Hello, Bash has a nice feature to walkthrough the lines of the command history by arrow keys. But when a command is executed and leaves arbitrary traces on stdout I am forced to take the mouse to copy lines of interest if I want to use it again.
Im not talking about directing the output of a command to the next command. I know about piping. Now it would be nice just to log the last lines on stdout and walk it through line by line ready to be put to the clipboard. Lets say there is a lot of debug info or something arbitrary on screen. But you want to pick a filename that you find on one of the lines. Now you would have to copy paste it by mouse so that you can use it like : vim /usr/bin/myscript.sh It would be so cool just to [shift] + [arrow up] to go to the line of interest. [arrow right] to copy it to the clipboard and return to the normal console again. then I can decide what to do with it next. This would be useful above all in situations where the output is already produced and the cant just reproduce it or where it is too hard to create an expression just to rgab exactely what you want. Thanks a lot Hrazel -- View this message in context: http://gnu-bash.2382.n7.nabble.com/Feature-walkthrough-lines-of-stdout-tp15616.html Sent from the Gnu - Bash mailing list archive at Nabble.com.