[bde7714] | 1 | ======================== |
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| 2 | Quick Guide To Using Owl |
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| 3 | ======================== |
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[61d27fb] | 4 | |
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[bde7714] | 5 | ======================= |
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| 6 | Section 1: INTRODUCTION |
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| 7 | ======================= |
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[61d27fb] | 8 | |
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[bde7714] | 9 | Owl is a tty, curses-based instant messaging client. This is a quick |
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| 10 | guide to learning how to use it. Currently it supports only zephyr, |
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| 11 | but other messaging protocols, including AIM and Jabber, are on the |
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| 12 | way. Some major features of owl include: |
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[7d4fbcd] | 13 | |
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[bde7714] | 14 | o) As a tty client it can be run over telnet, rlogin or text ssh |
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| 15 | sessions |
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[7d4fbcd] | 16 | |
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[bde7714] | 17 | o) It uses a perl configuration file for setting preferences and |
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| 18 | formatting messages |
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[7d4fbcd] | 19 | |
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[bde7714] | 20 | o) Emacs style editing of messages |
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[7d4fbcd] | 21 | |
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[bde7714] | 22 | o) It is easy to use and runs without a configfile. |
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[7d4fbcd] | 23 | |
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[bde7714] | 24 | o) Advanced sorting and coloring of messages |
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[7d4fbcd] | 25 | |
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[bde7714] | 26 | ========================== |
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| 27 | Section 2: GETTING STARTED |
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| 28 | ========================== |
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[7d4fbcd] | 29 | |
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| 30 | Owl will run happily without a configfile, so to get started just run |
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[3969e3a] | 31 | the program. Owl will take over the terminal window it is started in, |
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| 32 | so you may wish to have another terminal window available at the same |
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| 33 | time. |
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[bde7714] | 34 | |
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[3969e3a] | 35 | On Athena you can find owl in the ktools locker. To run it, type: |
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[bde7714] | 36 | |
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| 37 | add ktools |
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| 38 | owl |
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| 39 | |
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| 40 | at the Athena% prompt. If you wish to run the latest beta release of |
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[3969e3a] | 41 | owl use: |
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| 42 | |
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| 43 | add ktools |
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| 44 | owl-beta |
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| 45 | |
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| 46 | instead. |
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[7d4fbcd] | 47 | |
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[bde7714] | 48 | The Screen Layout |
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| 49 | ----------------- |
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| 50 | There are three main parts to the owl screen. The large top portion |
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| 51 | of the screen is where zephyrs are displayed. The status bar |
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[3969e3a] | 52 | separates this area from the one below and displays owl status |
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| 53 | information. The space below that is used to type messages and is |
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[bde7714] | 54 | also used by owl to give warnings and information to the user. |
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| 55 | |
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| 56 | On Line Help |
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| 57 | ------------ |
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| 58 | Owl has a full on line help system. Pressing the 'h' key will bring |
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| 59 | up the basic help screen. Further help can be obtained using the help |
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[3969e3a] | 60 | command, described later. |
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[7d4fbcd] | 61 | |
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| 62 | Sending a Zephyr |
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| 63 | ---------------- |
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[88736cb] | 64 | To send a zephyr press the 'z' key. This will start a zwrite command, |
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| 65 | which you can finish by typing the name of the user you wish to send |
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| 66 | to, followed by enter. Begin typing your message. You will notice |
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| 67 | that most emacs-style editing is available. When you are ready to |
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| 68 | send the message type Control-D or a dot ('.') on a line by itself. |
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| 69 | If instead you wish to cancel the message type Control-C. |
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[7d4fbcd] | 70 | |
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[bde7714] | 71 | If you wish to send to a class/instance pair simply supply -c and -i |
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| 72 | arguments to the zwrite command as you normally would. |
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[7d4fbcd] | 73 | |
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| 74 | Manipulating Messages |
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| 75 | --------------------- |
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[3969e3a] | 76 | When there are zephyrs in the message window, one of them will be the |
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| 77 | 'current' message. Owl will indicate which one it is with an arrow |
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| 78 | that looks like this: -> The following keys will move you to different |
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| 79 | messages: |
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[7d4fbcd] | 80 | |
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| 81 | n move to the next non-deleted message |
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| 82 | p move to the previous non-deleted message |
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| 83 | C-n , down move to the next message |
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| 84 | C-p , up move to the previous message |
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| 85 | < move to the first message |
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| 86 | > move to the last message |
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[bde7714] | 87 | C-v page down |
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| 88 | M-v page up |
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[7d4fbcd] | 89 | right scroll the screen to the right |
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| 90 | left scroll the screen to the left |
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| 91 | P move to the next personal message |
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| 92 | M-P move to the previous personal message |
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| 93 | |
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| 94 | When you are ready to delete a message you can mark it for deletion |
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| 95 | and a 'D' will appear to the left of the message. Messages will not |
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[bde7714] | 96 | actually be removed until you perform an expunge. The following keys |
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| 97 | are used to delete, undelete and expunge messages: |
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[7d4fbcd] | 98 | |
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| 99 | d mark a message for deletion |
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| 100 | u unmark a message for deletion |
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| 101 | x expunge deleted messages |
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[bde7714] | 102 | T mark all 'trash' messages for deletion |
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| 103 | M-D mark all messages in the view for deletion |
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| 104 | M-u unmark all messages in the view for deletion |
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[7d4fbcd] | 105 | |
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| 106 | If you would like to respond to a zephyr sent to you there is a reply |
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[3969e3a] | 107 | shortcut: |
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[7d4fbcd] | 108 | |
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[bde7714] | 109 | r Reply. Personal zephyrs get a personal reply, |
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| 110 | class/instance zephyrs get a public reply. |
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| 111 | R Reply to sender. Always replies personally |
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| 112 | to the user. |
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| 113 | M-r Reply but allow editing of the command line. |
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| 114 | M-R Reply to sender but allow editing of the |
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| 115 | command line. |
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[7d4fbcd] | 116 | |
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[bde7714] | 117 | In the event that the current message is too large to fit on the |
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| 118 | screen, you can scroll within the message using the following keys: |
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[7d4fbcd] | 119 | |
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| 120 | SPACE page down |
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| 121 | b page up |
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| 122 | RETURN line down |
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| 123 | BACKSPACE line up |
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| 124 | |
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[bde7714] | 125 | The message pointer will change to indicate that the message is not |
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| 126 | starting at the first line. |
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[7d4fbcd] | 127 | |
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| 128 | Two other keys that relate to the current message: |
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| 129 | |
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| 130 | i print detailed information about the message |
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| 131 | w instruct netscape to visit a URL in the message |
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| 132 | |
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| 133 | Other Functions |
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| 134 | ---------------- |
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[3969e3a] | 135 | Some other functions that can be performed with a single keystroke: |
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[7d4fbcd] | 136 | |
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[bde7714] | 137 | A toggle zaway on or off |
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[7d4fbcd] | 138 | C-l refresh and resize the screen |
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| 139 | C-z suspend |
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| 140 | |
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| 141 | Command Mode |
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| 142 | ------------ |
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[3969e3a] | 143 | Owl has a command mode from which you can enter more detailed commands |
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| 144 | for owl to process. To enter command mode press the colon (':') key: |
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[7d4fbcd] | 145 | |
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| 146 | : begin command mode |
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| 147 | |
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| 148 | Owl will give you a command prompt and you can begin typing your |
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| 149 | command. Type Enter to execute the command, Control-C to cancel. |
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[bde7714] | 150 | There are many commands. The basic commands are listed on the basic |
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| 151 | help screen (by pressing 'h'). If you'd like a list of all commands |
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[3969e3a] | 152 | you can use the command: |
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| 153 | |
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| 154 | show commands |
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[bde7714] | 155 | |
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[3969e3a] | 156 | And for detailed information on the syntax and use of a command you |
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| 157 | can use: |
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| 158 | |
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| 159 | help <command> |
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| 160 | |
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| 161 | For example "help zwrite" will display all the options available when |
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| 162 | using the zwrite command. |
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[7d4fbcd] | 163 | |
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| 164 | Variables |
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| 165 | --------- |
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[bde7714] | 166 | Owl has a number of internal variables that can be used to change the |
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| 167 | behavior the program. The 'print' command will let you view the value |
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| 168 | of a variable and the 'set' commmand will let you set the value of a |
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| 169 | variable. For example: |
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| 170 | |
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| 171 | set personalbell on |
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| 172 | |
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| 173 | will set the value of the variable 'personalbell' to on. The command: |
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| 174 | |
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| 175 | print personalbell |
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| 176 | |
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| 177 | will show you the current value. The 'print' command with no |
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[3969e3a] | 178 | arguments: |
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| 179 | |
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| 180 | print |
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| 181 | |
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| 182 | Owl will show you the value of all variables. You can also use |
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| 183 | |
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| 184 | show variables |
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| 185 | show variable <variable> |
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| 186 | |
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| 187 | To display further information on owl variables. |
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| 188 | |
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| 189 | Views |
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| 190 | ----- |
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| 191 | Owl always displays a current "view" of messages. The view describes |
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| 192 | which set of messages should be included on the display. The default |
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| 193 | view is called "all" and includes every message. However, you can |
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| 194 | narrow the view to a particular set of zephyrs: |
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| 195 | |
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| 196 | M-n Narrow view to the selected conversation |
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| 197 | M-N Narrow view to selected conversation by instance |
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| 198 | V Return to the home view (the 'all' view) |
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| 199 | X Expunge messages and return to home view |
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| 200 | |
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| 201 | If you press M-n while the pointer is on a personal zephyr, the view |
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| 202 | will be narrowed to the conversation with that user only. If used on |
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| 203 | a class zephyr the conversation will be narrowed to that class, with |
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| 204 | a few special exceptions like class MESSAGE. |
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| 205 | |
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| 206 | There are also some owl commands related to views: |
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| 207 | |
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| 208 | viewclass <class> Narrow the view to the named class |
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| 209 | viewuser <user> Narrow the view to the named user |
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| 210 | |
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| 211 | More information on views and how they work is included in the section |
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| 212 | on "FILTERS AND COLORS". |
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| 213 | |
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| 214 | ========================================== |
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| 215 | Section 3: KEYBINDINGS AND COMMAND ALIASES |
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| 216 | ========================================== |
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[bde7714] | 217 | |
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| 218 | |
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| 219 | ============================= |
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[3969e3a] | 220 | Section 4: FILTERS AND COLORS |
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[bde7714] | 221 | ============================= |
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| 222 | |
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| 223 | |
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| 224 | |
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| 225 | ========================== |
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[3969e3a] | 226 | Section 5: THE CONFIG FILE |
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[bde7714] | 227 | ========================== |
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[7d4fbcd] | 228 | |
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| 229 | *** WARNING: This interface may change substantially in the near future *** |
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| 230 | |
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| 231 | This file is interpreted by the perl interpreter. |
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| 232 | If you wish to execute an owl command use the |
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| 233 | function owl::command(). i.e. |
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| 234 | |
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| 235 | owl::command("set zsigproc \"/mit/kretch/bin/getzsig foo\""); |
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| 236 | |
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| 237 | will set the owl variable zsigproc. Note that commands will currently |
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| 238 | be executed in order after the called configuration subroutine exits. |
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| 239 | |
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| 240 | Subroutines created with the names below will be executed at the |
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| 241 | specified times: |
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| 242 | |
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| 243 | subroutine name properties |
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| 244 | --------------- ---------- |
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| 245 | owl::startup() run when owl first starts |
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| 246 | owl::shutdown() run when owl exits |
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| 247 | owl::format_msg() run when a new message arrives, the return |
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| 248 | value is used to display the message on the |
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| 249 | screen |
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| 250 | owl::receive_msg() run when a message is received, and after |
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| 251 | it has been added to the message list |
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| 252 | |
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| 253 | |
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| 254 | The following variables will be set each time a message is recevied: |
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| 255 | |
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| 256 | $owl::class, $owl::instance, $owl::recipient, |
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| 257 | $owl::sender, $owl::opcode, $owl::zsig, |
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| 258 | $owl::msg, $owl::time, $owl::host, @owl::fields, $owl::id |
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| 259 | |
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| 260 | The "appendtosepbar" variable may be set in owl::format_msg() |
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| 261 | to set text to be appended to sepbar that separates the received |
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| 262 | message list from the edit window. |
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| 263 | |
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| 264 | |
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[bde7714] | 265 | ============================== |
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[3969e3a] | 266 | Section 6: FURTHER INFORMATION |
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[bde7714] | 267 | ============================== |
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| 268 | |
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| 269 | $Id$ |
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