diff options
-rw-r--r-- | Etc/FAQ.yo | 64 |
1 files changed, 35 insertions, 29 deletions
diff --git a/Etc/FAQ.yo b/Etc/FAQ.yo index ed6800f82..fecd8e82e 100644 --- a/Etc/FAQ.yo +++ b/Etc/FAQ.yo @@ -1640,43 +1640,49 @@ sect(How do I get a variable's value to be evaluated as another variable?) sect(How do I prevent the prompt overwriting output when there is no newline?) - The problem is, for example, + The problem is normally limited to zsh versions prior to 4.3.0 due to the + advent of the PROMPT_SP option (which is enabled by default, and eliminates + this problem for most terminals). An example of the overwriting is: verb( % echo -n foo % ) - and the tt(foo) has been overwritten by the prompt tt(%). The reason this - happens is that the option tt(PROMPT_CR) is enabled by default, and it - outputs a carriage return before the prompt in order to ensure that the - line editor knows what column it is in (this is needed to position the - right-side prompt correctly (mytt($RPROMPT), mytt($RPS1)) and to avoid screen - corruption when performing line editing). If you add tt(unsetopt promptcr) - to your tt(.zshrc), you will see any partial output, but your screen may - look weird until you press return or refresh the screen. - - Another solution for many terminals is to define a precmd function that - outputs a screen-width of spaces, like this: - verb( - function precmd { - echo -n ${(l:$COLUMNS:::):-} - } - ) - (Explanation: an empty parameter expansion is padded out to the number of - columns on the screen.) That precmd function will only bump the screen - down to a new line if there was output on the prompt line, otherwise the - extra spaces get removed by the tt(PROMPT_CR) action. Although this - typically looks fine it may result in the preceding spaces being included - when you select a line of text with the mouse. + This shows a case where the word tt(foo) was output without a newline, and + then overwritten by the prompt line tt(%). The reason this happens is that + the option tt(PROMPT_CR) is enabled by default, and it outputs a carriage + return before the prompt in order to ensure that the line editor knows what + column it is in (this is needed to position the right-side prompt correctly + (mytt($RPROMPT), mytt($RPS1)) and to avoid screen corruption when performing + line editing). If you add tt(unsetopt promptcr) to your tt(.zshrc), you + will see any partial output, but your screen may look weird until you press + return or refresh the screen. + + A better solution than disabling PROMPT_CR (for most terminals) is adding + a simpler version of the PROMPT_SP functionality to an older zsh using a + custom precmd function, like this one: + verb( + # Skip defining precmd if the PROMPT_SP option is available. + if ! eval '[[ -o promptsp ]] 2>/dev/null'; then + function precmd { + # An efficient version using termcap multi-right: + echo -n ' ' # Output 1 space + echotc RI $((COLUMNS - 3)) + echo -n ' ' # Output 2 spaces + # Alternately, try replacing the above 3 lines with this echo + # that outputs a screen-column-width of spaces: + #echo -n ${(l:$COLUMNS:::):-} + } + fi + ) + That precmd function will only bump the screen down to a new line if there + was output on the prompt line, otherwise the extra spaces get removed by + the tt(PROMPT_CR) action. Although this typically looks fine it may result + in the preceding spaces being included when you select a line of text with + the mouse. One final alternative is to put a newline in your prompt -- see question link(3.13)(313) for that. - Version 3.0 of zsh includes a workaround: if the tt(PROMPT_SP) option - is set, as it is by default, the shell will try to move the cursor to the - start of the next screen line. This requires some support from the - terminal which is available in most recent terminal emulators. - - sect(What's wrong with cut and paste on my xterm?) On the majority of modern UNIX systems, cutting text from one window and |