<Eterm-0.9.2> begin color foreground white background black cursor #ffff00 cursor_text #880000 pointer white video normal end color begin attributes geometry 80x56 end attributes begin imageclasses path "/usr/share/Eterm/pix/" begin image type background mode trans allow trans auto state normal cmod image 100 end image end imageclasses begin toggles map_alert on visual_bell on login_shell true scrollbar off utmp_logging on iconic false home_on_output 1 home_on_input 1 scrollbar_right true scrollbar_floating false borderless false end toggles begin keyboard smallfont_key LessThan bigfont_key GreaterThan end keyboard begin misc save_lines 1024 cut_chars "t\\`\\"'&() *,;< =>?@[]{|}" border_width 0 end misc
Month: October 2004
Eterm
Shaded, transparent terminal emulators are pretty. While this is well known by the asthetes who use KDE, and other high-zoot, high-function desktops, I think that it is still true of those who like things a little simpler. I find it quicker to kick the tires of a unicycle. Still, I was looking to see if I could find a terminal emulator that was as fast as rxvt (which I switched to after debian-testing bungled the colours in the standard xterm) but allowed pretty shaded transparency.
I tried aterm, because it had little in the way of dependent libraries, but it didn’t refresh when the backdrop image did, which I found annoying. So, I tried eterm (pronounced, inexplicably, Eterm) and kicked it around for a while. I think I like it, based on this theme:
<Eterm-0.9.2> begin color foreground white background black cursor #ffff00 cursor_text #880000 pointer white video normal end color begin attributes geometry 80x56 end attributes begin imageclasses path "/usr/share/Eterm/pix/" begin image type background mode trans allow trans auto state normal cmod image 100 end image end imageclasses begin toggles map_alert on visual_bell on login_shell true scrollbar off utmp_logging on iconic false home_on_output 1 home_on_input 1 scrollbar_right true scrollbar_floating false borderless false end toggles begin keyboard smallfont_key LessThan bigfont_key GreaterThan end keyboard begin misc save_lines 1024 cut_chars "t`"'&() *,;<=>?@[]{|}" border_width 0 end misc
It is really simple, but lets me see my pretty backdrop images even when the window is cluttered with terminals. I had to go into my .muttrc to change the “black” to “default”, but that was no hardship.
Block Editing in Vim
I have been lax in adding to this site for some time, but I am hoping to rectify that in the coming weeks. Luckily I have a backlog of things that I have done that will make up the next few entries. For instance, I have come to love Visual Block editing in vim.
When I’m debugging code it is just magic to be able to comment out a block at a time to test various aspects of a program. For a long time now I’ve been referring to a copy-and-pasted section of the vim manual in a loose file, because I don’t use the features so often that it sticks in my mind yet. To avoid collecting these loose files, I’ll put the relevant section here, so I can find it.
Visual-block Insert *v_b_I* With a blockwise selection, I{string}
will insert {string}
at the start of block in every line of the block, provided that the line extends into the block. Thus lines that are short will remain unmodified. TABs are split to retain visual columns.
Visual-block Append*v_b_A* With a blockwise
selection, A{string}
will append {string}
to the end of block on every line of the
block. There is some differing behavior where the block RHS is not straight, due to different line lengths:
1. Block was created with
In this case the string is appended to the end of each line. 2. Block was created with
In this case the string is appended to the end of the block on each line, and whitespace is inserted to pad to the end-of-block column.
Note: “I” and “A” behave differently for lines that don’t extend into the selected block. This was done intentionally, so that you can do it the way you want.