prompter − prompting editor front−end prompter [−erase chr] [−kill chr] [−prepend] [−noprepend] [−rapid] [−norapid] file [−help]
DESCRIPTION
This program is normally not invoked directly by users but takes the place of an editor and acts as an editor front−end. It operates on an 822−style message draft skeleton specified by file, normally provided by comp, dist, forw, or repl.
Prompter is an editor which allows rapid composition of messages. It is particularly useful to network and low−speed (less than 2400 baud) users of MH. It is an MH program in that it can have its own profile entry with switches, but it is not invoked directly by the user. The commands comp, dist, forw, and repl invoke prompter as an editor, either when invoked with ‘−editor prompter’, or by the profile entry “Editor: prompter”, or when given the command ‘edit prompter’ at “What now?” level.
For each empty component prompter finds in the draft, the user is prompted for a response; A <RETURN> will cause the whole component to be left out. Otherwise, a ‘\’ preceding a <RETURN> will continue the response on the next line, allowing for multiline components. Continuation lines must begin with a space or tab.
Each non−empty component is copied to the draft and displayed on the terminal.
The start of the message body is denoted by a blank line or a line of dashes. If the body is non−empty, the prompt, which isn’t written to the file, is
“--------Enter additional text”,
or (if ‘−prepend’ was given)
“--------Enter initial text”.
Message−body typing is terminated with an end−of−file (usually CTRL−D). At this point control is returned to the calling program, where the user is asked “What now?”. See whatnow for the valid options to this query.
By using the ‘−prepend’ switch, the user can add type−in to the beginning of the message body and have the rest of the body follow. This is useful for the forw command.
By using the ‘−rapid’ switch, if the draft already contains text in the message−body, it is not displayed on the user’s terminal. This is useful for low−speed terminals.
The line editing characters for kill and erase may be specified by the user via the arguments ‘−kill chr’ and ‘−erase chr’, where chr may be a character; or ‘\nnn’, where “nnn” is the octal value for the character.
An interrupt (usually CTRL−C) during component typing will abort prompter and the MH command that invoked it. An interrupt during message−body typing is equivalent to CTRL−D, for historical reasons. This means that prompter should finish up and exit.
The first non−flag argument to prompter is taken as the name of the draft file, and subsequent non−flag arguments are ignored. ^$HOME/.mh_profile~^The user profile ^/tmp/prompter∗~^Temporary copy of message prompter−next: To name the editor to be used on exit from prompter ^Msg−Protect:~^To set mode when creating a new draft comp(1), dist(1), forw(1), repl(1), whatnow(1) ‘−prepend’ ‘−norapid’ None Prompter uses stdio (3), so it will lose if you edit files with nulls in them.
NEWS-OSRelease 3.3