That did the trick, thanks heaps again. I think I may have done a
"Use Settings as Default" after having tweaked the Terminal settings
after launching GHCi. I kept thinking it was some kind of Unix shell
startup script thing.
Xavier
On 12/03/2006, at 5:54 AM, Wolfgang Thaller wrote:
First, a classic Mac OS trick: If an application misbehaves,
delete its preferences file (in this case, ~/Library/Preferences/
com.apple.Terminal.plist).
Remmeber: uninstalling my GHCi package is never a solution. ;-)
I played around with Apple's Terminal a bit to find out what
happened, and I've come to the conclusion that I can shift the
blame to Apple:
Apparently, the command that is run when a terminal window is
openened is one of the "settings" that the "Use Settings as
Default" menu item (and the button in the "Terminal Inspector"
window) refers to.
What's more, there seems to be no way to change this setting from
the user interface. The only way I know of apart from deleting the
preferences file is to open Script Editor and run the following
script:
tell application "Terminal" to do script ""
.. which opens a new Terminal window without running a command. You
can then use "Use Settings as Default" to restore everything to
normal.
Cheers,
Wolfgang
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