Sujet : Re: xterm rlwrap sbcl
De : nospam (at) *nospam* needed.invalid (Paul)
Groupes : comp.unix.questionsDate : 12. Dec 2024, 13:20:17
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <vjeke1$24hao$1@dont-email.me>
References : 1 2
User-Agent : Ratcatcher/2.0.0.25 (Windows/20130802)
On Thu, 12/12/2024 1:05 AM, Lawrence D'Oliveiro wrote:
On Wed, 11 Dec 2024 22:22:28 -0300, Salvador Mirzo wrote:
$ echo $TERM
xterm
Same here.
I really am running PuTTY on Windows and logging in to a FreeBSD system.
I am running KDE Konsole on Linux to access a local shell.
Of course, I typed
>
(format t "hello~%")
>
but we end up seeing
>
(f(format t "hello~%")
My terminal window shows:
* (format t "hello~%")
hello
NIL
If I type
>
(write-string "hello")
>
we end up with
>
* (w(write-string "hello")
hello
"hello"
My terminal window shows:
* (write-string "hello")
hello
"hello"
Most likely suspect: Windows is the weakest link.
This is the easiest thing I could wire up as a simulation
for those at home. Since I don't know a thing about LISP,
I can't very well address that part of the problem.
[Picture]
https://i.postimg.cc/9FVtm0S5/putty-ssh-session-overview.gifThe $TERM declaration and the color capability,
don't exactly match in my copy of PuTTY. The distortion
seen by the OP does not look like wrongly emitted
color codes, which could make more of a mess.
PuTTY is not declaring "xterm-256color" as the term type.
[Picture]
https://i.postimg.cc/QMtZRXsc/putty-settings.gif Paul