User`s guide

Table A–1 (Cont.): Basic SL Command-Line Editing Functions
Key Function
Moves the cursor toward the end of a command line. The
PF1
combination moves the cursor to the end of the
command line.
LINE FEED
or
CTRL/J
Deletes the element of command syntax to the left of
the cursor. An element of syntax can be the device
handler name and unit number, file name, file type or
extension, command, any options, and any arguments to
those options.
DELETE
or
<
x
Deletes the character to the left of the cursor. The
PF1 DELETE
(or
<
x
) combination restores that deleted
character or character position.
BACKSPACE
or
CTRL/H
Switches the character at the current cursor position with
the character to the right of the cursor and moves the
cursor to the right. The
PF1 BACKSPACE
combination
switches the character at the current cursor position with
the character to the left of the cursor and moves the cursor
to the left.
CTRL/B
Requires that TT is set to condition NOFB. Same as .
CTRL/F
Requires that TT is set to condition NOFB. Same as .
CTRL/R
or
CTRL/W
Redisplays the current command line. Use
CTRL/R
or
CTRL/W
to refresh the command line on your terminal
screen if the command line becomes garbled or corrupted.
CTRL/U
Deletes all characters from the current cursor position
to the beginning of the command line. The
PF1 CTRL/U
combination restores those deleted characters.
RETURN
Issues the currently displayed command. You can press
RETURN
and issue a command no matter where the
current cursor position is in that command. The
PF1
RETURN
combination truncates the command (deletes all
characters from the cursor position to the end of the
command line) and issues the truncated command.
A.2 Keypad SL Functions
Table A–2 summarizes the Keypad SL functionality that you enable with SET SL
KED, ON command.
A–2 RT–11 Commands Manual