> In usual applications - yes. In terminal - no.
> In terminal Ctrl+C will terminate the process, You are doing there.
> Copy is Ctrl+Shift+C, Paste is Ctrl+Shift+V or Shift+Insert.
> I just tried and it works this way at least on Lucid.
>
> Viesturs
Hm, using X11 "copy" is marking the text with y
2011/12/18 Peter Blodow :
> Viesturs Lācis schrieb:
> /snip/
>>> It's called "pastebin" because you paste text there using the
>>> copy/paste method.
>>> Select the text in the terminal window (with the mouse) and press Copy
>>> (Ctrl-C)
>>>
>>
>> Ctrl+Shift+C is "copy" in terminal :))
>>
>> Viestu
Viesturs Lācis schrieb:
/snip/
>> It's called "pastebin" because you paste text there using the
>> copy/paste method.
>> Select the text in the terminal window (with the mouse) and press Copy
>> (Ctrl-C)
>>
>
> Ctrl+Shift+C is "copy" in terminal :))
>
> Viesturs
>
No, Control-C is copy, cor
2011/12/18 andy pugh :
> On 18 December 2011 04:36, alice wrote:
>> i go to the terminal to load rtapi as docs say cd emc2 halrun, then it gives
>> error consistig of rtapi kernel not loaded.
>
> You don't need to cd to emc2, and "halrun" needs to be a command on a
> line by itself.
>
>>i would i
On 18 December 2011 04:36, alice wrote:
> i go to the terminal to load rtapi as docs say cd emc2 halrun, then it gives
> error consistig of rtapi kernel not loaded.
You don't need to cd to emc2, and "halrun" needs to be a command on a
line by itself.
>i would include the file but ive not yet fi
i go to the terminal to load rtapi as docs say cd emc2 halrun, then it gives
error consistig of rtapi kernel not loaded. i would include the file but ive
not yet figured out how to save it to send it to the paste bin this install
disk was burned dec 16 thanx jeremy
--