lpe - Lightweight programmer's editor
lpe [ --help | --version ]
lpe [ -- ]
file
This page needs to be translated into Bulgarian!!!
Lpe is a minimalist, visual, real-time text editor designed to make
editing code easier without alienating its user from the shell. It includes
abilities to search files for plain text and block cut and paste, along with
standard editing capabilities. It takes some inspiration from
emacs(1) and
pico(1).
- --help
- Prints a brief description of program usage and terminates.
This must be the first option to lpe, and all other options are
ignored.
- --version
- Prints a message indication the program version and
terminates. This must be the first option to lpe, and all other
options are ignored.
- --
- Treat future arguments as file names, not options. This
allows lpe to be used to edit files starting with the - character.
As mentioned above, lpe is designed as a minimalist editor, meant to be small
and robust and efficient, but not to provide too many superfluous features.
For this reason, it should not be difficult to learn to use lpe, provided that
one is willing to invest effort to learn a few basic keys.
-
Up or Alt-K
- Go to previous line of text
-
Down or Alt-J
- Go to next line of text
-
Left or Alt-H
- Move cursor left one column
-
Right or Alt-L
- Move cursor right one column
-
Home or Alt-0
- Move cursor to beginning of line
-
End or Alt-$
- Move cursor to end of line
-
PageUp or Alt-B
- Scroll one screen up
-
PageDn or Alt-F
- Scroll one screen down
- Alt-A
- Move cursor to beginning of buffer
- Alt-S
- Move cursor to end of buffer
- Ctrl-S
- Search for a specified string in the file
- Ctrl-K
- Kill the current line
-
Ctrl-Y or Ctrl-U
- Insert the most recent block of killed lines
- Ctrl-T
- Toggle between hard and soft tab characters
- Ctrl-O
- Open a new file within the editor
- Ctrl-W
- Write the buffer to disk
- Ctrl-Q
- Save to an alternate file
- Ctrl-E
- Forget modifications to the buffer
- Ctrl-X
- Write the buffer to disk and exit
- Ctrl-D
- Perform an internal debug command
- <interrupt>
- Exit without writing to disk
- Ctrl-Z
- Suspend the editor and escape to a prompt
<interrupt> refers to your terminal's interrupt key. This is
often Ctrl-C, but can vary between terminals. Ctrl-Z, on the other hand,
is fixed, regardless of the normal stop key for your terminal.
emacs(1),
pico(1)
Chris Smith,
[email protected]
Lots of 'em -- see the BUGS file in the distribution for a partial list. I am
not planning on updating this man page often enough to keep up with the bug
list, so I won't even try to list bugs here.