Travis,
it may be so that I could do this, but I have no desire to do this.
I pay two companies good money to maintain the stability of my services.
the last thing I wish to do is risk damaging that functionality by
tampering with the foundational file of the browser I use countless times
a day.
That is me, I respect those who are programmers at heart, but I am not one
of them.
Besides, Rudy illustrated that I will not gain my single goal by taking
these steps.
Certainly, I might pay a programmer good money to build a current Lynx for
DOS package, allowing me to run Lynx from my desktop, and giving me a
personal
lynx.cft that way.
Otherwise, I prefer leaving things as they are here.
Kare
On Sun, 14 Nov 2021, Travis Siegel wrote:
You can easily create your own lynx.cfg file, put it in your home directory,
then start lynx with a -cfg=<filename> command line parameter, and poof, you
have full control over your lynx configuration, no need to depend on the
system wide one at all.
On 11/14/2021 2:29 PM, Karen Lewellen wrote:
Russell,
Because my access to lynx is tied to a service, I do not edit their
lynx.cfg files.
In fact, I do not even know where they are kept.
Karen
On Sun, 14 Nov 2021, russellb...@gmail.com wrote:
>
> ????????Quoth Karen Lewellen: 'the shellworld setup for lynx, there is
> an associated editor.?? One that allows me, at least if the command
> "use control x e for editor" is spoken by lynx when I am on a field.
> If it is a single line, I cannot employ my editor.?? Meaning I cannot
> use control r and bring a file into the edit line.?? I would have to
> type it manually.'
> ????????You can edit $HOME/.lynxrc directly
>
> ????????useragent=Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 5.1; rv:1.9.2)
> Gecko/20100115 Firefox/3.6 l_y_n_x
>
> is mine.
>
> russell bell
>
>
>