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Date:      Tue, 30 Nov 2004 18:09:07 -0500
From:      Vance Shipley <vances@motivity.ca>
To:        "Kevin D. Kinsey, DaleCo, S.P." <kdk@daleco.biz>
Cc:        questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: erase2 ( xterm
Message-ID:  <20041130230907.GA21202@frogman.motivity.ca>
In-Reply-To: <41ACFA75.3040307@daleco.biz>
References:  <20041130131228.GA19023@frogman.motivity.ca> <20041130154715.3465d998.torfinn.ingolfsen@broadpark.no> <41ACFA75.3040307@daleco.biz>

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On Tue, Nov 30, 2004 at 04:55:49PM -0600, Kevin D. Kinsey, DaleCo, S.P. wrote:
}  
}  However, his statement "functioning as a backspace" doesn't
}  ring true, because, no such functionality is present (for me) in
}  any terminal with that key, regardless of the $TERM variable.
}  
}  Terminal emulation is a little bit mysterious to me; maybe someone
}  with more expertise can answer the larger question.  I'm just curious
}  whether pushing the {right parenthesis} character on Vance's
}  keyboard actually does backspace, and whether he's on the console,
}  on X, using PuTTY from a Winboxen, etc., and/or what terminal emulator
}  he's actually using, what version he's running, whether his termcap
}  symlink or file is corrupt/missing, etc., etc., blah, blah....
}  
}  Vance?


No, from the console everything is fine.  It is when I use sh within an
xterm or wterm that I have a problem.  Using csh there is no problem.
Pressing the ( key erases the character before the cursor when using sh
within an xterm.

This is 5.3-STABLE.  I found a few references by googling from others 
who have had the same problem and have also had to put a 'stty erase2 ^H'
in .shrc (or whatever).

	-Vance



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