 0623
#define KEY_SSAVE 0624
#define KEY_SSUSPEND 0625
#define KEY_SUNDO 0626
#define KEY_SUSPEND 0627
#define KEY_UNDO 0630
#define TRUE 1
#define FALSE 0
#define A_STANDOUT 0001 /* standout mode */
#define A_NC_BIG5 0x0100 /* Handle Chinese Big5 characters */
#define SCROLL 1 /* text has been scrolled */
#define CLEAR 2 /* window has been cleared */
#define CHANGE 3 /* window has been changed */
#define UP 1 /* direction of scroll */
#define DOWN 2
struct _line {
struct _line *next_screen;
struct _line *prev_screen;
char *row;
char *attributes;
int last_char;
int changed;
int scroll;
int number;
};
struct _line *top_of_win;
typedef struct WIND {
int SR; /* starting row */
int SC; /* starting column */
int LC; /* last column */
int LX; /* last cursor column position */
int LY; /* last cursor row position */
int Attrib; /* attributes active in window */
int Num_lines; /* number of lines */
int Num_cols; /* number of columns */
int scroll_up; /* number of lines moved */
int scroll_down;
int SCROLL_CLEAR; /* indicates that window has been scrolled or cleared */
struct _line *first_line;
struct _line **line_array;
} WINDOW;
extern WINDOW *curscr;
extern WINDOW *stdscr;
extern int LINES, COLS;
#if defined(__STDC__) || defined(__cplusplus)
#define P_(s) s
#else
#define P_(s) ()
#endif
extern void copy_window P_((WINDOW *origin, WINDOW *destination));
extern void reinitscr P_((int));
extern void initscr P_((void));
extern int Get_int P_((void));
extern int INFO_PARSE P_((void));
extern int AtoI P_((void));
extern void Key_Get P_((void));
extern void keys_vt100 P_((void));
extern struct _line *Screenalloc P_((int columns));
extern WINDOW *newwin P_((int lines, int cols, int start_l, int start_c));
extern int Operation P_((int Temp_Stack[], int place));
extern void Info_Out P_((char *string, int p_list[], int place));
extern void wmove P_((WINDOW *window, int row, int column));
extern void clear_line P_((struct _line *line, int column, int cols));
extern void werase P_((WINDOW *window));
extern void wclrtoeol P_((WINDOW *window));
extern void wrefresh P_((WINDOW *window));
extern void touchwin P_((WINDOW *window));
extern void wnoutrefresh P_((WINDOW *window));
extern void flushinp P_((void));
extern void ungetch P_((int c));
extern int wgetch P_((WINDOW *window));
extern void Clear P_((int));
extern int Get_key P_((int first_char));
extern void waddch P_((WINDOW *window, int c));
extern void winsertln P_((WINDOW *window));
extern void wdeleteln P_((WINDOW *window));
extern void wclrtobot P_((WINDOW *window));
extern void wstandout P_((WINDOW *window));
extern void wstandend P_((WINDOW *window));
extern void waddstr P_((WINDOW *window, char *string));
extern void clearok P_((WINDOW *window, int flag));
extern void echo P_((void));
extern void noecho P_((void));
extern void raw P_((void));
extern void noraw P_((void));
extern void nl P_((void));
extern void nonl P_((void));
extern void saveterm P_((void));
extern void fixterm P_((void));
extern void resetterm P_((void));
extern void nodelay P_((WINDOW *window, int flag));
extern void idlok P_((WINDOW *window, int flag));
extern void keypad P_((WINDOW *window, int flag));
extern void savetty P_((void));
extern void resetty P_((void));
extern void endwin P_((void));
extern void delwin P_((WINDOW *window));
extern void wprintw P_((WINDOW *window, const char* format, ...));
extern void iout P_((WINDOW *window, int value));
extern int Comp_line P_((struct _line *line1, struct _line *line2));
extern struct _line *Insert_line P_((int row, int end_row, WINDOW *window));
extern struct _line *Delete_line P_((int row, int end_row, WINDOW *window));
extern void CLEAR_TO_EOL P_((WINDOW *window, int row, int column));
extern int check_delete P_((WINDOW *window, int line, int offset, struct _line *pointer_new, struct _line *pointer_old));
extern int check_insert P_((WINDOW *window, int line, int offset, struct _line *pointer_new, struct _line *pointer_old));
extern void doupdate P_((void));
extern void Position P_((WINDOW *window, int row, int col));
extern void Char_del P_((char *line, char *attrib, int offset, int maxlen));
extern void Char_ins P_((char *line, char *attrib, int newc, int newatt, int offset, int maxlen));
extern void attribute_on P_((void));
extern void attribute_off P_((void));
extern void Char_out P_((int newc, int newatt, char *line, char *attrib, int offset));
extern void nc_setattrib P_((int));
extern void nc_clearattrib P_((int));
#undef P_