On Thursday, July 31, 2014 10:33 PM, Jim Mahood <address@hidden> wrote:
Nice solution combined with tab completion. :-) Thanks Gerald!
On Jul 31, 2014 12:45 PM, "Gerald Young" <
address@hidden> wrote:
Hi,
What I do is have a keystroke binding which types in this:
C-a :source /home/user/Screen/
But it doesn't actually submit the command. Then I can manually type in the
command I want to run, like so:
C-a :source /home/user/Screen/command
And hit enter to execute. The command is actually a screen script stored at
that location. So adding new commands is matter just of adding new script
files.
Here's the actual binding:
bind ^L eval 'register z ":source /home/user/Screen/"' 'command' 'process z'
Regards,
Gerald
On Thursday, July 31, 2014 10:35:31 AM Dun Peal wrote:
> Folks,
>
> There's a sequence of screen operations that I execute every once in a
> while. I can use `bind` and `eval` to execute it by keystroke, but it
> is not used commonly enough to justify a keystroke binding.
>
> Is there a way to define it such that I can execute it by running a
> custom command on the `C-a :` command line?
>
> So for example, I'd define it as custom command `foo`, such that when
> I hit `C-a :` then type `foo` and press enter, the sequence of screen
> commands gets executed.
>
> Thanks, D.
>
> _______________________________________________
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> address@hidden
> https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/screen-users
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