Skip site navigation (1)Skip section navigation (2)

FreeBSD Manual Pages

  
 
  

home | help
DTE(1)			    General Commands Manual			DTE(1)

NAME
       dte - A small, configurable text	editor

SYNOPSIS
       dte [-HR] [-c command] [-t ctag]	[-r rcfile] [[+line[,column]] file]...
       dte [-h|-B|-K|-V|-b rcname|-s file]

OPTIONS
       -c command
	      Run  command,  after  reading  the  rc file and opening any file
	      arguments. See dterc(5) for available commands.

       -t ctag
	      Jump to source location of ctag. Requires	tags file generated by
	      ctags(1).

       -r rcfile
	      Read configuration from rcfile instead of	~/.dte/rc.

       -s file
	      Load  file  as  a	 dte-syntax(5)	file  and  exit.  Any	errors
	      encountered  are printed to stderr(3) and	the exit status	is set
	      appropriately.

       -b rcname
	      Dump the contents	of the built-in	rc or syntax file named	rcname
	      and exit.

       -B     Print a list of all built-in config names	that can be used  with
	      the -b option and	exit.

       -H     Don't  load  history  files  at startup or save history files on
	      exit (see	FILES section below). History features	will  work  as
	      usual  but  will	be  in-memory  only  and  not persisted	to the
	      filesystem.

       -R     Don't read the rc	file.

       -K     Start in a special mode that continuously	reads input and	prints
	      the symbolic name	of each	pressed	key.

       -h     Display the help summary and exit.

       -V     Display the version number and exit.

       +line,column arguments can  be  used  to	 specify  the  initial	cursor
       position	 of the	next file argument. These can also be specified	in the
       format +line:column.

KEY BINDINGS
       There are 3 editor modes, each having a different set of	key  bindings.
       Bindings	 can  be  customized  using the	bind command (see dterc(5)) or
       displayed using the show	bind command.

       The key bindings	listed below are in the	same format as accepted	by the
       bind command.  In  particular,  key  combinations  are  represented  as
       follows:

        M-x is	Alt+x
        C-v (or ^V) is	Ctrl+v
        S-left	is Shift+left
        C-M-S-left is Ctrl+Alt+Shift+left

   Normal Mode
       Normal mode is the mode the editor starts in. Pressing basic keys (i.e.
       without	modifiers) simply inserts text into the	buffer.	There are also
       various key combinations	bound by default:

       S-up, S-down, S-left, S-right
	      Move cursor and select characters

       C-S-left, C-S-right
	      Move cursor and select whole words

       C-S-up, C-S-down
	      Move cursor and select whole lines

       C-c    Copy current line	or selection

       C-x    Cut current line or selection

       C-v    Paste

       C-z    Undo

       C-y    Redo

       M-x    Enter command mode

       C-f    Enter search mode

       F3     Search next

       F4     Search previous

       C-t    Open new buffer

       M-1, M-2	... M-9
	      Switch to	buffer 1 (or 2,	3, 4, etc.)

       C-w    Close current buffer

       C-s    Save

       C-q    Quit

   Command Mode
       Command mode allows running various editor commands  using  a  language
       similar	to  Unix  shell.  The  next  and  prev	commands switch	to the
       next/previous  file.  The  open,	 save  and  quit  commands  should  be
       self-explanatory. For a full list of available commands,	see dterc(5).

       The key bindings	for command mode are:

       up, down
	      Browse previous command history.

       tab    Auto-complete current command or argument

       C-a, home
	      Go to beginning of command line

       C-b, left
	      Move left

       C-c, C-g, Esc
	      Exit command mode

       C-d, delete
	      Delete

       C-e, end
	      Go to end	of command line

       C-f, right
	      Move right

       C-k, M-delete
	      Delete to	end of command line

       C-u    Delete to	beginning of command line

       C-w, M-C-? (Alt+Backspace)
	      Erase word

   Search Mode
       Search  mode  allows  entering  a  regular  expression to search	in the
       current buffer.

       The key bindings	for search mode	are mostly  the	 same  as  in  command
       mode, plus these	additional keys:

       M-c    Toggle case sensitive search option.

       M-r    Reverse search direction.

       Enter  Perform regex search.

       M-Enter
	      Perform plain-text search	(escapes the regex).

ENVIRONMENT
       The following environment variables are inspected at startup:

       DTE_HOME
	      User configuration directory. Defaults to	$HOME/.dte if not set.

       HOME   User  home  directory.  Used  when expanding ~/ in filenames and
	      also to determine	the default value for DTE_HOME.

       XDG_RUNTIME_DIR
	      Directory	used to	store lock files. Defaults to $DTE_HOME	if not
	      set.

       TERM   Terminal	identifier.   Used   to	  determine   which   terminal
	      capabilities are supported.

       COLORTERM
	      Enables  support for 24-bit terminal colors, if set to truecolor
	      or 24bit.

       The following environment variables  affect  various  library  routines
       used by dte and are inspected on	every use:

       PATH   Colon-delimited list of directory	prefixes, used by execvp(3) to
	      find executables.

       The following environment variables are set by dte:

       DTE_VERSION
	      Editor  version  string.	This  is  set  at  startup to the same
	      version string as	shown by dte -V.

       PWD    Absolute	path  of  the  current	working	 directory;  set  when
	      changing directory with the cd command.

       OLDPWD Absolute	path  of  the  previous	 working  directory;  set when
	      changing	directory  with	 the  cd  command  and	also  used  to
	      determine	which directory	cd - switches to.

FILES
       $DTE_HOME/rc
	      User  configuration  file.  See  dterc(5)	 for  a	 full  list of
	      available	commands and options or	run "dte -b  rc"  to  see  the
	      built-in,	default	config.

       $DTE_HOME/syntax/*
	      User  syntax  files.  These  override the	syntax files that come
	      with the program.	See dte-syntax(5) for more information or  run
	      "dte -b syntax/dte" for a	basic example.

       $DTE_HOME/file-history
	      History  of  edited files	and cursor positions. Used only	if the
	      file-history option is enabled.

       $DTE_HOME/command-history
	      History of dterc(5) commands used	while in command mode.

       $DTE_HOME/search-history
	      History of search	patterns used while in search mode.

       $XDG_RUNTIME_DIR/dte-locks
	      List of files currently open in a	dte process (if	the lock-files
	      option is	enabled).

EXIT STATUS
       0      Program exited normally.

       64     Command-line usage error (see "synopsis" above).

       65     Input data error (e.g. data specified by the -s option).

       71     Operating	system error.

       74     Input/output error.

       78     Configuration error.

       Note: the above exit codes are set by the editor	itself,	with values in
       accordance with sysexits(3). The	exit code may also be set to values in
       the range 0..125	by the quit command.

EXAMPLES
       Open /etc/passwd	with cursor on line 3, column 8:

	      dte +3:8 /etc/passwd

       Run several commands at startup:

	      dte -c 'set filetype sh; insert -m "#!/bin/sh\n"'

       Read a buffer from standard input:

	      echo 'Hello, World!' | dte

       Interactively filter a shell pipeline:

	      echo 'A B	C D E F' | tr '	' '\n' | dte | tac

NOTES
       It's advised to NOT  run	 shell	pipelines  with	 multiple  interactive
       programs	that try to control the	terminal. For example:

	      echo "Don't run this example!!" |	dte | less

       A  shell	 will run these	processes in parallel and both dte(1) and less
       will then try to	control	the terminal at	the same time; clobbering  the
       input/output of both.

SEE ALSO
       dterc(5), dte-syntax(5)

AUTHORS
       Craig Barnes
       Timo Hirvonen

				 October 2022				DTE(1)

Want to link to this manual page? Use this URL:
<https://man.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=dte&sektion=1&manpath=FreeBSD+Ports+15.0.quarterly>

home | help