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Yorick Development Environment
Yorick is not a point-and-click program. To use it, you type commands
at a terminal; the commands cause yorick programs to execute. Output
may consist of things printed in the terminal window, or graphics
plotted in separate graphics windows, or files written to disk. You
also need a text editor (not a word processor) in order to prepare and
save more permanent yorick programs. On the MS Windows and MacIntosh
platforms, at least the terminal window and possibly a text editor are
built into the yorick binary. On UNIX platforms, including Linux, you
can use a standard terminal emulator like xterm, but I strongly
recommend running yorick from GNU Emacs.
Emacs can serve as both a powerful terminal emulation program and a
syntax-aware text editor for managing yorick source code. A good port
of GNU Emacs exists for MS Windows. On the
MacIntosh, the BBEdit text editor
is probably the best choice for editing yorick source code.
The yorick.el emacs package is part of the
yorick-1.5 distribution, but it works just as well with earlier
versions of yorick. If you have a yorick binary distribution, it may
already include yorick.el; try typing M-x yorick in an emacs window,
or, if that fails, see if yorick.el is in your Y_SITE directory. The
yorick.el package provides both a special mode for editing yorick
source code, and a very nice terminal emulator where you can run
yorick. Even if you don't like emacs as a text editor, you will
probably find the yorick.el terminal emulator nicer than xterm.
Since one of the primary goals of yorick is cross-platform
portability, we try to keep the look-and-feel of the yorick
development environment as consistent as possible across platforms.
This has proven impossible at the level of the text editor, so the
text editors built into yorick, or used to edit yorick source code,
tend to have little resemblance. However, for the terminal emulators,
we try to provide at least the following functions. Here, the
keystroke RET means the Return or Enter key, and the prefix C- means
holding down the control key. Several of the keys operate slightly
differently when you are at the end of the text in the window (where
you would normally type into a terminal window), as opposed to
elsewhere in the window.
- RET
- on final line: send the command line to yorick
elsewhere: copy the current line after the final prompt
(a form of command recall)
- Up arrow
- at end of text: recall previous command line
elsewhere: usual cursor up function
- Down arrow
- at end of text: recall next command line
elsewhere: usual cursor down function
- Right arrow
- at end of text: recall most recently recalled command line
elsewhere: usual cursor right function
- C-j
- insert a newline (since RET does something else)
- C-u
- kill line back to prompt
- C-k
- kill line forward to end of line
- C-a
- move to beginning of line
- C-o
- kill most recent output from yorick
- C-c
- interrupt yorick
- C-.
- open and position the file and line number mentioned in the
yorick error or help message nearest the cursor
The usual text editing commands work anywhere in the terminal window,
so you can edit not only the current command line, but previous input
to or output from yorick. The command recall mechanism remembers the
line most recently recalled: A sequence of Up, Down, or Right arrow
keystrokes with nothing else intervening moves through the command
history. If the first arrow key in a sequence is the Up arrow, the
most recently sent command line is recalled. However, if the first
arrow key in a sequence is the Right or Down arrow, the sequence
begins with the most recently recalled line or the line after that,
respectively. The point of this is that you can hit Up several times
to get back to an earlier line. After you've edited and sent this
line by hitting RET, you can hit Down to recall the next line in the
earlier sequence, so that the key sequence Down RET Down RET Down RET
sends a whole series of earlier lines. Interactive yorick sessions
benefit greatly from this sort of command recall, since sequences of
yorick commands, perhaps with small changes, are often repeated.
LLNL Disclaimers
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