Hi,
I'm troubleshooting some problems that I'm having in a terminal session connected to an AIX server. Basically, I'd like to be able to see what escape sequences are being sent in the terminal for a given key stroke.
I know there is a way to enable your terminal to display escape sequences, but I can't for the life of me remember how or find instructions now.
Thanks,
Andy
Gnome Desktop, a library that contains APIs which can be useful for a few applications, but which do not belong to GTK+, has reached version 3.7.90.
Highlights of Gnome Desktop 3.7.90:
• The introspection generation for Vala has been fixed;
• The introspectability of GnomeBg has been repaired;
• Break ABI and API to fix reliance of the API on an Xorg bug;
• The standard GObje
I have a sed replacement command that I would like to be compatible with BSD sed as well as GNU sed. Extended regular expressions are not an issue as I do not need them in this case. My primary problem is difference in the way that the two seds interpret character escape sequences in the replacement strings.
GNOME Control Center, GNOME's main interface for the configuration of various aspects of your desktop, is now at version 3.4.3.
Highlights of GNOME Control Center 3.4.3:
• The Ctrl+Alt+W key combination is now handled differently than Ctrl+W;
• Users can now escape the wallpaper filename before displaying it;
• The settings for DUN/PAN networks are now working properly;
• A c
TweetSo, I have been working on this console based project that prints a lot of messages. I wanted to make certain messages - warning etc. to be highlighted so that it could catch the user's eye easily.
I'm using GNU screen to connect to a VT100 terminal server (DOS running in DOSEMU). I want to configure escape sequences to exec a subprocess and quit a subprocess. This would be similar to printcmd, except I would return the processes STDOUT to the remote server's STDIN.
Cheese, a Photobooth-inspired GNOME application for taking pictures and videos from a webcam which also includes graphical effects based on the gstreamer-backend, is now at version 3.7.4.
Highlights of Cheese 3.7.4:
• An instance-used-via-static warning has been eliminated;
• Deprecated GFile attribute syntax has been avoided;
• Vala requirement has been bumped to 0.16.0;
• T
Proxmox VE (Virtual Environment), an easy to use open-source virtualization platform for running Virtual Appliances and Virtual Machines, is now at version 2.2.
GNOME Control Center, GNOME's main interface for configuration of various aspects of your desktop, is now at version 3.8 Beta 2.
Highlights of GNOME Control Center 3.8 Beta 2:
• A titlebar bug has been corrected;
• Use the new GdStack widget to switch panels;
• Don't prelight icons in the icon view;
• Make search be "and" instead of "or" by default;
• Make it possible to