inject the selected line into the tty input buffer
.IP "\fB-m\fP" 10
force the monochrome mode
-.IP "\fB-t <color fg modeline> <color bg modeline> <color fg highlight> <color bg highlight>\fP" 10
-select a color them; each color is a positive number
+.IP "\fB-c <color fg modeline> <color bg modeline> <color fg highlight> <color bg highlight>\fP" 10
+select the display colors for the modeline and the highlighted line
.IP "\fB-o <output filename>\fP" 10
write the selected line into the specified file
.IP "\fB-s <pattern separator>\fP" 10
*
*/
-// Here is how to use it as a super-history-search
+// To use it as a super-history-search:
// ./selector -v -f ${HISTFILE}
// This software is highly Linux-specific, but I would be glad to get
int console_width = getmaxx(stdscr);
int console_height = getmaxy(stdscr);
- int nb_printed_lines = 1;
-
// First, we find a visible line. In priority: The current, or the
// first visible after it, or the first visible before it.
addstr("\n");
+ int nb_printed_lines = 1;
+
// Here new_line is either a line number matching the patterns, or -1
if(new_line >= 0) {
i += 2;
}
- else if(strcmp(argv[i], "-t") == 0) {
+ else if(strcmp(argv[i], "-c") == 0) {
check_opt(argc, argv, i, 4, "<color fg modeline> <color bg modeline> <color fg highlight> <color bg highlight>");
color_fg_modeline = atoi(argv[i+1]);
color_bg_modeline = atoi(argv[i+2]);
<< " [-b]"
<< " [-v]"
<< " [-m]"
- << " [-t <color fg modeline> <color bg modeline> <color fg highlight> <color bg highlight>]"
+ << " [-c <color fg modeline> <color bg modeline> <color fg highlight> <color bg highlight>]"
<< " [-o <output filename>]"
<< " [-s <pattern separator>]"
<< " [-l <max number of lines>]"