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Tornado

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<strong>Tornado</strong> 2.0<br />

User’s Guide<br />

Table 5-15<br />

Shell Line-Editing Commands<br />

c0 ...ESC Change from cursor to beginning of line (ESC ends input).<br />

R ...ESC Type over characters (ESC ends input).<br />

nrc<br />

Replace the following n characters with c.*<br />

~ Toggle case, lower to upper or vice versa.<br />

Delete Commands<br />

nx<br />

nX<br />

dw<br />

dd<br />

Delete n characters starting at cursor.*<br />

Delete n character to left of cursor.*<br />

Delete word.<br />

Delete entire line (also CTRL+U).<br />

d$ or D Delete from cursor to end of line.<br />

d0<br />

Delete from cursor to beginning of line.<br />

Put and Undo Commands<br />

p or P<br />

Put last deletion after cursor, or in front of cursor.<br />

u<br />

Undo last command.<br />

* The default value for n is 1.<br />

† words are separated by blanks or punctuation; large words are separated by blanks<br />

only.<br />

5.6 Object Module Load Path<br />

In order to download an object module dynamically to the target, both WindSh<br />

and the target server must be able to locate the file. If path naming conventions are<br />

different between WindSh and the target server, the two systems may both have<br />

access to the file, but mounted with different path names. This situation arises<br />

often in environments where UNIX and Windows systems are networked together,<br />

because the path naming convention is different: the UNIX /usr/fred/applic.o may<br />

well correspond to the Windows n:\fred\applic.o. If you encounter this problem,<br />

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