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       This  manual  page  is part of the POSIX Programmer's Manual.  The Linux implementation of this interface
       may differ (consult the corresponding Linux manual page for details of Linux behavior), or the  interface
       may not be implemented on Linux.

NAME

       ex — text editor

SYNOPSIS

       ex [−rR] [−s|−v] [−c command] [−t tagstring] [−w size] [file...]

DESCRIPTION

       The ex utility is a line-oriented text editor. There are two other modes of the editor—open and visual—in
       which screen-oriented editing is available. This is described more  fully  by  the  ex  open  and  visual
       commands and in vi.

       If an operand is '−', the results are unspecified.

       This  section  uses the term edit buffer to describe the current working text. No specific implementation
       is implied by this term. All editing changes are performed on the edit buffer, and no changes to it shall
       affect any file until an editor command writes the file.

       Certain  terminals do not have all the capabilities necessary to support the complete ex definition, such
       as the full-screen editing commands (visual mode or open mode).  When these commands cannot be  supported
       on such terminals, this condition shall not produce an error message such as ``not an editor command'' or
       report a syntax error. The implementation may either accept the  commands  and  produce  results  on  the
       screen  that  are  the  result  of  an  unsuccessful  attempt  to meet the requirements of this volume of
       POSIX.1‐2008 or report an error describing the terminal-related deficiency.

OPTIONS

       The ex utility shall conform to the Base Definitions volume of POSIX.1‐2008, Section 12.2, Utility Syntax
       Guidelines,  except  for  the  unspecified  usage  of  '−',  and  that '+' may be recognized as an option
       delimiter as well as '−'.

       The following options shall be supported:

       −c command
                 Specify an initial command to be executed in the first edit buffer loaded from an existing file
                 (see  the  EXTENDED  DESCRIPTION  section).   Implementations may support more than a single −c
                 option. In such implementations,  the  specified  commands  shall  be  executed  in  the  order
                 specified on the command line.

       −r        Recover  the  named  files  (see the EXTENDED DESCRIPTION section).  Recovery information for a
                 file shall be saved during an  editor  or  system  crash  (for  example,  when  the  editor  is
                 terminated by a signal which the editor can catch), or after the use of an ex preserve command.

                 A  crash  in  this  context  is  an  unexpected  failure of the system or utility that requires
                 restarting the failed system or utility. A system crash implies that any utilities  running  at
                 the  time  also  crash.  In the case of an editor or system crash, the number of changes to the
                 edit buffer (since the most recent preserve command) that will be recovered is unspecified.

                 If no file operands are given and the −t option is not specified, all other options, the EXINIT
                 variable,  and  any  .exrc files shall be ignored; a list of all recoverable files available to
                 the invoking user shall be written, and the editor shall exit normally without further action.

       −R        Set readonly edit option.

       −s        Prepare ex for batch use by taking the following actions:

                  *  Suppress writing prompts and informational (but not diagnostic) messages.

                  *  Ignore the value of TERM and any  implementation  default  terminal  type  and  assume  the
                     terminal is a type incapable of supporting open or visual modes; see the visual command and
                     the description of vi.

                  *  Suppress the use of the EXINIT environment variable and the reading of any .exrc file;  see
                     the EXTENDED DESCRIPTION section.

                  *  Suppress autoindentation, ignoring the value of the autoindent edit option.

       −t tagstring
                 Edit  the  file containing the specified tagstring; see ctags.  The tags feature represented by
                 −t tagstring and the tag command is optional. It shall be provided  on  any  system  that  also
                 provides  a  conforming  implementation  of  ctags; otherwise, the use of −t produces undefined
                 results. On any system, it shall be an error to specify more than a single −t option.

       −v        Begin in visual mode (see vi).

       −w size   Set the value of the window editor option to size.

OPERANDS

       The following operand shall be supported:

       file      A pathname of a file to be edited.

STDIN

       The standard input consists of a series of  commands  and  input  text,  as  described  in  the  EXTENDED
       DESCRIPTION section. The implementation may limit each line of standard input to a length of {LINE_MAX}.

       If the standard input is not a terminal device, it shall be as if the −s option had been specified.

       If  a  read  from  the standard input returns an error, or if the editor detects an end-of-file condition
       from the standard input, it shall be equivalent to a SIGHUP asynchronous event.

INPUT FILES

       Input files shall be text files or files that would be text files except for an incomplete last line that
       is  not  longer  than  {LINE_MAX}−1  bytes  in  length  and  contains  no NUL characters. By default, any
       incomplete last line shall be treated as if it had a trailing <newline>.  The editing of other  forms  of
       files may optionally be allowed by ex implementations.

       The  .exrc  files  and  source  files  shall  be  text  files consisting of ex commands; see the EXTENDED
       DESCRIPTION section.

       By default, the editor shall read lines from the files to be edited without  interpreting  any  of  those
       lines as any form of editor command.

ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES

       The following environment variables shall affect the execution of ex:

       COLUMNS   Override  the  system-selected  horizontal  screen  size.  See  the  Base Definitions volume of
                 POSIX.1‐2008, Chapter 8, Environment Variables for valid values and results when it is unset or
                 null.

       EXINIT    Determine  a  list  of  ex  commands  that  are  executed  on editor start-up. See the EXTENDED
                 DESCRIPTION section for more details of the initialization phase.

       HOME      Determine a pathname of a directory that shall be searched for an editor  start-up  file  named
                 .exrc; see the EXTENDED DESCRIPTION section.

       LANG      Provide a default value for the internationalization variables that are unset or null. (See the
                 Base Definitions volume of POSIX.1‐2008, Section 8.2, Internationalization  Variables  for  the
                 precedence   of   internationalization  variables  used  to  determine  the  values  of  locale
                 categories.)

       LC_ALL    If set to a non-empty string value, override the values of all the  other  internationalization
                 variables.

       LC_COLLATE
                 Determine  the  locale  for  the  behavior  of ranges, equivalence classes, and multi-character
                 collating elements within regular expressions.

       LC_CTYPE  Determine the locale for the interpretation of sequences of bytes of text  data  as  characters
                 (for  example,  single-byte  as opposed to multi-byte characters in arguments and input files),
                 the behavior of character classes within regular expressions, the classification of  characters
                 as  uppercase  or  lowercase letters, the case conversion of letters, and the detection of word
                 boundaries.

       LC_MESSAGES
                 Determine the locale that should be used to  affect  the  format  and  contents  of  diagnostic
                 messages written to standard error.

       LINES     Override  the  system-selected vertical screen size, used as the number of lines in a screenful
                 and the vertical screen size in visual mode.  See the Base Definitions volume of  POSIX.1‐2008,
                 Chapter 8, Environment Variables for valid values and results when it is unset or null.

       NLSPATH   Determine the location of message catalogs for the processing of LC_MESSAGES.

       PATH      Determine  the  search path for the shell command specified in the ex editor commands !, shell,
                 read, and write, and the open and visual mode command !; see the description of command  search
                 and execution in Section 2.9.1.1, Command Search and Execution.

       SHELL     Determine the preferred command line interpreter for use as the default value of the shell edit
                 option.

       TERM      Determine the name of the terminal type. If this variable is  unset  or  null,  an  unspecified
                 default terminal type shall be used.

ASYNCHRONOUS EVENTS

       The  following  term  is  used  in  this and following sections to specify command and asynchronous event
       actions:

       complete write
                 A complete write is a write of the entire contents of the edit buffer to a file of a type other
                 than  a  terminal  device, or the saving of the edit buffer caused by the user executing the ex
                 preserve command. Writing the contents of the edit buffer to a  temporary  file  that  will  be
                 removed when the editor exits shall not be considered a complete write.

       The following actions shall be taken upon receipt of signals:

       SIGINT    If  the  standard  input  is  not  a  terminal device, ex shall not write the file or return to
                 command or text input mode, and shall exit with a non-zero exit status.

                 Otherwise, if executing an open or visual text input mode command,  ex  in  receipt  of  SIGINT
                 shall behave identically to its receipt of the <ESC> character.

                 Otherwise:

                  1. If  executing  an  ex  text  input  mode command, all input lines that have been completely
                     entered shall be resolved into the edit buffer, and any partially  entered  line  shall  be
                     discarded.

                  2. If  there  is  a  currently executing command, it shall be aborted and a message displayed.
                     Unless otherwise specified by the ex or vi command descriptions, it is unspecified  whether
                     any  lines  modified by the executing command appear modified, or as they were before being
                     modified by the executing command, in the buffer.

                     If the currently executing command was a motion command, its associated  command  shall  be
                     discarded.

                  3. If in open or visual command mode, the terminal shall be alerted.

                  4. The editor shall then return to command mode.

       SIGCONT   The screen shall be refreshed if in open or visual mode.

       SIGHUP    If  the  edit  buffer has been modified since the last complete write, ex shall attempt to save
                 the edit buffer so that it can be recovered later  using  the  −r  option  or  the  ex  recover
                 command. The editor shall not write the file or return to command or text input mode, and shall
                 terminate with a non-zero exit status.

       SIGTERM   Refer to SIGHUP.

       The action taken for all other signals is unspecified.

STDOUT

       The standard output shall be used only for writing prompts to the user, for informational  messages,  and
       for writing lines from the file.

STDERR

       The standard error shall be used only for diagnostic messages.

OUTPUT FILES

       The output from ex shall be text files.

EXTENDED DESCRIPTION

       Only  the  ex mode of the editor is described in this section. See vi for additional editing capabilities
       available in ex.

       When an error occurs, ex shall write a message. If the terminal supports a standout mode (such as inverse
       video),  the message shall be written in standout mode. If the terminal does not support a standout mode,
       and the edit option errorbells is set, an alert action shall precede the error message.

       By default, ex shall start in command mode, which shall be indicated  by  a  :  prompt;  see  the  prompt
       command.  Text input mode can be entered by the append, insert, or change commands; it can be exited (and
       command mode re-entered) by typing a <period> ('.')  alone at the beginning of a line.

   Initialization in ex and vi
       The following symbols are used in this and following sections to specify locations in the edit buffer:

       alternate and current pathnames
             Two pathnames, named current and alternate, are maintained by the editor. Any ex commands that take
             filenames as arguments shall set them as follows:

              1. If  a  file  argument  is  specified  to  the ex edit, ex, or recover commands, or if an ex tag
                 command replaces the contents of the edit buffer.

                  a. If the command replaces the contents of the edit buffer, the current pathname shall be  set
                     to  the file argument or the file indicated by the tag, and the alternate pathname shall be
                     set to the previous value of the current pathname.

                  b. Otherwise, the alternate pathname shall be set to the file argument.

              2. If a file argument is specified to the ex next command:

                  a. If the command replaces the contents of the edit buffer, the current pathname shall be  set
                     to  the  first file argument, and the alternate pathname shall be set to the previous value
                     of the current pathname.

              3. If a file argument is specified to the ex file command, the current pathname shall  be  set  to
                 the file argument, and the alternate pathname shall be set to the previous value of the current
                 pathname.

              4. If a file argument is specified to the ex read and write commands (that  is,  when  reading  or
                 writing  a  file, and not to the program named by the shell edit option), or a file argument is
                 specified to the ex xit command:

                  a. If the current pathname has no value, the  current  pathname  shall  be  set  to  the  file
                     argument.

                  b. Otherwise, the alternate pathname shall be set to the file argument.

             If  the  alternate  pathname  is set to the previous value of the current pathname when the current
             pathname had no previous value, then the alternate pathname shall have no value as a result.

       current line
             The line of the edit buffer referenced by  the  cursor.  Each  command  description  specifies  the
             current  line after the command has been executed, as the current line value.  When the edit buffer
             contains no lines, the current line shall be zero; see Addressing in ex.

       current column
             The current display line column occupied by the cursor. (The columns shall be numbered beginning at
             1.)  Each  command description specifies the current column after the command has been executed, as
             the current column value. This column is an ideal column that is remembered over  the  lifetime  of
             the  editor.  The  actual display line column upon which the cursor rests may be different from the
             current column; see the cursor positioning discussion in Command Descriptions in vi.

       set to non-<blank>
             A description for a current column value, meaning that the current column shall be set to the  last
             display  line  column  on  which is displayed any part of the first non-<blank> of the line. If the
             line has no non-<blank> non-<newline> characters, the current column  shall  be  set  to  the  last
             display line column on which is displayed any part of the last non-<newline> character in the line.
             If the line is empty, the current column shall be set to column position 1.

       The length of lines in the edit buffer may be limited to {LINE_MAX} bytes. In open and visual  mode,  the
       length  of  lines  in  the  edit  buffer  may be limited to the number of characters that will fit in the
       display. If either limit is exceeded during editing, an error message shall be written. If  either  limit
       is  exceeded by a line read in from a file, an error message shall be written and the edit session may be
       terminated.

       If the editor stops running due to any reason other than a user command, and the  edit  buffer  has  been
       modified  since  the  last  complete write, it shall be equivalent to a SIGHUP asynchronous event. If the
       system crashes, it shall be equivalent to a SIGHUP asynchronous event.

       During initialization (before the first file is copied into the edit buffer or any user commands from the
       terminal are processed) the following shall occur:

        1. If the environment variable EXINIT is set, the editor shall execute the ex commands contained in that
           variable.

        2. If the EXINIT variable is not set, and all of the following are true:

            a. The HOME environment variable is not null and not empty.

            b. The file .exrc in the directory referred to by the HOME environment variable:

                i.  Exists

               ii.  Is owned by the same user ID as the  real  user  ID  of  the  process  or  the  process  has
                    appropriate privileges

               iii. Is not writable by anyone other than the owner

           the editor shall execute the ex commands contained in that file.

        3. If and only if all of the following are true:

            a. The current directory is not referred to by the HOME environment variable.

            b. A  command  in  the  EXINIT  environment variable or a command in the .exrc file in the directory
               referred to by the HOME environment variable sets the editor option exrc.

            c. The .exrc file in the current directory:

                i.  Exists

               ii.  Is owned by the same user ID as the real user ID of the process, or  by  one  of  a  set  of
                    implementation-defined user IDs

               iii. Is not writable by anyone other than the owner

           the editor shall attempt to execute the ex commands contained in that file.

       Lines  in any .exrc file that are blank lines shall be ignored. If any .exrc file exists, but is not read
       for ownership or permission reasons, it shall be an error.

       After the EXINIT variable and any .exrc files are processed, the first file specified by the  user  shall
       be edited, as follows:

        1. If  the  user  specified the −t option, the effect shall be as if the ex tag command was entered with
           the specified argument, with the exception that if tag processing does not result in a file to  edit,
           the effect shall be as described in step 3. below.

        2. Otherwise,  if  the  user specified any command line file arguments, the effect shall be as if the ex
           edit command was entered with the first of those arguments as its file argument.

        3. Otherwise, the effect shall be as if the ex edit command was entered with a nonexistent  filename  as
           its  file  argument.  It  is  unspecified  whether  this action shall set the current pathname. In an
           implementation where this action does not set the current pathname,  any  editor  command  using  the
           current pathname shall fail until an editor command sets the current pathname.

       If the −r option was specified, the first time a file in the initial argument list or a file specified by
       the −t option is edited, if recovery information has previously been saved  about  it,  that  information
       shall  be  recovered  and the editor shall behave as if the contents of the edit buffer have already been
       modified. If there are multiple instances of the file to be recovered, the one most recently saved  shall
       be  recovered,  and  an  informational  message  that there are previous versions of the file that can be
       recovered shall be written. If no recovery information  about  a  file  is  available,  an  informational
       message to this effect shall be written, and the edit shall proceed as usual.

       If  the  −c  option was specified, the first time a file that already exists (including a file that might
       not exist but for which recovery information is available, when the −r option is specified)  replaces  or
       initializes  the  contents of the edit buffer, the current line shall be set to the last line of the edit
       buffer, the current column shall be set to non-<blank>, and the ex commands specified with the −c  option
       shall  be  executed.  In this case, the current line and current column shall not be set as described for
       the command associated with the replacement or initialization of the edit buffer  contents.  However,  if
       the  −t  option or a tag command is associated with this action, the −c option commands shall be executed
       and then the movement to the tag shall be performed.

       The current argument list shall initially be set to the filenames specified by the user  on  the  command
       line.  If  no  filenames  are  specified by the user, the current argument list shall be empty. If the −t
       option was specified, it is unspecified whether any filename  resulting  from  tag  processing  shall  be
       prepended  to  the  current  argument  list.  In  the case where the filename is added as a prefix to the
       current argument list, the current argument list reference shall be set to that  filename.  In  the  case
       where  the  filename  is  not  added  as a prefix to the current argument list, the current argument list
       reference shall logically be located before the first of the filenames specified on the command line (for
       example,  a  subsequent  ex  next command shall edit the first filename from the command line). If the −t
       option was not specified, the current argument list reference shall be to the first of the  filenames  on
       the command line.

   Addressing in ex
       Addressing in ex relates to the current line and the current column; the address of a line is its 1-based
       line number, the address of a column is its 1-based count from the beginning of the line. Generally,  the
       current  line  is  the  last  line  affected  by a command. The current line number is the address of the
       current line. In each command description, the effect of the command on the current line number  and  the
       current column is described.

       Addresses are constructed as follows:

        1. The character '.'  (period) shall address the current line.

        2. The character '$' shall address the last line of the edit buffer.

        3. The positive decimal number n shall address the nth line of the edit buffer.

        4. The  address  "'x"  refers  to  the  line  marked  with the mark name character 'x', which shall be a
           lowercase letter from the portable character  set,  the  backquote  character,  or  the  single-quote
           character.  It  shall  be  an  error if the line that was marked is not currently present in the edit
           buffer or the mark has not been set. Lines can be marked with the ex mark or k commands, or the vi  m
           command.

        5. A  regular  expression  enclosed  by  <slash>  characters ('/') shall address the first line found by
           searching forwards from the line following the current line toward the end of  the  edit  buffer  and
           stopping at the first line for which the line excluding the terminating <newline> matches the regular
           expression. As stated in Regular  Expressions  in  ex,  an  address  consisting  of  a  null  regular
           expression  delimited  by  <slash>  characters  ("//") shall address the next line for which the line
           excluding the terminating <newline> matches the last regular expression encountered. In addition, the
           second  <slash>  can be omitted at the end of a command line. If the wrapscan edit option is set, the
           search shall wrap around to the beginning of the edit buffer and continue up  to  and  including  the
           current line, so that the entire edit buffer is searched. Within the regular expression, the sequence
           "\/" shall represent a literal <slash> instead of the regular expression delimiter.

        6. A regular expression enclosed in <question-mark> characters ('?')  shall address the first line found
           by  searching  backwards  from  the  line preceding the current line toward the beginning of the edit
           buffer and stopping at the first line for which the line excluding the terminating <newline>  matches
           the  regular  expression.  An address consisting of a null regular expression delimited by <question-
           mark> characters ("??") shall address the previous line for which the line excluding the  terminating
           <newline>  matches  the  last regular expression encountered. In addition, the second <question-mark>
           can be omitted at the end of a command line. If the wrapscan edit option is  set,  the  search  shall
           wrap  around  from  the beginning of the edit buffer to the end of the edit buffer and continue up to
           and including the current line, so that the entire  edit  buffer  is  searched.  Within  the  regular
           expression, the sequence "\?" shall represent a literal <question-mark> instead of the RE delimiter.

        7. A <plus-sign> ('+') or a minus-sign ('−') followed by a decimal number shall address the current line
           plus or minus the number. A '+' or '−' not followed by a decimal number  shall  address  the  current
           line plus or minus 1.

       Addresses can be followed by zero or more address offsets, optionally <blank>-separated.  Address offsets
       are constructed as follows:

        1. A '+' or '−' immediately followed by a decimal number shall add (subtract) the  indicated  number  of
           lines  to (from) the address. A '+' or '−' not followed by a decimal number shall add (subtract) 1 to
           (from) the address.

        2. A decimal number shall add the indicated number of lines to the address.

       It shall not be an error for an intermediate address value to be less than zero or greater than the  last
       line in the edit buffer. It shall be an error for the final address value to be less than zero or greater
       than the last line in the edit buffer.

       Commands take zero, one,  or  two  addresses;  see  the  descriptions  of  1addr  and  2addr  in  Command
       Descriptions  in  ex.   If  more  than  the  required  number of addresses are provided to a command that
       requires zero addresses, it shall be an error. Otherwise, if more than the required number  of  addresses
       are  provided to a command, the addresses specified first shall be evaluated and then discarded until the
       maximum number of valid addresses remain.

       Addresses shall be separated from each other by a <comma> (',') or a <semicolon> (';').  If no address is
       specified  before  or  after  a  <comma>  or  <semicolon> separator, it shall be as if the address of the
       current line was specified before or after the separator. In the case of  a  <semicolon>  separator,  the
       current line ('.')  shall be set to the first address, and only then will the next address be calculated.
       This feature can be used to determine the starting line for forwards and backwards searches (see rules 5.
       and 6.).

       A <percent-sign> ('%') shall be equivalent to entering the two addresses "1,$".

       Any  delimiting  <blank>  characters  between  addresses, address separators, or address offsets shall be
       discarded.

   Command Line Parsing in ex
       The following symbol is used in this and following sections to describe parsing behavior:

       escape    If a character is referred to as ``<backslash>-escaped'' or ``<control>‐V-escaped'',  it  shall
                 mean  that  the  character  acquired  or  lost  a  special meaning by virtue of being preceded,
                 respectively, by a <backslash>  or  <control>‐V  character.  Unless  otherwise  specified,  the
                 escaping  character shall be discarded at that time and shall not be further considered for any
                 purpose.

       Command-line parsing shall be done in the following steps. For each step,  characters  already  evaluated
       shall be ignored; that is, the phrase ``leading character'' refers to the next character that has not yet
       been evaluated.

        1. Leading <colon> characters shall be skipped.

        2. Leading <blank> characters shall be skipped.

        3. If the leading character is a double-quote character, the characters up to  and  including  the  next
           non-<backslash>-escaped  <newline>  shall be discarded, and any subsequent characters shall be parsed
           as a separate command.

        4. Leading characters that can be interpreted as addresses shall be evaluated; see Addressing in ex.

        5. Leading <blank> characters shall be skipped.

        6. If the next character is a <vertical-line> character or a <newline>:

            a. If the next character is a <newline>:

                i.  If ex is in open or visual mode,  the  current  line  shall  be  set  to  the  last  address
                    specified, if any.

               ii.  Otherwise,  if  the  last  command  was terminated by a <vertical-line> character, no action
                    shall be taken; for example, the command "||<newline>" shall execute two  implied  commands,
                    not three.

               iii. Otherwise, step 6.b. shall apply.

            b. Otherwise,  the  implied command shall be the print command. The last #, p, and l flags specified
               to any ex command shall be remembered and shall apply to this implied command.  Executing the  ex
               number, print, or list command shall set the remembered flags to #, nothing, and l, respectively,
               plus any other flags specified for that execution of the number, print, or list command.

               If ex is not currently performing a global or v command, and no address or  count  is  specified,
               the  current  line  shall be incremented by 1 before the command is executed. If incrementing the
               current line would result in an address past the last line in the edit buffer, the command  shall
               fail, and the increment shall not happen.

            c. The <newline> or <vertical-line> character shall be discarded and any subsequent characters shall
               be parsed as a separate command.

        7. The command name shall be comprised of the next character (if the character is  not  alphabetic),  or
           the  next  character  and any subsequent alphabetic characters (if the character is alphabetic), with
           the following exceptions:

            a. Commands that consist of any prefix of the  characters  in  the  command  name  delete,  followed
               immediately  by any of the characters 'l', 'p', '+', '−', or '#' shall be interpreted as a delete
               command, followed by a <blank>, followed by the characters that were not part of  the  prefix  of
               the delete command. The maximum number of characters shall be matched to the command name delete;
               for example, "del" shall not be treated as "de" followed by the flag l.

            b. Commands that consist of the character 'k', followed by a character that can be used as the  name
               of  a  mark,  shall  be  equivalent  to  the  mark command followed by a <blank>, followed by the
               character that followed the 'k'.

            c. Commands that consist of the character 's', followed by characters that could be  interpreted  as
               valid  options to the s command, shall be the equivalent of the s command, without any pattern or
               replacement values, followed by a <blank>, followed by the characters after the 's'.

        8. The command name shall be matched against the  possible  command  names,  and  a  command  name  that
           contains a prefix matching the characters specified by the user shall be the executed command. In the
           case of commands where the characters specified by the user could be ambiguous, the executed  command
           shall be as follows:

                                          ┌───┬────────┬┬───┬───────┬┬───┬───────┐
                                          │aappend ││nnext  ││tt     │
                                          │cchange ││pprint ││uundo  │
                                          │chchange ││prprint ││unundo  │
                                          │eedit   ││rread  ││vv     │
                                          │mmove   ││reread  ││wwrite │
                                          │mamark   ││ss     ││   │       │
                                          └───┴────────┴┴───┴───────┴┴───┴───────┘
           Implementation  extensions  with  names  causing similar ambiguities shall not be checked for a match
           until all possible matches for commands specified by POSIX.1‐2008 have been checked.

        9. If the command is a !  command, or if the command is a read command followed by zero or more  <blank>
           characters  and  a !, or if the command is a write command followed by one or more <blank> characters
           and a !, the rest of the command  shall  include  all  characters  up  to  a  non-<backslash>-escaped
           <newline>.   The  <newline>  shall  be  discarded  and any subsequent characters shall be parsed as a
           separate ex command.

       10. Otherwise, if the command is an edit, ex, or next command, or a  visual  command  while  in  open  or
           visual mode, the next part of the command shall be parsed as follows:

            a. Any '!'  character immediately following the command shall be skipped and be part of the command.

            b. Any leading <blank> characters shall be skipped and be part of the command.

            c. If  the  next character is a '+', characters up to the first non-<backslash>-escaped <newline> or
               non-<backslash>-escaped <blank> shall be skipped and be part of the command.

            d. The rest of the command shall be determined by the steps specified in paragraph 12.

       11. Otherwise, if the command is a global, open, s, or v command, the next part of the command  shall  be
           parsed as follows:

            a. Any leading <blank> characters shall be skipped and be part of the command.

            b. If the next character is not an alphanumeric, double-quote, <newline>, <backslash>, or <vertical-
               line> character:

                i.  The next character shall be used as a command delimiter.

               ii.  If  the  command  is  a  global,  open,  or  v  command,  characters   up   to   the   first
                    non-<backslash>-escaped  <newline>,  or  first  non-<backslash>-escaped delimiter character,
                    shall be skipped and be part of the command.

               iii. If the command  is  an  s  command,  characters  up  to  the  first  non-<backslash>-escaped
                    <newline>,  or  second  non-<backslash>-escaped delimiter character, shall be skipped and be
                    part of the command.

            c. If the command is a global or v command,  characters  up  to  the  first  non-<backslash>-escaped
               <newline> shall be skipped and be part of the command.

            d. Otherwise, the rest of the command shall be determined by the steps specified in paragraph 12.

       12. Otherwise:

            a. If  the command was a map, unmap, abbreviate, or unabbreviate command, characters up to the first
               non-<control>‐V-escaped <newline>, <vertical-line>, or double-quote character  shall  be  skipped
               and be part of the command.

            b. Otherwise,  characters  up  to  the  first non-<backslash>-escaped <newline>, <vertical-line>, or
               double-quote character shall be skipped and be part of the command.

            c. If the command was an append, change, or insert command, and the step 12.b. ended at a <vertical-
               line>  character,  any  subsequent  characters,  up to the next non-<backslash>-escaped <newline>
               shall be used as input text to the command.

            d. If the command was ended by a double-quote character, all subsequent characters, up to  the  next
               non-<backslash>-escaped <newline>, shall be discarded.

            e. The  terminating  <newline>  or  <vertical-line>  character shall be discarded and any subsequent
               characters shall be parsed as a separate ex command.

       Command arguments shall be parsed as described by the Synopsis and  Description  of  each  individual  ex
       command.  This  parsing shall not be <blank>-sensitive, except for the !  argument, which must follow the
       command name without intervening <blank> characters, and where  it  would  otherwise  be  ambiguous.  For
       example, count and flag arguments need not be <blank>-separated because "d22p" is not ambiguous, but file
       arguments to the ex next command must be separated by one or more  <blank>  characters.  Any  <blank>  in
       command  arguments  for the abbreviate, unabbreviate, map, and unmap commands can be <control>‐V-escaped,
       in which case the <blank> shall not be used as an argument delimiter. Any <blank> in the command argument
       for  any  other  command  can  be <backslash>-escaped, in which case that <blank> shall not be used as an
       argument delimiter.

       Within command arguments for the abbreviate, unabbreviate, map, and unmap commands, any character can  be
       <control>‐V-escaped.   All  such  escaped characters shall be treated literally and shall have no special
       meaning. Within command arguments for  all  other  ex  commands  that  are  not  regular  expressions  or
       replacement   strings,   any   character   that   would   otherwise   have   a  special  meaning  can  be
       <backslash>-escaped.  Escaped characters shall be treated literally, without  special  meaning  as  shell
       expansion  characters  or  '!',  '%',  and  '#'  expansion  characters. See Regular Expressions in ex and
       Replacement Strings in ex  for  descriptions  of  command  arguments  that  are  regular  expressions  or
       replacement strings.

       Non-<backslash>-escaped '%' characters appearing in file arguments to any ex command shall be replaced by
       the current pathname; unescaped '#' characters shall be replaced by the alternate pathname. It  shall  be
       an  error if '%' or '#' characters appear unescaped in an argument and their corresponding values are not
       set.

       Non-<backslash>-escaped '!'  characters in the arguments to either the ex !   command  or  the  open  and
       visual mode !  command, or in the arguments to the ex read command, where the first non-<blank> after the
       command name is a '!'  character, or in the arguments to the ex write command where the command  name  is
       followed  by  one  or  more  <blank> characters and the first non-<blank> after the command name is a '!'
       character, shall be replaced with the arguments to the last of those  three  commands  as  they  appeared
       after  all unescaped '%', '#', and '!'  characters were replaced. It shall be an error if '!'  characters
       appear unescaped in one of these commands and there has been  no  previous  execution  of  one  of  these
       commands.

       If an error occurs during the parsing or execution of an ex command:

        *  An informational message to this effect shall be written. Execution of the ex command shall stop, and
           the cursor (for example, the current line and column) shall not be further modified.

        *  If the ex command resulted from a map expansion, all characters from  that  map  expansion  shall  be
           discarded, except as otherwise specified by the map command.

        *  Otherwise,  if the ex command resulted from the processing of an EXINIT environment variable, a .exrc
           file, a :source command, a −c option, or a +command specified to an ex  edit,  ex,  next,  or  visual
           command, no further commands from the source of the commands shall be executed.

        *  Otherwise,  if  the  ex  command resulted from the execution of a buffer or a global or v command, no
           further commands caused by the execution of the buffer or the global or v command shall be executed.

        *  Otherwise, if the ex command was not terminated by a <newline>, all characters up  to  and  including
           the next non-<backslash>-escaped <newline> shall be discarded.

   Input Editing in ex
       The following symbol is used in this and the following sections to specify command actions:

       word      In the POSIX locale, a word consists of a maximal sequence of letters, digits, and underscores,
                 delimited at both ends by characters other than letters, digits,  or  underscores,  or  by  the
                 beginning or end of a line or the edit buffer.

       When  accepting input characters from the user, in either ex command mode or ex text input mode, ex shall
       enable canonical mode input processing, as defined in the System Interfaces volume of POSIX.1‐2008.

       If in ex text input mode:

        1. If the number edit option is set, ex shall prompt for input using  the  line  number  that  would  be
           assigned to the line if it is entered, in the format specified for the ex number command.

        2. If  the  autoindent  edit  option  is  set, ex shall prompt for input using autoindent characters, as
           described by the autoindent edit option.  autoindent characters shall follow the line number, if any.

       If in ex command mode:

        1. If the prompt edit option is set,  input  shall  be  prompted  for  using  a  single  ':'  character;
           otherwise, there shall be no prompt.

       The input characters in the following sections shall have the following effects on the input line.

   Scroll
       Synopsis:
                     eof

       See the description of the stty eof character in stty.

       If in ex command mode:

              If the eof character is the first character entered on the line, the line shall be evaluated as if
              it contained two characters: a <control>‐D and a <newline>.

              Otherwise, the eof character shall have no special meaning.

       If in ex text input mode:

              If the cursor follows an autoindent character, the autoindent characters  in  the  line  shall  be
              modified  so that a part of the next text input character will be displayed on the first column in
              the line after the previous shiftwidth edit option column boundary, and the user shall be prompted
              again for input for the same line.

              Otherwise, if the cursor follows a '0', which follows an autoindent character, and the '0' was the
              previous text input character, the '0'  and  all  autoindent  characters  in  the  line  shall  be
              discarded, and the user shall be prompted again for input for the same line.

              Otherwise, if the cursor follows a '^', which follows an autoindent character, and the '^' was the
              previous text input character, the '^'  and  all  autoindent  characters  in  the  line  shall  be
              discarded,  and  the  user  shall  be prompted again for input for the same line. In addition, the
              autoindent level for the next input line shall be derived  from  the  same  line  from  which  the
              autoindent level for the current input line was derived.

              Otherwise,  if  there  are  no  autoindent or text input characters in the line, the eof character
              shall be discarded.

              Otherwise, the eof character shall have no special meaning.

   <newline>
       Synopsis:
                     <newline>
                     <control>-J

       If in ex command mode:

              Cause the command line to be parsed; <control>‐J  shall  be  mapped  to  the  <newline>  for  this
              purpose.

       If in ex text input mode:

              Terminate  the  current  line.  If there are no characters other than autoindent characters on the
              line, all characters on the line shall be discarded.

              Prompt for text input on a new line after the current line. If the autoindent edit option is  set,
              an appropriate number of autoindent characters shall be added as a prefix to the line as described
              by the ex autoindent edit option.

   <backslash>
       Synopsis:
                     <backslash>

       Allow the entry of a subsequent <newline> or <control>‐J as a literal  character,  removing  any  special
       meaning  that  it  may  have  to  the  editor  during text input mode. The <backslash> character shall be
       retained and evaluated when the command line is parsed, or retained and  included  when  the  input  text
       becomes part of the edit buffer.

   <control>‐V
       Synopsis:
                     <control>-V

       Allow  the entry of any subsequent character as a literal character, removing any special meaning that it
       may have to the editor during text input mode. The <control>‐V character shall be  discarded  before  the
       command line is parsed or the input text becomes part of the edit buffer.

       If the ``literal next'' functionality is performed by the underlying system, it is implementation-defined
       whether a character other than <control>‐V performs this function.

   <control>‐W
       Synopsis:
                     <control>-W

       Discard the <control>‐W, and the word previous to it in the input line, including any <blank>  characters
       following  the  word  and preceding the <control>‐W.  If the ``word erase'' functionality is performed by
       the underlying system, it is implementation-defined whether a character other than  <control>‐W  performs
       this function.

   Command Descriptions in ex
       The  following  symbols  are used in this section to represent command modifiers. Some of these modifiers
       can be omitted, in which case the specified defaults shall be used.

       1addr     A single line address, given in any of the forms described in Addressing  in  ex;  the  default
                 shall be the current line ('.'), unless otherwise specified.

                 If  the line address is zero, it shall be an error, unless otherwise specified in the following
                 command descriptions.

                 If the edit buffer is empty, and the address is specified with a command other than =,  append,
                 insert, open, put, read, or visual, or the address is not zero, it shall be an error.

       2addr     Two  addresses  specifying  an  inclusive  range  of  lines. If no addresses are specified, the
                 default for 2addr shall be the current line only (".,."), unless  otherwise  specified  in  the
                 following  command  descriptions.  If  one  address is specified, 2addr shall specify that line
                 only, unless otherwise specified in the following command descriptions.

                 It shall be an error if the first address is greater than the second address.

                 If the edit buffer is empty, and the two addresses are specified with a command other than  the
                 !, write, wq, or xit commands, or either address is not zero, it shall be an error.

       count     A  positive  decimal  number.  If  count  is specified, it shall be equivalent to specifying an
                 additional address to  the  command,  unless  otherwise  specified  by  the  following  command
                 descriptions.  The  additional  address  shall  be  equal  to the last address specified to the
                 command (either explicitly or by default) plus count−1.

                 If this would result in an address greater than the last line of the edit buffer, it  shall  be
                 corrected to equal the last line of the edit buffer.

       flags     One  or  more  of  the  characters '+', '−', '#', 'p', or 'l' (ell). The flag characters can be
                 <blank>-separated, and in any order or combination. The characters  '#',  'p',  and  'l'  shall
                 cause  lines  to  be  written  in  the format specified by the print command with the specified
                 flags.

                 The lines to be written are as follows:

                  1. All edit buffer lines written during the execution of the ex  &,  ~,  list,  number,  open,
                     print, s, visual, and z commands shall be written as specified by flags.

                  2. After the completion of an ex command with a flag as an argument, the current line shall be
                     written as specified by flags, unless the current line was the last  line  written  by  the
                     command.

                 The  characters  '+'  and '−' cause the value of the current line after the execution of the ex
                 command to be adjusted by the offset address as described in Addressing in ex.  This adjustment
                 shall occur before the current line is written as described in 2. above.

                 The default for flags shall be none.

       buffer    One  of  a  number  of  named  areas  for  holding text. The named buffers are specified by the
                 alphanumeric characters of the POSIX locale. There shall also be one ``unnamed''  buffer.  When
                 no buffer is specified for editor commands that use a buffer, the unnamed buffer shall be used.
                 Commands that store text into buffers shall store the text as it was before  the  command  took
                 effect,  and  shall store text occurring earlier in the file before text occurring later in the
                 file, regardless of how the text region was specified. Commands that store  text  into  buffers
                 shall store the text into the unnamed buffer as well as any specified buffer.

                 In  ex  commands,  buffer  names  are  specified  as the name by itself. In open or visual mode
                 commands the name is preceded by a double-quote ('"') character.

                 If the specified buffer name is an uppercase character, and  the  buffer  contents  are  to  be
                 modified,  the  buffer shall be appended to rather than being overwritten. If the buffer is not
                 being modified, specifying the buffer name in lowercase  and  uppercase  shall  have  identical
                 results.

                 There  shall  also  be  buffers named by the numbers 1 through 9. In open and visual mode, if a
                 region of text including characters from more than a single line is being modified by the vi  c
                 or  d  commands,  the  motion  character associated with the c or d commands specifies that the
                 buffer text shall be in line mode, or the commands %, `, /, ?, (, ), N, n, {, or } are used  to
                 define  a  region of text for the c or d commands, the contents of buffers 1 through 8 shall be
                 moved into the buffer named by the next numerically greater value, the  contents  of  buffer  9
                 shall  be  discarded,  and  the  region of text shall be copied into buffer 1. This shall be in
                 addition to copying the text into a user-specified buffer or unnamed buffer, or  both.  Numeric
                 buffers  can  be  specified  as  a  source  buffer  for open and visual mode commands; however,
                 specifying a numeric buffer as the write target of an open or visual mode  command  shall  have
                 unspecified results.

                 The  text  of  each  buffer  shall have the characteristic of being in either line or character
                 mode. Appending text to a non-empty buffer shall set the mode to match  the  characteristic  of
                 the  text  being  appended. Appending text to a buffer shall cause the creation of at least one
                 additional line in the buffer. All text stored into buffers by ex commands  shall  be  in  line
                 mode.  The  ex commands that use buffers as the source of text specify individually how buffers
                 of different modes are handled. Each open or visual mode command  that  uses  buffers  for  any
                 purpose  specifies  individually the mode of the text stored into the buffer and how buffers of
                 different modes are handled.

       file      Command text used to derive a pathname. The default shall be the current pathname,  as  defined
                 previously,  in  which  case,  if  no  current pathname has yet been established it shall be an
                 error, except where specifically noted in the individual command descriptions that follow.   If
                 the  command  text contains any of the characters '~', '{', '[', '*', '?', '$', '"', backquote,
                 single-quote, and <backslash>, it shall be subjected to the process of ``shell expansions'', as
                 described  below;  if  more than a single pathname results and the command expects only one, it
                 shall be an error.

                 The process of shell expansions in the editor shall be done as follows. The  ex  utility  shall
                 pass  two  arguments  to the program named by the shell edit option; the first shall be −c, and
                 the second shall be the string "echo" and the command text as a single argument.  The  standard
                 output and standard error of that command shall replace the command text.

       !         A  character  that  can be appended to the command name to modify its operation, as detailed in
                 the individual command descriptions. With the exception of the ex read, write, and !  commands,
                 the  '!'   character shall only act as a modifier if there are no <blank> characters between it
                 and the command name.

       remembered search direction
                 The vi commands N and n begin searching in a forwards or backwards direction in the edit buffer
                 based  on a remembered search direction, which is initially unset, and is set by the ex global,
                 v, s, and tag commands, and the vi / and ?  commands.

   Abbreviate
       Synopsis:
                     ab[breviate][lhs rhs]

       If lhs and rhs are not specified, write the current list of abbreviations and do nothing more.

       Implementations may restrict the set of  characters  accepted  in  lhs  or  rhs,  except  that  printable
       characters   and   <blank>   characters  shall  not  be  restricted.  Additional  restrictions  shall  be
       implementation-defined.

       In both lhs and rhs, any character may be escaped with a <control>‐V, in which case the  character  shall
       not be used to delimit lhs from rhs, and the escaping <control>‐V shall be discarded.

       In open and visual text input mode, if a non-word or <ESC> character that is not escaped by a <control>‐V
       character is entered after a word character, a check shall be made for a set of characters matching  lhs,
       in  the text input entered during this command. If it is found, the effect shall be as if rhs was entered
       instead of lhs.

       The set of characters that are checked is defined as follows:

        1. If there are no characters inserted before the word and non-word or <ESC> characters  that  triggered
           the check, the set of characters shall consist of the word character.

        2. If  the  character inserted before the word and non-word or <ESC> characters that triggered the check
           is a word character, the set of characters shall  consist  of  the  characters  inserted  immediately
           before the triggering characters that are word characters, plus the triggering word character.

        3. If  the  character inserted before the word and non-word or <ESC> characters that triggered the check
           is not a word character, the set of characters shall consist of the  characters  that  were  inserted
           before  the  triggering  characters that are neither <blank> characters nor word characters, plus the
           triggering word character.

       It is unspecified whether the lhs argument entered for the ex abbreviate  and  unabbreviate  commands  is
       replaced  in this fashion. Regardless of whether or not the replacement occurs, the effect of the command
       shall be as if the replacement had not occurred.

       Current line: Unchanged.

       Current column: Unchanged.

   Append
       Synopsis:
                     [1addr] a[ppend][!]

       Enter ex text input mode; the input text shall be placed after  the  specified  line.  If  line  zero  is
       specified, the text shall be placed at the beginning of the edit buffer.

       This command shall be affected by the number and autoindent edit options; following the command name with
       '!'  shall cause the autoindent edit option setting to be toggled for the duration of this command only.

       Current line: Set to the last input line; if no lines were input, set to the specified line,  or  to  the
       first line of the edit buffer if a line of zero was specified, or zero if the edit buffer is empty.

       Current column: Set to non-<blank>.

   Arguments
       Synopsis:
                     ar[gs]

       Write  the  current  argument  list,  with  the  current argument-list entry, if any, between '[' and ']'
       characters.

       Current line: Unchanged.

       Current column: Unchanged.

   Change
       Synopsis:
                     [2addr] c[hange][!][count]

       Enter ex text input mode; the input text shall replace the specified lines. The specified lines shall  be
       copied into the unnamed buffer, which shall become a line mode buffer.

       This command shall be affected by the number and autoindent edit options; following the command name with
       '!'  shall cause the autoindent edit option setting to be toggled for the duration of this command only.

       Current line: Set to the last input line; if no lines were input,  set  to  the  line  before  the  first
       address, or to the first line of the edit buffer if there are no lines preceding the first address, or to
       zero if the edit buffer is empty.

       Current column: Set to non-<blank>.

   Change Directory
       Synopsis:
                     chd[ir][!][directory]
                     cd[!][directory]

       Change the current working directory to directory.

       If no directory argument is specified, and the HOME environment variable is set to a  non-null  and  non-
       empty  value,  directory  shall  default to the value named in the HOME environment variable. If the HOME
       environment variable is empty or is undefined, the default value of directory is implementation-defined.

       If no '!'  is appended to the command name, and the edit buffer has been modified since the last complete
       write, and the current pathname does not begin with a '/', it shall be an error.

       Current line: Unchanged.

       Current column: Unchanged.

   Copy
       Synopsis:
                     [2addr] co[py] 1addr [flags]
                     [2addr] t 1addr [flags]

       Copy  the  specified lines after the specified destination line; line zero specifies that the lines shall
       be placed at the beginning of the edit buffer.

       Current line: Set to the last line copied.

       Current column: Set to non-<blank>.

   Delete
       Synopsis:
                     [2addr] d[elete][buffer][count][flags]

       Delete the specified lines into a buffer (defaulting to the unnamed buffer), which shall become  a  line-
       mode buffer.

       Flags can immediately follow the command name; see Command Line Parsing in ex.

       Current line: Set to the line following the deleted lines, or to the last line in the edit buffer if that
       line is past the end of the edit buffer, or to zero if the edit buffer is empty.

       Current column: Set to non-<blank>.

   Edit
       Synopsis:
                     e[dit][!][+command][file]
                     ex[!][+command][file]

       If no '!'  is appended to the command name, and the edit buffer has been modified since the last complete
       write, it shall be an error.

       If  file is specified, replace the current contents of the edit buffer with the current contents of file,
       and set the current pathname to file.  If file is not specified, replace the current contents of the edit
       buffer with the current contents of the file named by the current pathname. If for any reason the current
       contents of the file cannot be accessed, the edit buffer shall be empty.

       The +command option shall be <blank>-delimited; <blank> characters within the +command can be escaped  by
       preceding  them  with  a  <backslash>  character.  The  +command  shall  be  interpreted as an ex command
       immediately after the contents of the edit buffer have been replaced and the current line and column have
       been set.

       If the edit buffer is empty:

       Current line: Set to 0.

       Current column: Set to 1.

       Otherwise, if executed while in ex command mode or if the +command argument is specified:

       Current line: Set to the last line of the edit buffer.

       Current column: Set to non-<blank>.

       Otherwise, if file is omitted or results in the current pathname:

       Current line: Set to the first line of the edit buffer.

       Current column: Set to non-<blank>.

       Otherwise,  if  file is the same as the last file edited, the line and column shall be set as follows; if
       the file was previously edited, the line and column may be set as follows:

       Current line: Set to the last value held when that file was last edited. If this value  is  not  a  valid
       line in the new edit buffer, set to the first line of the edit buffer.

       Current  column: If the current line was set to the last value held when the file was last edited, set to
       the last value held when the file was last edited.  Otherwise, or if the last value is not a valid column
       in the new edit buffer, set to non-<blank>.

       Otherwise:

       Current line: Set to the first line of the edit buffer.

       Current column: Set to non-<blank>.

   File
       Synopsis:
                     f[ile][file]

       If  a  file  argument  is specified, the alternate pathname shall be set to the current pathname, and the
       current pathname shall be set to file.

       Write an informational message. If the file has a current pathname, it shall be included in this message;
       otherwise,  the  message  shall  indicate  that there is no current pathname. If the edit buffer contains
       lines, the current line number and the number of lines in the edit  buffer  shall  be  included  in  this
       message; otherwise, the message shall indicate that the edit buffer is empty. If the edit buffer has been
       modified since the last complete write, this fact shall be included in this message. If the readonly edit
       option  is  set,  this  fact shall be included in this message. The message may contain other unspecified
       information.

       Current line: Unchanged.

       Current column: Unchanged.

   Global
       Synopsis:
                     [2addr] g[lobal] /pattern/ [commands]
                     [2addr] v /pattern/ [commands]

       The optional '!'  character after the global command shall be the same as executing the v command.

       If pattern is empty (for example, "//") or not specified, the last regular expression used in the  editor
       command  shall  be used as the pattern.  The pattern can be delimited by <slash> characters (shown in the
       Synopsis), as well as any  non-alphanumeric  or  non-<blank>  other  than  <backslash>,  <vertical-line>,
       <newline>, or double-quote.

       If no lines are specified, the lines shall default to the entire file.

       The  global  and v commands are logically two-pass operations. First, mark the lines within the specified
       lines for which the line excluding the terminating <newline> matches (global) or does  not  match  (v  or
       global!)  the specified pattern. Second, execute the ex commands given by commands, with the current line
       ('.')  set to each marked line. If an error occurs during this process,  or  the  contents  of  the  edit
       buffer  are replaced (for example, by the ex :edit command) an error message shall be written and no more
       commands resulting from the execution of this command shall be processed.

       Multiple ex commands can be specified by entering multiple commands on a single line using  a  <vertical-
       line> to delimit them, or one per line, by escaping each <newline> with a <backslash>.

       If no commands are specified:

        1. If in ex command mode, it shall be as if the print command were specified.

        2. Otherwise, no command shall be executed.

       For the append, change, and insert commands, the input text shall be included as part of the command, and
       the terminating <period> can be omitted if the command ends the list of commands.  The  open  and  visual
       commands  can  be specified as one of the commands, in which case each marked line shall cause the editor
       to enter open or visual mode. If open or visual mode is exited using the vi Q command, the  current  line
       shall  be  set to the next marked line, and open or visual mode reentered, until the list of marked lines
       is exhausted.

       The global, v, and undo commands cannot be used in commands.  Marked lines may  be  deleted  by  commands
       executed  for  lines occurring earlier in the file than the marked lines. In this case, no commands shall
       be executed for the deleted lines.

       If the remembered search direction is not set, the global and v commands shall set it to forward.

       The autoprint and autoindent edit options shall be inhibited for the duration of the g or v command.

       Current line: If no commands executed, set to the last marked  line.  Otherwise,  as  specified  for  the
       executed ex commands.

       Current  column:  If  no  commands  are  executed,  set  to  non-<blank>; otherwise, as specified for the
       individual ex commands.

   Insert
       Synopsis:
                     [1addr] i[nsert][!]

       Enter ex text input mode; the input text shall be placed before the specified line. If the line  is  zero
       or 1, the text shall be placed at the beginning of the edit buffer.

       This command shall be affected by the number and autoindent edit options; following the command name with
       '!'  shall cause the autoindent edit option setting to be toggled for the duration of this command only.

       Current line: Set to the last input line; if no lines were input, set to the line  before  the  specified
       line, or to the first line of the edit buffer if there are no lines preceding the specified line, or zero
       if the edit buffer is empty.

       Current column: Set to non-<blank>.

   Join
       Synopsis:
                     [2addr] j[oin][!][count][flags]

       If count is specified:

              If no address was specified, the join command shall behave as if 2addr were the current  line  and
              the current line plus count (.,. + count).

              If one address was specified, the join command shall behave as if 2addr were the specified address
              and the specified address plus count (addr,addr + count).

              If two addresses were specified, the join command shall behave as if an additional address,  equal
              to the last address plus count −1 (addr1,addr2,addr2 + count −1), was specified.

              If  this  would result in a second address greater than the last line of the edit buffer, it shall
              be corrected to be equal to the last line of the edit buffer.

       If no count is specified:

              If no address was specified, the join command shall behave as if 2addr were the current  line  and
              the next line (.,. +1).

              If one address was specified, the join command shall behave as if 2addr were the specified address
              and the next line (addr,addr +1).

       Join the text from the specified lines together into a single line, which  shall  replace  the  specified
       lines.

       If  a '!'  character is appended to the command name, the join shall be without modification of any line,
       independent of the current locale.

       Otherwise, in the POSIX locale, set the current line to the first of the specified lines, and  then,  for
       each subsequent line, proceed as follows:

        1. Discard leading <space> characters from the line to be joined.

        2. If the line to be joined is now empty, delete it, and skip steps 3 through 5.

        3. If  the  current  line  ends  in  a <blank>, or the first character of the line to be joined is a ')'
           character, join the lines without further modification.

        4. If the last character of the current line is a '.',  join  the  lines  with  two  <space>  characters
           between them.

        5. Otherwise, join the lines with a single <space> between them.

       Current line: Set to the first line specified.

       Current column: Set to non-<blank>.

   List
       Synopsis:
                     [2addr] l[ist][count][flags]

       This command shall be equivalent to the ex command:

           [2addr] p[rint][count] l[flags]

       See Print.

   Map
       Synopsis:
                     map[!][lhs rhs]

       If lhs and rhs are not specified:

        1. If '!'  is specified, write the current list of text input mode maps.

        2. Otherwise, write the current list of command mode maps.

        3. Do nothing more.

       Implementations  may  restrict  the  set  of  characters  accepted  in  lhs or rhs, except that printable
       characters  and  <blank>  characters  shall  not  be  restricted.  Additional   restrictions   shall   be
       implementation-defined.  In  both  lhs and rhs, any character can be escaped with a <control>‐V, in which
       case the character shall not be used to delimit lhs from rhs,  and  the  escaping  <control>‐V  shall  be
       discarded.

       If  the character '!'  is appended to the map command name, the mapping shall be effective during open or
       visual text input mode rather than open or visual command mode. This allows lhs to have two different map
       definitions at the same time: one for command mode and one for text input mode.

       For command mode mappings:

              When the lhs is entered as any part of a vi command in open or visual mode (but not as part of the
              arguments to the command), the action shall be as if the corresponding rhs had been entered.

              If any character in the command, other than the first, is escaped using a  <control>‐V  character,
              that character shall not be part of a match to an lhs.

              It  is unspecified whether implementations shall support map commands where the lhs is more than a
              single character in length, where the first character of the lhs is printable.

              If lhs contains more than one character and the first character is '#', followed by a sequence  of
              digits  corresponding to a numbered function key, then when this function key is typed it shall be
              mapped to rhs.  Characters other than digits following a '#' character also represent the function
              key  named  by  the  characters  in  the  lhs  following  the '#' and may be mapped to rhs.  It is
              unspecified how function keys are named or what function keys are supported.

       For text input mode mappings:

              When the lhs is entered as any part of text entered in open or visual text input modes, the action
              shall be as if the corresponding rhs had been entered.

              If  any character in the input text is escaped using a <control>‐V character, that character shall
              not be part of a match to an lhs.

              It is unspecified whether the lhs text entered for subsequent map or unmap  commands  is  replaced
              with the rhs text for the purposes of the screen display; regardless of whether or not the display
              appears as if the corresponding rhs text was entered, the effect of the command shall be as if the
              lhs text was entered.

       If  only  part  of  the  lhs  is entered, it is unspecified how long the editor will wait for additional,
       possibly matching characters before treating the already entered characters as not matching the lhs.

       The rhs characters shall themselves be subject to remapping, unless otherwise specified by the remap edit
       option,  except  that  if the characters in lhs occur as prefix characters in rhs, those characters shall
       not be remapped.

       On block-mode terminals, the mapping need not occur immediately (for example,  it  may  occur  after  the
       terminal  transmits  a group of characters to the system), but it shall achieve the same results as if it
       occurred immediately.

       Current line: Unchanged.

       Current column: Unchanged.

   Mark
       Synopsis:
                     [1addr] ma[rk] character
                     [1addr] k character

       Implementations shall support character values of a single lowercase letter of the POSIX locale  and  the
       backquote and single-quote characters; support of other characters is implementation-defined.

       If  executing the vi m command, set the specified mark to the current line and 1-based numbered character
       referenced by the current column, if any; otherwise, column position 1.

       Otherwise, set the  specified  mark  to  the  specified  line  and  1-based  numbered  first  non-<blank>
       non-<newline>  in  the  line,  if  any; otherwise, the last non-<newline> in the line, if any; otherwise,
       column position 1.

       The mark shall remain associated with the line until the mark is reset or  the  line  is  deleted.  If  a
       deleted  line  is  restored  by a subsequent undo command, any marks previously associated with the line,
       which have not been reset, shall be restored as well. Any use of a mark not  associated  with  a  current
       line in the edit buffer shall be an error.

       The  marks ` and ' shall be set as described previously, immediately before the following events occur in
       the editor:

        1. The use of '$' as an ex address

        2. The use of a positive decimal number as an ex address

        3. The use of a search command as an ex address

        4. The use of a mark reference as an ex address

        5. The use of the following open and visual mode commands: <control>‐], %, (, ), [, ], {, }

        6. The use of the following open and visual mode commands: ', G, H, L, M, z if  the  current  line  will
           change as a result of the command

        7. The use of the open and visual mode commands: /, ?, N, `, n if the current line or column will change
           as a result of the command

        8. The use of the ex mode commands: z, undo, global, v

       For rules 1., 2., 3., and 4., the ` and ' marks shall not be set if the ex command is parsed as specified
       by rule 6.a. in Command Line Parsing in ex.

       For  rules 5., 6., and 7., the ` and ' marks shall not be set if the commands are used as motion commands
       in open and visual mode.

       For rules 1., 2., 3., 4., 5., 6., 7., and 8., the ` and ' marks shall not be set if the command fails.

       The ` and ' marks shall be set as described previously, each time the contents of  the  edit  buffer  are
       replaced  (including  the editing of the initial buffer), if in open or visual mode, or if in ex mode and
       the edit buffer is not empty, before any commands or movements (including commands or movements specified
       by  the  −c or −t options or the +command argument) are executed on the edit buffer. If in open or visual
       mode, the marks shall be set as if executing the vi m command; otherwise, as if  executing  the  ex  mark
       command.

       When  changing from ex mode to open or visual mode, if the ` and ' marks are not already set, the ` and '
       marks shall be set as described previously.

       Current line: Unchanged.

       Current column: Unchanged.

   Move
       Synopsis:
                     [2addr] m[ove] 1addr [flags]

       Move the specified lines after the specified destination line. A destination of line zero specifies  that
       the  lines  shall  be placed at the beginning of the edit buffer. It shall be an error if the destination
       line is within the range of lines to be moved.

       Current line: Set to the last of the moved lines.

       Current column: Set to non-<blank>.

   Next
       Synopsis:
                     n[ext][!][+command][file ...]

       If no '!'  is appended to the command name, and the edit buffer has been modified since the last complete
       write,  it  shall  be  an  error,  unless  the file is successfully written as specified by the autowrite
       option.

       If one or more files is specified:

        1. Set the argument list to the specified filenames.

        2. Set the current argument list reference to be the first entry in the argument list.

        3. Set the current pathname to the first filename specified.

       Otherwise:

        1. It shall be an error if there are no more filenames in the argument list after the filename currently
           referenced.

        2. Set  the  current pathname and the current argument list reference to the filename after the filename
           currently referenced in the argument list.

       Replace the contents of the edit buffer with the contents of the file named by the current  pathname.  If
       for any reason the contents of the file cannot be accessed, the edit buffer shall be empty.

       This command shall be affected by the autowrite and writeany edit options.

       The  +command option shall be <blank>-delimited; <blank> characters can be escaped by preceding them with
       a <backslash> character. The +command shall be  interpreted  as  an  ex  command  immediately  after  the
       contents of the edit buffer have been replaced and the current line and column have been set.

       Current line: Set as described for the edit command.

       Current column: Set as described for the edit command.

   Number
       Synopsis:
                     [2addr] nu[mber][count][flags]
                     [2addr] #[count][flags]

       These commands shall be equivalent to the ex command:

           [2addr] p[rint][count] #[flags]

       See Print.

   Open
       Synopsis:
                     [1addr] o[pen] /pattern/ [flags]

       This  command  need not be supported on block-mode terminals or terminals with insufficient capabilities.
       If standard input, standard output,  or  standard  error  are  not  terminal  devices,  the  results  are
       unspecified.

       Enter open mode.

       The  trailing  delimiter  can be omitted from pattern at the end of the command line. If pattern is empty
       (for example, "//") or not specified, the last regular expression used in the editor shall be used as the
       pattern.  The  pattern  can  be  delimited  by <slash> characters (shown in the Synopsis), as well as any
       alphanumeric, or non-<blank> other than <backslash>, <vertical-line>, <newline>, or double-quote.

       Current line: Set to the specified line.

       Current column: Set to non-<blank>.

   Preserve
       Synopsis:
                     pre[serve]

       Save the edit buffer in a form that can later be recovered by using the −r option  or  by  using  the  ex
       recover  command.  After  the  file  has  been  preserved, a mail message shall be sent to the user. This
       message shall be readable by invoking the mailx utility. The message shall contain the name of the  file,
       the  time  of  preservation,  and  an  ex  command  that  could  be  used to recover the file. Additional
       information may be included in the mail message.

       Current line: Unchanged.

       Current column: Unchanged.

   Print
       Synopsis:
                     [2addr] p[rint][count][flags]

       Write the addressed lines. The behavior is unspecified if the number of columns on the  display  is  less
       than the number of columns required to write any single character in the lines being written.

       Non-printable  characters,  except  for  the  <tab>,  shall  be  written as implementation-defined multi-
       character sequences.

       If the # flag is specified or the number edit option is set, each line shall  be  preceded  by  its  line
       number in the following format:

           "%6d  ", <line number>

       If the l flag is specified or the list edit option is set:

        1. The characters listed in the Base Definitions volume of POSIX.1‐2008, Table 5-1, Escape Sequences and
           Associated Actions shall be written as the corresponding escape sequence.

        2. Non-printable characters not in the Base  Definitions  volume  of  POSIX.1‐2008,  Table  5-1,  Escape
           Sequences  and  Associated Actions shall be written as one three-digit octal number (with a preceding
           <backslash>) for each byte in the character (most significant byte first).

        3. The end of each line shall be marked with a '$', and literal '$' characters within the line shall  be
           written with a preceding <backslash>.

       Long  lines shall be folded; the length at which folding occurs is unspecified, but should be appropriate
       for the output terminal, considering the number of columns of the terminal.

       If a line is folded, and the l flag is not specified  and  the  list  edit  option  is  not  set,  it  is
       unspecified  whether  a  multi-column  character  at  the  folding position is separated; it shall not be
       discarded.

       Current line: Set to the last written line.

       Current column: Unchanged if the current line is unchanged; otherwise, set to non-<blank>.

   Put
       Synopsis:
                     [1addr] pu[t][buffer]

       Append text from the specified buffer (by default, the unnamed buffer) to the specified line;  line  zero
       specifies  that  the  text shall be placed at the beginning of the edit buffer. Each portion of a line in
       the buffer shall become a new line in the edit buffer, regardless of the mode of the buffer.

       Current line: Set to the last line entered into the edit buffer.

       Current column: Set to non-<blank>.

   Quit
       Synopsis:
                     q[uit][!]

       If no '!'  is appended to the command name:

        1. If the edit buffer has been modified since the last complete write, it shall be an error.

        2. If there are filenames in the argument list after the filename currently  referenced,  and  the  last
           command was not a quit, wq, xit, or ZZ (see Exit) command, it shall be an error.

       Otherwise, terminate the editing session.

   Read
       Synopsis:
                     [1addr] r[ead][!][file]

       If  '!'   is  not the first non-<blank> to follow the command name, a copy of the specified file shall be
       appended into the edit buffer after the specified line; line zero specifies that the copy shall be placed
       at  the  beginning of the edit buffer. The number of lines and bytes read shall be written. If no file is
       named, the current pathname shall be the default. If there is no current pathname, then file shall become
       the current pathname. If there is no current pathname or file operand, it shall be an error. Specifying a
       file that is not of type regular shall have unspecified results.

       Otherwise, if file is preceded by '!', the rest of the line after the '!'  shall have '%', '#',  and  '!'
       characters expanded as described in Command Line Parsing in ex.

       The  ex  utility  shall  then pass two arguments to the program named by the shell edit option; the first
       shall be −c and the second shall be the expanded arguments to the read command as a single argument.  The
       standard  input  of the program shall be set to the standard input of the ex program when it was invoked.
       The standard error and standard output of the program shall be appended into the edit  buffer  after  the
       specified line.

       Each  line  in  the copied file or program output (as delimited by <newline> characters or the end of the
       file or output if it is not immediately preceded by a <newline>), shall be a separate line  in  the  edit
       buffer. Any occurrences of <carriage-return> and <newline> pairs in the output shall be treated as single
       <newline> characters.

       The special meaning of the '!'  following the read command can  be  overridden  by  escaping  it  with  a
       <backslash> character.

       Current  line: If no lines are added to the edit buffer, unchanged. Otherwise, if in open or visual mode,
       set to the first line entered into the edit buffer. Otherwise, set to the last line entered into the edit
       buffer.

       Current column: Set to non-<blank>.

   Recover
       Synopsis:
                     rec[over][!] file

       If no '!'  is appended to the command name, and the edit buffer has been modified since the last complete
       write, it shall be an error.

       If no file operand is specified, then the current pathname shall be used. If there is no current pathname
       or file operand, it shall be an error.

       If  no  recovery  information  has  previously  been  saved  about file, the recover command shall behave
       identically to the edit command, and an informational message to this effect shall be written.

       Otherwise, set the current pathname to file, and replace the current contents of the edit buffer with the
       recovered  contents  of  file.  If there are multiple instances of the file to be recovered, the one most
       recently saved shall be recovered, and an informational message that there are previous versions  of  the
       file  that  can  be  recovered  shall  be written. The editor shall behave as if the contents of the edit
       buffer have already been modified.

       Current file: Set as described for the edit command.

       Current column: Set as described for the edit command.

   Rewind
       Synopsis:
                     rew[ind][!]

       If no '!'  is appended to the command name, and the edit buffer has been modified since the last complete
       write,  it  shall  be  an  error,  unless  the file is successfully written as specified by the autowrite
       option.

       If the argument list is empty, it shall be an error.

       The current argument list reference and the current pathname shall be set to the first  filename  in  the
       argument list.

       Replace  the  contents of the edit buffer with the contents of the file named by the current pathname. If
       for any reason the contents of the file cannot be accessed, the edit buffer shall be empty.

       This command shall be affected by the autowrite and writeany edit options.

       Current line: Set as described for the edit command.

       Current column: Set as described for the edit command.

   Set
       Synopsis:
                     se[t][option[=[value]] ...][nooption ...][option? ...][all]

       When no arguments are specified, write the value of the term edit option and those options  whose  values
       have  been changed from the default settings; when the argument all is specified, write all of the option
       values.

       Giving an option name followed by the character '?'  shall cause the current value of that option  to  be
       written.  The  '?'   can  be  separated  from the option name by zero or more <blank> characters. The '?'
       shall be necessary only for Boolean valued options. Boolean options can be given values by the  form  set
       option  to  turn  them on or set nooption to turn them off; string and numeric options can be assigned by
       the form set option=value.  Any <blank> characters in strings can be included as  is  by  preceding  each
       <blank>  with an escaping <backslash>.  More than one option can be set or listed by a single set command
       by specifying multiple arguments, each separated from the next by one or more <blank> characters.

       See Edit Options in ex for details about specific options.

       Current line: Unchanged.

       Current column: Unchanged.

   Shell
       Synopsis:
                     sh[ell]

       Invoke the program named in the shell edit option with the single argument −i (interactive mode). Editing
       shall be resumed when the program exits.

       Current line: Unchanged.

       Current column: Unchanged.

   Source
       Synopsis:
                     so[urce] file

       Read and execute ex commands from file.  Lines in the file that are blank lines shall be ignored.

       Current line: As specified for the individual ex commands.

       Current column: As specified for the individual ex commands.

   Substitute
       Synopsis:
                     [2addr] s[ubstitute][/pattern/repl/[options][count][flags]]
                     [2addr] &[options][count][flags]]
                     [2addr] ~[options][count][flags]]

       Replace the first instance of the pattern pattern by the string repl on each specified line. (See Regular
       Expressions in ex and Replacement Strings in ex.)  Any non-alphabetic, non-<blank> delimiter  other  than
       <backslash>,  '|',  <newline>, or double-quote can be used instead of '/'.  <backslash> characters can be
       used to escape delimiters, <backslash> characters, and other special characters.

       The trailing delimiter can be omitted from pattern or from repl at the end of the command line.  If  both
       pattern  and  repl  are  not  specified  or  are  empty  (for example, "//"), the last s command shall be
       repeated. If only pattern is not specified or is empty, the last regular expression used  in  the  editor
       shall be used as the pattern. If only repl is not specified or is empty, the pattern shall be replaced by
       nothing.  If the entire replacement pattern is '%', the last replacement pattern to an s command shall be
       used.

       Entering  a  <carriage-return> in repl (which requires an escaping <backslash> in ex mode and an escaping
       <control>‐V in open or vi mode) shall split the line at that point, creating  a  new  line  in  the  edit
       buffer. The <carriage-return> shall be discarded.

       If  options  includes  the  letter 'g' (global), all non-overlapping instances of the pattern in the line
       shall be replaced.

       If options includes the letter 'c' (confirm), then before each substitution the line  shall  be  written;
       the  written  line  shall  reflect  all previous substitutions. On the following line, <space> characters
       shall be written beneath the characters from the line that are before the pattern to be replaced, and '^'
       characters  written  beneath  the characters included in the pattern to be replaced. The ex utility shall
       then wait for a response from the user. An affirmative response shall cause the substitution to be  done,
       while  any  other  input shall not make the substitution. An affirmative response shall consist of a line
       with the affirmative response (as defined by the current locale) at the beginning of the line. This  line
       shall be subject to editing in the same way as the ex command line.

       If  interrupted  (see  the ASYNCHRONOUS EVENTS section), any modifications confirmed by the user shall be
       preserved in the edit buffer after the interrupt.

       If the remembered search direction is not set, the s command shall set it to forward.

       In the second Synopsis, the & command shall repeat the previous substitution, as if the  &  command  were
       replaced by:

           s/pattern/repl/

       where pattern and repl are as specified in the previous s, &, or ~ command.

       In  the third Synopsis, the ~ command shall repeat the previous substitution, as if the '~' were replaced
       by:

           s/pattern/repl/

       where pattern shall be the last regular expression specified to the editor, and repl shall  be  from  the
       previous substitution (including & and ~) command.

       These commands shall be affected by the LC_MESSAGES environment variable.

       Current  line:  Set  to  the last line in which a substitution occurred, or, unchanged if no substitution
       occurred.

       Current column: Set to non-<blank>.

   Suspend
       Synopsis:
                     su[spend][!]
                     st[op][!]

       Allow control to return to the invoking process; ex shall suspend  itself  as  if  it  had  received  the
       SIGTSTP  signal. The suspension shall occur only if job control is enabled in the invoking shell (see the
       description of set −m).

       These commands shall be affected by the autowrite and writeany edit options.

       The current susp character (see stty) shall be equivalent to the suspend command.

   Tag
       Synopsis:
                     ta[g][!] tagstring

       The results are unspecified if the format of a tags file is not as specified by the  ctags  utility  (see
       ctags) description.

       The  tag  command  shall search for tagstring in the tag files referred to by the tag edit option, in the
       order they are specified, until a reference to tagstring is found. Files shall be searched from beginning
       to  end.  If  no  reference  is  found, it shall be an error and an error message to this effect shall be
       written. If the reference is not found, or if an error occurs while processing a file referred to in  the
       tag  edit  option, it shall be an error, and an error message shall be written at the first occurrence of
       such an error.

       Otherwise, if the tags file contained a pattern, the pattern shall be treated  as  a  regular  expression
       used in the editor; for example, for the purposes of the s command.

       If  the  tagstring is in a file with a different name than the current pathname, set the current pathname
       to the name of that file, and replace the contents of the edit buffer with the contents of that file.  In
       this  case,  if  no '!'  is appended to the command name, and the edit buffer has been modified since the
       last complete write, it shall be an error, unless the file is successfully written as  specified  by  the
       autowrite option.

       This command shall be affected by the autowrite, tag, taglength, and writeany edit options.

       Current  line:  If  the tags file contained a line number, set to that line number. If the line number is
       larger than the last line in the edit buffer, an error message shall be  written  and  the  current  line
       shall be set as specified for the edit command.

       If  the  tags  file  contained  a  pattern, set to the first occurrence of the pattern in the file. If no
       matching pattern is found, an error message shall be written  and  the  current  line  shall  be  set  as
       specified for the edit command.

       Current  column:  If  the tags file contained a line-number reference and that line-number was not larger
       than the last line in the edit buffer, or if the tags file contained  a  pattern  and  that  pattern  was
       found, set to non-<blank>.  Otherwise, set as specified for the edit command.

   Unabbreviate
       Synopsis:
                     una[bbrev] lhs

       If  lhs  is  not  an  entry  in the current list of abbreviations (see Abbreviate), it shall be an error.
       Otherwise, delete lhs from the list of abbreviations.

       Current line: Unchanged.

       Current column: Unchanged.

   Undo
       Synopsis:
                     u[ndo]

       Reverse the changes made by the last command that modified the contents of  the  edit  buffer,  including
       undo.   For  this  purpose,  the global, v, open, and visual commands, and commands resulting from buffer
       executions and mapped character expansions, are considered single commands.

       If no action that can be undone preceded the undo command, it shall be an error.

       If the undo command restores lines that were marked, the mark shall also be restored unless it was  reset
       subsequent to the deletion of the lines.

       Current line:

        1. If lines are added or changed in the file, set to the first line added or changed.

        2. Set to the line before the first line deleted, if it exists.

        3. Set to 1 if the edit buffer is not empty.

        4. Set to zero.

       Current column: Set to non-<blank>.

   Unmap
       Synopsis:
                     unm[ap][!] lhs

       If  '!'   is  appended to the command name, and if lhs is not an entry in the list of text input mode map
       definitions, it shall be an  error.  Otherwise,  delete  lhs  from  the  list  of  text  input  mode  map
       definitions.

       If  no  '!'   is appended to the command name, and if lhs is not an entry in the list of command mode map
       definitions, it shall be an error. Otherwise, delete lhs from the list of command mode map definitions.

       Current line: Unchanged.

       Current column: Unchanged.

   Version
       Synopsis:
                     ve[rsion]

       Write a message containing version information for the editor. The format of the message is unspecified.

       Current line: Unchanged.

       Current column: Unchanged.

   Visual
       Synopsis:
                     [1addr] vi[sual][type][count][flags]

       If ex is currently in open or visual mode, the Synopsis and behavior of the visual command shall  be  the
       same as the edit command, as specified by Edit.

       Otherwise,  this  command  need  not  be supported on block-mode terminals or terminals with insufficient
       capabilities. If standard input, standard output, or standard error are not terminal devices, the results
       are unspecified.

       If  count  is  specified,  the  value  of  the  window edit option shall be set to count (as described in
       window).  If the '^' type character was also specified, the window edit option shall be set before  being
       used by the type character.

       Enter  visual  mode.  If  type  is not specified, it shall be as if a type of '+' was specified. The type
       shall cause the following effects:

       +     Place the beginning of the specified line at the top of the display.

       -     Place the end of the specified line at the bottom of the display.

       .     Place the beginning of the specified line in the middle of the display.

       ^     If the specified line is less than or equal to the value of the window edit option, set the line to
             1;  otherwise,  decrement  the  line  by  the  value  of  the window edit option minus 1. Place the
             beginning of this line as close to the bottom of the  displayed  lines  as  possible,  while  still
             displaying the value of the window edit option number of lines.

       Current line: Set to the specified line.

       Current column: Set to non-<blank>.

   Write
       Synopsis:
                     [2addr] w[rite][!][>>][file]
                     [2addr] w[rite][!][file]
                     [2addr] wq[!][>>][file]

       If no lines are specified, the lines shall default to the entire file.

       The  command  wq  shall  be  equivalent  to  a  write  command  followed by a quit command; wq!  shall be
       equivalent to write!  followed by quit.  In both cases, if the write command fails, the quit shall not be
       attempted.

       If  the  command name is not followed by one or more <blank> characters, or file is not preceded by a '!'
       character, the write shall be to a file.

        1. If the >> argument is specified, and the file already exists, the lines shall be appended to the file
           instead  of  replacing  its  contents. If the >> argument is specified, and the file does not already
           exist, it is unspecified whether the write shall proceed as if the >> argument had not been specified
           or if the write shall fail.

        2. If the readonly edit option is set (see readonly), the write shall fail.

        3. If file is specified, and is not the current pathname, and the file exists, the write shall fail.

        4. If  file  is  not specified, the current pathname shall be used. If there is no current pathname, the
           write command shall fail.

        5. If the current pathname is used, and the current pathname has  been  changed  by  the  file  or  read
           commands,  and  the  file exists, the write shall fail. If the write is successful, subsequent writes
           shall not fail for this reason (unless the current pathname is changed again).

        6. If the whole edit buffer is not being written, and the file to be written  exists,  the  write  shall
           fail.

       For  rules  1.,  2.,  3.,  and 5., the write can be forced by appending the character '!'  to the command
       name.

       For rules 2., 3., and 5., the write can be forced by setting the writeany edit option.

       Additional, implementation-defined tests may cause the write to fail.

       If the edit buffer is empty, a file without any contents shall be written.

       An informational message shall be written noting the number of lines and bytes written.

       Otherwise, if the command is followed by one or more <blank> characters, and the file is preceded by '!',
       the  rest  of  the  line after the '!'  shall have '%', '#', and '!'  characters expanded as described in
       Command Line Parsing in ex.

       The ex utility shall then pass two arguments to the program named by the shell  edit  option;  the  first
       shall be −c and the second shall be the expanded arguments to the write command as a single argument. The
       specified lines shall be written to the standard input of the command. The standard  error  and  standard
       output of the program, if any, shall be written as described for the print command. If the last character
       in that output is not a <newline>, a <newline> shall be written at the end of the output.

       The special meaning of the '!'  following the write command can be  overridden  by  escaping  it  with  a
       <backslash> character.

       Current line: Unchanged.

       Current column: Unchanged.

   Write and Exit
       Synopsis:
                     [2addr] x[it][!][file]

       If  the  edit  buffer has not been modified since the last complete write, xit shall be equivalent to the
       quit command, or if a '!'  is appended to the command name, to quit!.

       Otherwise, xit shall be equivalent to the wq command, or if a '!'  is appended to the  command  name,  to
       wq!.

       Current line: Unchanged.

       Current column: Unchanged.

   Yank
       Synopsis:
                     [2addr] ya[nk][buffer][count]

       Copy  the  specified lines to the specified buffer (by default, the unnamed buffer), which shall become a
       line-mode buffer.

       Current line: Unchanged.

       Current column: Unchanged.

   Adjust Window
       Synopsis:
                     [1addr] z[!][type ...][count][flags]

       If no line is specified, the current line shall be the default; if type is omitted as well,  the  current
       line value shall first be incremented by 1. If incrementing the current line would cause it to be greater
       than the last line in the edit buffer, it shall be an error.

       If there are <blank> characters between the type argument and the preceding z command  name  or  optional
       '!'  character, it shall be an error.

       If  count  is  specified,  the  value  of  the  window edit option shall be set to count (as described in
       window).  If count is omitted, it shall default to 2 times the value of the scroll edit option, or  if  !
       was specified, the number of lines in the display minus 1.

       If  type is omitted, then count lines starting with the specified line shall be written. Otherwise, count
       lines starting with the line specified by the type argument shall be written.

       The type argument shall change the lines to be written. The possible values of type are as follows:

       −     The specified line shall be decremented by the following value:

                 (((number of ``−'' characters) x count) −1)

             If the calculation would result in a number less than 1, it shall be an error. Write lines from the
             edit  buffer,  starting  at  the  new value of line, until count lines or the last line in the edit
             buffer has been written.

       +     The specified line shall be incremented by the following value:

                 (((number of ``+'' characters) −1) x count) +1

             If the calculation would result in a number greater than the last line in the edit buffer, it shall
             be an error. Write lines from the edit buffer, starting at the new value of line, until count lines
             or the last line in the edit buffer has been written.

       =,.   If more than a single '.'  or '=' is specified, it shall be an error. The following steps shall  be
             taken:

              1. If count is zero, nothing shall be written.

              2. Write  as  many of the N lines before the current line in the edit buffer as exist. If count or
                 '!'  was specified, N shall be:

                     (count −1) /2

                 Otherwise, N shall be:

                     (count −3) /2

                 If N is a number less than 3, no lines shall be written.

              3. If '=' was specified as the type character, write a line  consisting  of  the  smaller  of  the
                 number of columns in the display divided by two, or 40 '−' characters.

              4. Write the current line.

              5. Repeat step 3.

              6. Write  as  many  of the N lines after the current line in the edit buffer as exist.  N shall be
                 defined as in step 2. If N is a number less than 3, no lines shall be written. If count is less
                 than 3, no lines shall be written.

       ^     The specified line shall be decremented by the following value:

                 (((number of ``^'' characters) +1) x count) −1

             If the calculation would result in a number less than 1, it shall be an error. Write lines from the
             edit buffer, starting at the new value of line, until count lines or the  last  line  in  the  edit
             buffer has been written.

       Current  line:  Set  to  the last line written, unless the type is =, in which case, set to the specified
       line.

       Current column: Set to non-<blank>.

   Escape
       Synopsis:
                     ! command
                     [addr]! command

       The contents of the line after the '!'  shall have '%', '#', and '!'  characters expanded as described in
       Command  Line  Parsing  in  ex.   If  the  expansion  causes  the text of the line to change, it shall be
       redisplayed, preceded by a single '!'  character.

       The ex utility shall execute the program named by the shell edit option. It shall pass two  arguments  to
       the program; the first shall be −c, and the second shall be the expanded arguments to the !  command as a
       single argument.

       If no lines are specified, the standard input, standard output, and standard error of the  program  shall
       be  set to the standard input, standard output, and standard error of the ex program when it was invoked.
       In addition, a warning message shall be written if the edit buffer  has  been  modified  since  the  last
       complete write, and the warn edit option is set.

       If  lines  are  specified, they shall be passed to the program as standard input, and the standard output
       and standard error of the program shall replace those lines in the edit buffer. Each line in the  program
       output  (as  delimited by <newline> characters or the end of the output if it is not immediately preceded
       by a <newline>), shall be a separate line in the edit buffer. Any occurrences  of  <carriage-return>  and
       <newline>  pairs in the output shall be treated as single <newline> characters. The specified lines shall
       be copied into the unnamed buffer before they are replaced, and the unnamed buffer shall become  a  line-
       mode buffer.

       If in ex mode, a single '!'  character shall be written when the program completes.

       This  command  shall  be  affected  by  the  shell and warn edit options. If no lines are specified, this
       command shall be affected by the autowrite and writeany  edit  options.  If  lines  are  specified,  this
       command shall be affected by the autoprint edit option.

       Current line:

        1. If no lines are specified, unchanged.

        2. Otherwise, set to the last line read in, if any lines are read in.

        3. Otherwise, set to the line before the first line of the lines specified, if that line exists.

        4. Otherwise, set to the first line of the edit buffer if the edit buffer is not empty.

        5. Otherwise, set to zero.

       Current column: If no lines are specified, unchanged. Otherwise, set to non-<blank>.

   Shift Left
       Synopsis:
                     [2addr] <[< ...][count][flags]

       Shift the specified lines to the start of the line; the number of column positions to be shifted shall be
       the number of command characters times the value of the shiftwidth  edit  option.  Only  leading  <blank>
       characters  shall be deleted or changed into other <blank> characters in shifting; other characters shall
       not be affected.

       Lines to be shifted shall be copied into the unnamed buffer, which shall become a line-mode buffer.

       This command shall be affected by the autoprint edit option.

       Current line: Set to the last line in the lines specified.

       Current column: Set to non-<blank>.

   Shift Right
       Synopsis:
                     [2addr] >[> ...][count][flags]

       Shift the specified lines away from the start of the line; the number of column positions to  be  shifted
       shall  be the number of command characters times the value of the shiftwidth edit option. The shift shall
       be accomplished by adding <blank> characters as  a  prefix  to  the  line  or  changing  leading  <blank>
       characters into other <blank> characters. Empty lines shall not be changed.

       Lines to be shifted shall be copied into the unnamed buffer, which shall become a line-mode buffer.

       This command shall be affected by the autoprint edit option.

       Current line: Set to the last line in the lines specified.

       Current column: Set to non-<blank>.

   <control>‐D
       Synopsis:
                     <control>-D

       Write  the next n lines, where n is the minimum of the values of the scroll edit option and the number of
       lines after the current line in the edit buffer. If the current line is the last line of the edit  buffer
       it shall be an error.

       Current line: Set to the last line written.

       Current column: Set to non-<blank>.

   Write Line Number
       Synopsis:
                     [1addr] = [flags]

       If line is not specified, it shall default to the last line in the edit buffer.  Write the line number of
       the specified line.

       Current line: Unchanged.

       Current column: Unchanged.

   Execute
       Synopsis:
                     [2addr] @ buffer
                     [2addr] * buffer

       If no buffer is specified or is specified as '@' or '*', the last buffer executed shall be  used.  If  no
       previous buffer has been executed, it shall be an error.

       For  each line specified by the addresses, set the current line ('.')  to the specified line, and execute
       the contents of the named buffer (as they were at the time the @ command was executed)  as  ex  commands.
       For each line of a line-mode buffer, and all but the last line of a character-mode buffer, the ex command
       parser shall behave as if the line was terminated by a <newline>.

       If an error occurs during this process, or a line specified by the addresses  does  not  exist  when  the
       current  line  would  be  set  to  it, or more than a single line was specified by the addresses, and the
       contents of the edit buffer are replaced (for example, by the ex :edit command) an error message shall be
       written, and no more commands resulting from the execution of this command shall be processed.

       Current line: As specified for the individual ex commands.

       Current column: As specified for the individual ex commands.

   Regular Expressions in ex
       The  ex  utility  shall  support regular expressions that are a superset of the basic regular expressions
       described in the Base Definitions volume of POSIX.1‐2008, Section 9.3, Basic Regular Expressions.  A null
       regular expression ("//") shall be equivalent to the last regular expression encountered.

       Regular  expressions  can  be  used in addresses to specify lines and, in some commands (for example, the
       substitute command), to specify portions of a line to be substituted.

       The following constructs can be used to enhance the basic regular expressions:

       \<    Match the beginning of  a  word.   (See  the  definition  of  word  at  the  beginning  of  Command
             Descriptions in ex.)

       \>    Match the end of a word.

       ~     Match  the  replacement  part  of  the  last substitute command. The <tilde> ('~') character can be
             escaped in a regular expression  to  become  a  normal  character  with  no  special  meaning.  The
             <backslash> shall be discarded.

       When  the  editor  option magic is not set, the only characters with special meanings shall be '^' at the
       beginning of a pattern, '$' at the end of a pattern, and <backslash>.  The characters '.', '*', '[',  and
       '~'  shall  be  treated  as  ordinary  characters  unless  preceded  by a <backslash>; when preceded by a
       <backslash> they shall regain their special meaning, or in the case  of  <backslash>,  be  handled  as  a
       single <backslash>.  <backslash> characters used to escape other characters shall be discarded.

   Replacement Strings in ex
       The  character '&' ('\&' if the editor option magic is not set) in the replacement string shall stand for
       the text matched by the pattern to be replaced. The character '~' ('\~' if magic is  not  set)  shall  be
       replaced  by  the  replacement  part of the previous substitute command. The sequence '\n', where n is an
       integer, shall be replaced by the text matched by the corresponding  back-reference  expression.  If  the
       corresponding back-reference expression does not match, then the characters '\n' shall be replaced by the
       empty string.

       The strings '\l', '\u', '\L', and '\U' can be used to modify the case  of  elements  in  the  replacement
       string  (using  the  '\&'  or  "\"digit)  notation. The string '\l' ('\u') shall cause the character that
       follows to be converted to lowercase (uppercase). The string  '\L'  ('\U')  shall  cause  all  characters
       subsequent  to it to be converted to lowercase (uppercase) as they are inserted by the substitution until
       the string '\e' or '\E', or the end of the replacement string, is encountered.

       Otherwise, any character following a <backslash> shall be treated as  that  literal  character,  and  the
       escaping <backslash> shall be discarded.

       An example of case conversion with the s command is as follows:

           :p
           The cat sat on the mat.
           :s/\<.at\>/\u&/gp
           The Cat Sat on the Mat.
           :s/S\(.*\)M/S\U\1\eM/p
           The Cat SAT ON THE Mat.

   Edit Options in ex
       The  ex  utility  has  a number of options that modify its behavior. These options have default settings,
       which can be changed using the set command.

       Options are Boolean unless otherwise specified.

   autoindent, ai
       [Default unset]

       If autoindent is set, each line in input mode shall be indented (using first as many <tab> characters  as
       possible,  as  determined  by the editor option tabstop, and then using <space> characters) to align with
       another line, as follows:

        1. If in open or visual mode and the text input is part of a line-oriented  command  (see  the  EXTENDED
           DESCRIPTION in vi), align to the first column.

        2. Otherwise, if in open or visual mode, indentation for each line shall be set as follows:

            a. If  a line was previously inserted as part of this command, it shall be set to the indentation of
               the last inserted line by default, or as otherwise specified for  the  <control>‐D  character  in
               Input Mode Commands in vi.

            b. Otherwise, it shall be set to the indentation of the previous current line, if any; otherwise, to
               the first column.

        3. For the ex a, i, and c commands, indentation for each line shall be set as follows:

            a. If a line was previously inserted as part of this command, it shall be set to the indentation  of
               the last inserted line by default, or as otherwise specified for the eof character in Scroll.

            b. Otherwise,  if  the  command  is the ex a command, it shall be set to the line appended after, if
               any; otherwise to the first column.

            c. Otherwise, if the command is the ex i command, it shall be set to the line  inserted  before,  if
               any; otherwise to the first column.

            d. Otherwise,  if  the  command  is the ex c command, it shall be set to the indentation of the line
               replaced.

   autoprint, ap
       [Default set]

       If autoprint is set, the current line shall be written after each ex command that modifies  the  contents
       of  the current edit buffer, and after each tag command for which the tag search pattern was found or tag
       line number was valid, unless:

        1. The command was executed while in open or visual mode.

        2. The command was executed as part of a global or v command or @ buffer execution.

        3. The command was the form of the read command that reads a file into the edit buffer.

        4. The command was the append, change, or insert command.

        5. The command was not terminated by a <newline>.

        6. The current line shall be written by a flag specified to the command; for  example,  delete  #  shall
           write the current line as specified for the flag modifier to the delete command, and not as specified
           by the autoprint edit option.

   autowrite, aw
       [Default unset]

       If autowrite is set, and the edit buffer has been modified since it was last completely  written  to  any
       file,  the  contents  of  the  edit buffer shall be written as if the ex write command had been specified
       without arguments, before each command affected by the autowrite edit option is executed.  Appending  the
       character  '!'  to the command name of any of the ex commands except '!'  shall prevent the write. If the
       write fails, it shall be an error and the command shall not be executed.

   beautify, bf
       [Default unset]

       If beautify  is  set,  all  non-printable  characters,  other  than  <tab>,  <newline>,  and  <form-feed>
       characters, shall be discarded from text read in from files.

   directory, dir
       [Default implementation-defined]

       The  value  of  this  option  specifies the directory in which the editor buffer is to be placed. If this
       directory is not writable by the user, the editor shall quit.

   edcompatible, ed
       [Default unset]

       Causes the presence of g and c suffixes on substitute commands to be remembered, and toggled by repeating
       the suffixes.

   errorbells, eb
       [Default unset]

       If  the  editor is in ex mode, and the terminal does not support a standout mode (such as inverse video),
       and errorbells is set, error messages shall be preceded by alerting the terminal.

   exrc
       [Default unset]

       If exrc is set, ex shall access any .exrc file in the current directory, as described  in  Initialization
       in  ex  and  vi.   If  exrc  is  not  set, ex shall ignore any .exrc file in the current directory during
       initialization, unless the current directory is that named by the HOME environment variable.

   ignorecase, ic
       [Default unset]

       If ignorecase is set, characters that have uppercase  and  lowercase  representations  shall  have  those
       representations considered as equivalent for purposes of regular expression comparison.

       The  ignorecase  edit  option shall affect all remembered regular expressions; for example, unsetting the
       ignorecase edit option shall cause a subsequent vi n  command  to  search  for  the  last  basic  regular
       expression in a case-sensitive fashion.

   list
       [Default unset]

       If  list is set, edit buffer lines written while in ex command mode shall be written as specified for the
       print command with the l flag specified. In open or visual mode, each edit buffer line shall be displayed
       as  specified for the ex print command with the l flag specified. In open or visual text input mode, when
       the cursor does not rest on any character in the line, it shall rest on the '$' marking the  end  of  the
       line.

   magic
       [Default set]

       If  magic  is  set,  modify  the  interpretation  of  characters  in regular expressions and substitution
       replacement strings (see Regular Expressions in ex and Replacement Strings in ex).

   mesg
       [Default set]

       If mesg is set, the permission for others to use the write or talk commands  to  write  to  the  terminal
       shall  be  turned  on  while in open or visual mode. The shell-level command mesg n shall take precedence
       over any setting of the ex mesg option; that is, if mesg y was issued before the editor started (or in  a
       shell escape), such as:

           :!mesg y

       the  mesg  option  in  ex shall suppress incoming messages, but the mesg option shall not enable incoming
       messages if mesg n was issued.

   number, nu
       [Default unset]

       If number is set, edit buffer lines written while in ex command mode shall be written with line  numbers,
       in  the format specified by the print command with the # flag specified. In ex text input mode, each line
       shall be preceded by the line number it will have in the file.

       In open or visual mode, each edit buffer line shall be displayed with a preceding  line  number,  in  the
       format  specified  by  the  ex  print  command  with  the # flag specified. This line number shall not be
       considered part of the line for the purposes of evaluating the current column; that is, column position 1
       shall be the first column position after the format specified by the print command.

   paragraphs, para
       [Default in the POSIX locale IPLPPPQPP LIpplpipbp]

       The  paragraphs  edit  option  shall  define additional paragraph boundaries for the open and visual mode
       commands. The paragraphs edit option can be set  to  a  character  string  consisting  of  zero  or  more
       character pairs. It shall be an error to set it to an odd number of characters.

   prompt
       [Default set]

       If prompt is set, ex command mode input shall be prompted for with a <colon> (':'); when unset, no prompt
       shall be written.

   readonly
       [Default see text]

       If the readonly edit option is set, read-only mode shall be  enabled  (see  Write).   The  readonly  edit
       option shall be initialized to set if either of the following conditions are true:

        *  The command-line option −R was specified.

        *  Performing  actions equivalent to the access() function called with the following arguments indicates
           that the file lacks write permission:

            1. The current pathname is used as the path argument.

            2. The constant W_OK is used as the amode argument.

       The readonly edit option may be  initialized  to  set  for  other,  implementation-defined  reasons.  The
       readonly  edit  option  shall  not be initialized to unset based on any special privileges of the user or
       process. The readonly edit option shall be reinitialized each time that the contents of the  edit  buffer
       are  replaced  (for  example, by an edit or next command) unless the user has explicitly set it, in which
       case it shall remain set until the user explicitly unsets it. Once unset, it shall again be reinitialized
       each time that the contents of the edit buffer are replaced.

   redraw
       [Default unset]

       The  editor  simulates  an  intelligent  terminal on a dumb terminal.  (Since this is likely to require a
       large amount of output to the terminal, it is useful only at high transmission speeds.)

   remap
       [Default set]

       If remap is set, map translation shall allow for maps defined in terms of other maps;  translation  shall
       continue until a final product is obtained. If unset, only a one-step translation shall be done.

   report
       [Default 5]

       The  value  of  this  report  edit option specifies what number of lines being added, copied, deleted, or
       modified in the edit buffer will cause an informational message to be written to the user. The  following
       conditions  shall  cause  an  informational message. The message shall contain the number of lines added,
       copied, deleted, or modified, but is otherwise unspecified.

        *  An ex or vi editor command, other than open, undo, or visual, that modifies at least the value of the
           report  edit  option number of lines, and which is not part of an ex global or v command, or ex or vi
           buffer execution, shall cause an informational message to be written.

        *  An ex yank or vi y or Y command, that copies at least the value of the  report  edit  option  plus  1
           number  of  lines,  and which is not part of an ex global or v command, or ex or vi buffer execution,
           shall cause an informational message to be written.

        *  An ex global, v, open, undo, or visual command or ex or vi buffer execution, that adds or  deletes  a
           total of at least the value of the report edit option number of lines, and which is not part of an ex
           global or v command, or ex or vi buffer  execution,  shall  cause  an  informational  message  to  be
           written.   (For  example,  if  3  lines were added and 8 lines deleted during an ex visual command, 5
           would be the number compared against the report edit option after the command completed.)

   scroll, scr
       [Default (number of lines in the display −1)/2]

       The value of the scroll edit option shall determine the number of lines scrolled by  the  ex  <control>‐D
       and  z commands. For the vi <control>‐D and <control>‐U commands, it shall be the initial number of lines
       to scroll when no previous <control>‐D or <control>‐U command has been executed.

   sections
       [Default in the POSIX locale NHSHH HUnhsh]

       The sections edit option shall define  additional  section  boundaries  for  the  open  and  visual  mode
       commands.  The sections edit option can be set to a character string consisting of zero or more character
       pairs; it shall be an error to set it to an odd number of characters.

   shell, sh
       [Default from the environment variable SHELL]

       The value of this option shall be a string. The  default  shall  be  taken  from  the  SHELL  environment
       variable.  If  the  SHELL  environment  variable  is  null or empty, the sh (see sh) utility shall be the
       default.

   shiftwidth, sw
       [Default 8]

       The value of this  option  shall  give  the  width  in  columns  of  an  indentation  level  used  during
       autoindentation and by the shift commands (< and >).

   showmatch, sm
       [Default unset]

       The  functionality  described for the showmatch edit option need not be supported on block-mode terminals
       or terminals with insufficient capabilities.

       If showmatch is set, in open or visual mode, when a ')' or '}' is typed, if the matching '('  or  '{'  is
       currently  visible  on  the  display,  the  matching '(' or '{' shall be flagged moving the cursor to its
       location for an unspecified amount of time.

   showmode
       [Default unset]

       If showmode is set, in open or visual mode, the current mode that the editor is in shall be displayed  on
       the last line of the display. Command mode and text input mode shall be differentiated; other unspecified
       modes and implementation-defined information may be displayed.

   slowopen
       [Default unset]

       If slowopen is set during open and visual text input modes, the editor shall not update portions  of  the
       display  other than those display line columns that display the characters entered by the user (see Input
       Mode Commands in vi).

   tabstop, ts
       [Default 8]

       The value of this edit option shall specify the column boundary used by  a  <tab>  in  the  display  (see
       autoprint, ap and Input Mode Commands in vi).

   taglength, tl
       [Default zero]

       The  value  of  this  edit  option  shall  specify  the  maximum number of characters that are considered
       significant in the user-specified tag name and in the tag name from the tags file. If the value is  zero,
       all characters in both tag names shall be significant.

   tags
       [Default see text]

       The  value  of this edit option shall be a string of <blank>-delimited pathnames of files used by the tag
       command. The default value is unspecified.

   term
       [Default from the environment variable TERM]

       The value of this edit option shall be a string. The default shall be taken from the TERM variable in the
       environment.  If  the  TERM environment variable is empty or null, the default is unspecified. The editor
       shall use the value of this edit option to determine the type of the display device.

       The results are unspecified if the  user  changes  the  value  of  the  term  edit  option  after  editor
       initialization.

   terse
       [Default unset]

       If  terse is set, error messages may be less verbose. However, except for this caveat, error messages are
       unspecified. Furthermore, not all error messages need change for different settings of this option.

   warn
       [Default set]

       If warn is set, and the contents of the edit buffer have been modified since they  were  last  completely
       written, the editor shall write a warning message before certain !  commands (see Escape).

   window
       [Default see text]

       A  value  used in open and visual mode, by the <control>‐B and <control>‐F commands, and, in visual mode,
       to specify the number of lines displayed when the screen is repainted.

       If the −w command-line option is not specified, the default value shall be set to the value of the  LINES
       environment variable. If the LINES environment variable is empty or null, the default shall be the number
       of lines in the display minus 1.

       Setting the window edit option to zero or to a value greater than the number  of  lines  in  the  display
       minus  1  (either explicitly or based on the −w option or the LINES environment variable) shall cause the
       window edit option to be set to the number of lines in the display minus 1.

       The baud rate of the terminal line may change the default in an implementation-defined manner.

   wrapmargin, wm
       [Default 0]

       If the value of this edit option is zero, it shall have no effect.

       If not in the POSIX locale, the effect of this edit option is implementation-defined.

       Otherwise, it shall specify a number of columns from the ending margin of the terminal.

       During open and visual text input modes, for each character for  which  any  part  of  the  character  is
       displayed  in  a  column that is less than wrapmargin columns from the ending margin of the display line,
       the editor shall behave as follows:

        1. If the character triggering this event is a  <blank>,  it,  and  all  immediately  preceding  <blank>
           characters  on the current line entered during the execution of the current text input command, shall
           be discarded, and the editor shall behave as if the user had entered a single <newline>  instead.  In
           addition, if the next user-entered character is a <space>, it shall be discarded as well.

        2. Otherwise,  if there are one or more <blank> characters on the current line immediately preceding the
           last group of inserted non-<blank> characters which was entered during the execution of  the  current
           text  input  command,  the  <blank>  characters shall be replaced as if the user had entered a single
           <newline> instead.

       If the autoindent edit option is set, and the events described in 1. or 2.  are  performed,  any  <blank>
       characters at or after the cursor in the current line shall be discarded.

       The  ending  margin shall be determined by the system or overridden by the user, as described for COLUMNS
       in the ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES section  and  the  Base  Definitions  volume  of  POSIX.1‐2008,  Chapter  8,
       Environment Variables.

   wrapscan, ws
       [Default set]

       If  wrapscan is set, searches (the ex / or ?  addresses, or open and visual mode /, ?, N, and n commands)
       shall wrap around the beginning or end of the edit  buffer;  when  unset,  searches  shall  stop  at  the
       beginning or end of the edit buffer.

   writeany, wa
       [Default unset]

       If writeany is set, some of the checks performed when executing the ex write commands shall be inhibited,
       as described in editor option autowrite.

EXIT STATUS

       The following exit values shall be returned:

        0    Successful completion.

       >0    An error occurred.

CONSEQUENCES OF ERRORS

       When any error is encountered and the standard input is not a terminal device file, ex  shall  not  write
       the file or return to command or text input mode, and shall terminate with a non-zero exit status.

       Otherwise,  when  an  unrecoverable error is encountered, it shall be equivalent to a SIGHUP asynchronous
       event.

       Otherwise, when an error is encountered, the editor shall behave as specified in Command Line Parsing  in
       ex.

       The following sections are informative.

APPLICATION USAGE

       If a SIGSEGV signal is received while ex is saving a file, the file might not be successfully saved.

       The next command can accept more than one file, so usage such as:

           next `ls [abc]*`

       is  valid; it would not be valid for the edit or read commands, for example, because they expect only one
       file and unspecified results occur.

EXAMPLES

       None.

RATIONALE

       The ex/vi specification  is  based  on  the  historical  practice  found  in  the  4  BSD  and  System  V
       implementations of ex and vi.

       A  restricted  editor  (both  the  historical  red  utility  and modifications to ex) were considered and
       rejected for inclusion. Neither option provided the level of security that users might expect.

       It is recognized that ex visual mode and related features would  be  difficult,  if  not  impossible,  to
       implement  satisfactorily  on a block-mode terminal, or a terminal without any form of cursor addressing;
       thus, it is not a mandatory requirement that such features should  work  on  all  terminals.  It  is  the
       intention,  however,  that  an  ex  implementation  should  provide  the  full set of capabilities on all
       terminals capable of supporting them.

   Options
       The −c replacement for +command was inspired by the −e option of sed.  Historically,  all  such  commands
       (see edit and next as well) were executed from the last line of the edit buffer. This meant, for example,
       that "+/pattern" would fail unless the wrapscan option was  set.  POSIX.1‐2008  requires  conformance  to
       historical  practice.  The  +command  option is no longer specified by POSIX.1‐2008 but may be present in
       some implementations. Historically, some implementations restricted the ex commands that could be  listed
       as part of the command line arguments.  For consistency, POSIX.1‐2008 does not permit these restrictions.

       In  historical implementations of the editor, the −R option (and the readonly edit option) only prevented
       overwriting of files; appending to files was still permitted, mapping  loosely  into  the  csh  noclobber
       variable.  Some  implementations,  however, have not followed this semantic, and readonly does not permit
       appending either. POSIX.1‐2008 follows the latter practice, believing that  it  is  a  more  obvious  and
       intuitive meaning of readonly.

       The  −s  option suppresses all interactive user feedback and is useful for editing scripts in batch jobs.
       The list of specific effects is historical practice. The terminal type ``incapable of supporting open and
       visual modes'' has historically been named ``dumb''.

       The  −t option was required because the ctags utility appears in POSIX.1‐2008 and the option is available
       in all historical implementations of ex.

       Historically, the ex and vi utilities accepted a −x option, which did encryption based on  the  algorithm
       found  in  the  historical crypt utility. The −x option for encryption, and the associated crypt utility,
       were omitted because the algorithm used was not specifiable and the export control laws of  some  nations
       make  it  difficult  to export cryptographic technology. In addition, it did not historically provide the
       level of security that users might expect.

   Standard Input
       An end-of-file condition is not equivalent to an end-of-file character.  A common end-of-file  character,
       <control>‐D, is historically an ex command.

       There  was no maximum line length in historical implementations of ex.  Specifically, as it was parsed in
       chunks, the addresses had a different maximum length than the filenames. Further, the maximum line buffer
       size  was declared as BUFSIZ, which was different lengths on different systems. This version selected the
       value of {LINE_MAX} to impose a reasonable restriction on portable usage of ex  and  to  aid  test  suite
       writers in their development of realistic tests that exercise this limit.

   Input Files
       It was an explicit decision by the standard developers that a <newline> be added to any file lacking one.
       It was believed that this feature of ex and vi was relied on by users in order to make text files lacking
       a  trailing  <newline>  more portable. It is recognized that this will require a user-specified option or
       extension for implementations that permit ex and vi to edit files of type other than text if  such  files
       are  not  otherwise  identified  by the system. It was agreed that the ability to edit files of arbitrary
       type can be useful, but it was not considered necessary to mandate that an ex  or  vi  implementation  be
       required to handle files other than text files.

       The  paragraph  in  the  INPUT  FILES  section, ``By default, ...'', is intended to close a long-standing
       security problem in ex and vi; that of the ``modeline'' or ``modelines'' edit option. This feature allows
       any  line  in  the  first  or  last  five  lines  of the file containing the strings "ex:" or "vi:" (and,
       apparently, "ei:" or "vx:") to be a line containing editor commands, and ex interprets all the text up to
       the  next  ':' or <newline> as a command. Consider the consequences, for example, of an unsuspecting user
       using ex or vi as the editor when replying to a mail message in which a line such as:

           ex:! rm −rf :

       appeared in the signature lines. The standard developers believed strongly that an editor should  not  by
       default  interpret  any  lines  of  a  file. Vendors are strongly urged to delete this feature from their
       implementations of ex and vi.

   Asynchronous Events
       The intention of the phrase ``complete write'' is that the  entire  edit  buffer  be  written  to  stable
       storage.  The  note regarding temporary files is intended for implementations that use temporary files to
       back edit buffers unnamed by the user.

       Historically, SIGQUIT was ignored by ex, but was the equivalent of the Q command in visual mode; that is,
       it  exited  visual  mode  and entered ex mode. POSIX.1‐2008 permits, but does not require, this behavior.
       Historically, SIGINT was often used by vi users to terminate text input mode (<control>‐C is often easier
       to  enter  than <ESC>).  Some implementations of vi alerted the terminal on this event, and some did not.
       POSIX.1‐2008 requires that SIGINT behave identically to <ESC>, and that the terminal not be alerted.

       Historically, suspending the ex editor during text input mode was similar to SIGINT, as  completed  lines
       were  retained,  but any partial line discarded, and the editor returned to command mode. POSIX.1‐2008 is
       silent on this issue; implementations are encouraged to follow historical practice, where possible.

       Historically, the vi editor did not treat  SIGTSTP  as  an  asynchronous  event,  and  it  was  therefore
       impossible  to  suspend  the editor in visual text input mode.  There are two major reasons for this. The
       first is that SIGTSTP is a broadcast signal on UNIX systems, and the chain  of  events  where  the  shell
       execs  an  application  that then execs vi usually caused confusion for the terminal state if SIGTSTP was
       delivered to the process group in the default manner. The second was that  most  implementations  of  the
       UNIX  curses  package  did  not handle SIGTSTP safely, and the receipt of SIGTSTP at the wrong time would
       cause them to crash. POSIX.1‐2008 is silent on  this  issue;  implementations  are  encouraged  to  treat
       suspension as an asynchronous event if possible.

       Historically, modifications to the edit buffer made before SIGINT interrupted an operation were retained;
       that is, anywhere from zero to all of the lines to be modified might have been modified by the  time  the
       SIGINT  arrived.  These  changes  were  not discarded by the arrival of SIGINT. POSIX.1‐2008 permits this
       behavior, noting that the undo command is required to be able to undo these partially completed commands.

       The action taken for signals other than SIGINT, SIGCONT, SIGHUP, and SIGTERM is unspecified because  some
       implementations attempt to save the edit buffer in a useful state when other signals are received.

   Standard Error
       For  ex/vi,  diagnostic messages are those messages reported as a result of a failed attempt to invoke ex
       or vi, such as  invalid  options  or  insufficient  resources,  or  an  abnormal  termination  condition.
       Diagnostic  messages should not be confused with the error messages generated by inappropriate or illegal
       user commands.

   Initialization in ex and vi
       If an ex command (other than cd, chdir, or source) has a filename argument, one or both of the  alternate
       and current pathnames will be set. Informally, they are set as follows:

        1. If  the ex command is one that replaces the contents of the edit buffer, and it succeeds, the current
           pathname will be set to the filename argument (the first filename argument in the case  of  the  next
           command) and the alternate pathname will be set to the previous current pathname, if there was one.

        2. In  the  case  of  the  file  read/write forms of the read and write commands, if there is no current
           pathname, the current pathname will be set to the filename argument.

        3. Otherwise, the alternate pathname will be set to the filename argument.

       For example, :edit foo and :recover foo, when successful, set the current pathname, and, if there  was  a
       previous  current  pathname, the alternate pathname. The commands :write, !command, and :edit set neither
       the current or alternate pathnames. If the :edit foo command were to fail for some reason, the  alternate
       pathname  would  be  set.  The read and write commands set the alternate pathname to their file argument,
       unless the current pathname is not set, in which case  they  set  the  current  pathname  to  their  file
       arguments.  The alternate pathname was not historically set by the :source command. POSIX.1‐2008 requires
       conformance to historical practice.  Implementations adding commands that take filenames as arguments are
       encouraged to set the alternate pathname as described here.

       Historically,  ex  and vi read the .exrc file in the $HOME directory twice, if the editor was executed in
       the $HOME directory. POSIX.1‐2008 prohibits this behavior.

       Historically, the 4 BSD ex and vi read the $HOME and local .exrc files if they were owned by the real  ID
       of  the  user,  or  the sourceany option was set, regardless of other considerations. This was a security
       problem because it is possible to put normal UNIX system commands inside a .exrc file. POSIX.1‐2008  does
       not specify the sourceany option, and historical implementations are encouraged to delete it.

       The  .exrc  files  must  be  owned  by the real ID of the user, and not writable by anyone other than the
       owner. The appropriate privileges exception is intended to permit users to  acquire  special  privileges,
       but continue to use the .exrc files in their home directories.

       System  V Release 3.2 and later vi implementations added the option [no]exrc.  The behavior is that local
       .exrc files are read-only if the exrc option is set. The default for the  exrc  option  was  off,  so  by
       default,  local  .exrc  files  were  not  read.  The problem this was intended to solve was that System V
       permitted users to give away files, so there is no possible ownership or writeability test to ensure that
       the  file is safe. This is still a security problem on systems where users can give away files, but there
       is nothing additional that POSIX.1‐2008 can do.  The  implementation-defined  exception  is  intended  to
       permit  groups  to  have  local .exrc files that are shared by users, by creating pseudo-users to own the
       shared files.

       POSIX.1‐2008 does not mention system-wide  ex  and  vi  start-up  files.  While  they  exist  in  several
       implementations  of ex and vi, they are not present in any implementations considered historical practice
       by POSIX.1‐2008. Implementations that have such files should use them only if they are owned by the  real
       user  ID  or  an appropriate user (for example, root on UNIX systems) and if they are not writable by any
       user other than their owner. System-wide start-up files  should  be  read  before  the  EXINIT  variable,
       $HOME/.exrc, or local .exrc files are evaluated.

       Historically,  any  ex  command  could be entered in the EXINIT variable or the .exrc file, although ones
       requiring that the edit buffer already contain lines of text generally caused historical  implementations
       of  the  editor  to  drop  core.   POSIX.1‐2008  requires  that any ex command be permitted in the EXINIT
       variable and .exrc files, for simplicity of specification and consistency, although  many  of  them  will
       obviously fail under many circumstances.

       The initialization of the contents of the edit buffer uses the phrase ``the effect shall be'' with regard
       to various ex commands. The intent of this  phrase  is  that  edit  buffer  contents  loaded  during  the
       initialization  phase not be lost; that is, loading the edit buffer should fail if the .exrc file read in
       the contents of a file and did not subsequently write the edit  buffer.  An  additional  intent  of  this
       phrase  is  to specify that the initial current line and column is set as specified for the individual ex
       commands.

       Historically, the −t option behaved as if the tag search were a +command; that is, it was  executed  from
       the  last line of the file specified by the tag. This resulted in the search failing if the pattern was a
       forward search pattern and the wrapscan edit option was  not  set.  POSIX.1‐2008  does  not  permit  this
       behavior,  requiring  that  the  search  for the tag pattern be performed on the entire file, and, if not
       found, that the current line be set to a more reasonable location in the file.

       Historically, the empty edit buffer presented for editing when a file was not specified by the  user  was
       unnamed.  This  is  permitted by POSIX.1‐2008; however, implementations are encouraged to provide users a
       temporary filename for this buffer because it permits them the use of ex commands that  use  the  current
       pathname during temporary edit sessions.

       Historically,  the  file  specified  using  the −t option was not part of the current argument list. This
       practice is permitted by POSIX.1‐2008; however, implementations are encouraged to include its name in the
       current argument list for consistency.

       Historically,  the  −c  command  was  generally not executed until a file that already exists was edited.
       POSIX.1‐2008 requires conformance to this historical practice.  Commands that could cause the −c  command
       to  be  executed  include  the  ex  commands  edit,  next,  recover, rewind, and tag, and the vi commands
       <control>‐^ and <control>‐].  Historically, reading a file into an edit  buffer  did  not  cause  the  −c
       command  to  be  executed  (even though it might set the current pathname) with the exception that it did
       cause the −c command to be executed if: the editor was in  ex  mode,  the  edit  buffer  had  no  current
       pathname,  the  edit  buffer  was empty, and no read commands had yet been attempted. For consistency and
       simplicity of specification, POSIX.1‐2008 does not permit this behavior.

       Historically, the −r option was the same as a normal edit session if there was  no  recovery  information
       available for the file. This allowed users to enter:

           vi −r *.c

       and  recover whatever files were recoverable. In some implementations, recovery was attempted only on the
       first file named, and the file was not entered into the argument list; in others, recovery was  attempted
       for  each  file named. In addition, some historical implementations ignored −r if −t was specified or did
       not support command  line  file  arguments  with  the  −t  option.  For  consistency  and  simplicity  of
       specification,  POSIX.1‐2008  disallows  these special cases, and requires that recovery be attempted the
       first time each file is edited.

       Historically, vi initialized the ` and ' marks, but ex did not. This meant that if the first  command  in
       ex  mode  was  visual  or  if an ex command was executed first (for example, vi +10 file), vi was entered
       without the marks being initialized. Because the standard developers believed the marks to  be  generally
       useful,  and  for  consistency and simplicity of specification, POSIX.1‐2008 requires that they always be
       initialized if in open or visual mode, or  if  in  ex  mode  and  the  edit  buffer  is  not  empty.  Not
       initializing  it  in  ex  mode if the edit buffer is empty is historical practice; however, it has always
       been possible to set (and use) marks in empty edit buffers in open and visual mode edit sessions.

   Addressing
       Historically, ex and vi accepted the additional addressing forms '\/' and '\?'.  They were equivalent  to
       "//"  and  "??",  respectively. They are not required by POSIX.1‐2008, mostly because nobody can remember
       whether they ever did anything different historically.

       Historically, ex and vi permitted an address of zero for several commands, and permitted the % address in
       empty files for others. For consistency, POSIX.1‐2008 requires support for the former in the few commands
       where it makes sense, and disallows it otherwise. In addition, because POSIX.1‐2008 requires  that  %  be
       logically equivalent to "1,$", it is also supported where it makes sense and disallowed otherwise.

       Historically, the % address could not be followed by further addresses. For consistency and simplicity of
       specification, POSIX.1‐2008 requires that additional addresses be supported.

       All of the following are valid addresses:

       +++       Three lines after the current line.

       /re/−     One line before the next occurrence of re.

       −2        Two lines before the current line.

       3 −−−− 2  Line one (note intermediate negative address).

       1 2 3     Line six.

       Any number of addresses can be provided to commands taking addresses; for  example,  "1,2,3,4,5p"  prints
       lines 4 and 5, because two is the greatest valid number of addresses accepted by the print command. This,
       in combination with the <semicolon> delimiter, permits users to create commands based on ordered patterns
       in  the  file.  For  example,  the  command 3;/foo/;+2print will display the first line after line 3 that
       contains the pattern foo, plus the next two lines. Note that the address  3;  must  be  evaluated  before
       being discarded because the search origin for the /foo/ command depends on this.

       Historically,  values could be added to addresses by including them after one or more <blank> characters;
       for example, 3  5p wrote the seventh line of the file, and /foo/ 5 was the same  as  /foo/+5.   However,
       only absolute values could be added; for example, 5 /foo/ was an error. POSIX.1‐2008 requires conformance
       to historical practice.  Address offsets are separately  specified  from  addresses  because  they  could
       historically be provided to visual mode search commands.

       Historically, any missing addresses defaulted to the current line. This was true for leading and trailing
       <comma>-delimited  addresses,  and  for  trailing  <semicolon>-delimited  addresses.   For   consistency,
       POSIX.1‐2008 requires it for leading <semicolon> addresses as well.

       Historically,  ex and vi accepted the '^' character as both an address and as a flag offset for commands.
       In both cases it was identical to the '−' character. POSIX.1‐2008  does  not  require  or  prohibit  this
       behavior.

       Historically,  the  enhancements  to  basic regular expressions could be used in addressing; for example,
       '~', '\<', and '\>'.  POSIX.1‐2008 requires conformance to historical practice;  that  is,  that  regular
       expression  usage  be  consistent, and that regular expression enhancements be supported wherever regular
       expressions are used.

   Command Line Parsing in ex
       Historical ex command parsing was even more complex than that described here. POSIX.1‐2008  requires  the
       subset  of  the command parsing that the standard developers believed was documented and that users could
       reasonably be expected to use in a  portable  fashion,  and  that  was  historically  consistent  between
       implementations.  (The  discarded  functionality  is  obscure, at best.)  Historical implementations will
       require changes in order to comply with POSIX.1‐2008; however, users are not expected to  notice  any  of
       these changes.  Most of the complexity in ex parsing is to handle three special termination cases:

        1. The  !,  global, v, and the filter versions of the read and write commands are delimited by <newline>
           characters (they can contain <vertical-line> characters that are usually shell pipes).

        2. The ex, edit, next, and visual in open and visual mode commands  all  take  ex  commands,  optionally
           containing <vertical-line> characters, as their first arguments.

        3. The s command takes a regular expression as its first argument, and uses the delimiting characters to
           delimit the command.

       Historically, <vertical-line> characters in the +command argument of the ex, edit, next, vi,  and  visual
       commands,  and in the pattern and replacement parts of the s command, did not delimit the command, and in
       the filter cases for read and write, and the !, global, and v commands, they did not delimit the  command
       at all. For example, the following commands are all valid:

           :edit +25 | s/abc/ABC/ file.c
           :s/ | /PIPE/
           :read !spell % | columnate
           :global/pattern/p | l
           :s/a/b/ | s/c/d | set

       Historically, empty or <blank> filled lines in .exrc files and sourced files (as well as EXINIT variables
       and ex command scripts)  were  treated  as  default  commands;  that  is,  print  commands.  POSIX.1‐2008
       specifically  requires  that  they  be ignored when encountered in .exrc and sourced files to eliminate a
       common source of new user error.

       Historically, ex commands with multiple adjacent (or <blank>-separated) vertical lines were handled oddly
       when  executed  from ex mode. For example, the command ||| <carriage-return>, when the cursor was on line
       1, displayed lines 2, 3, and 5 of the file.  In addition, the command | would only display the line after
       the  next  line,  instead  of  the next two lines. The former worked more logically when executed from vi
       mode, and displayed lines 2, 3, and 4. POSIX.1‐2008 requires the vi behavior; that is, a  single  default
       command  and  line  number  increment for each command separator, and trailing <newline> characters after
       <vertical-line> separators are discarded.

       Historically, ex permitted  a  single  extra  <colon>  as  a  leading  command  character;  for  example,
       :g/pattern/:p  was  a  valid command. POSIX.1‐2008 generalizes this to require that any number of leading
       <colon> characters be stripped.

       Historically, any prefix of the delete command could be followed without intervening  <blank>  characters
       by  a flag character because in the command d p, p is interpreted as the buffer p.  POSIX.1‐2008 requires
       conformance to historical practice.

       Historically, the k command could be followed by the mark name without  intervening  <blank>  characters.
       POSIX.1‐2008 requires conformance to historical practice.

       Historically,  the  s  command  could be immediately followed by flag and option characters; for example,
       s/e/E/|s|sgc3p was a valid command. However, flag characters could not  stand  alone;  for  example,  the
       commands  sp  and  s l would fail, while the command sgp and s gl would succeed. (Obviously, the '#' flag
       character was used as a delimiter character if it followed the command.) Another issue  was  that  option
       characters  had  to  precede  flag characters even when the command was fully specified; for example, the
       command s/e/E/pg would fail, while the command s/e/E/gp would succeed. POSIX.1‐2008 requires  conformance
       to historical practice.

       Historically,  the first command name that had a prefix matching the input from the user was the executed
       command; for example, ve, ver, and vers all executed the version command. Commands  were  in  a  specific
       order,  however,  so  that  a  matched  append,  not  abbreviate.   POSIX.1‐2008  requires conformance to
       historical practice. The restriction on command search order for implementations with  extensions  is  to
       avoid the addition of commands such that the historical prefixes would fail to work portably.

       Historical  implementations  of  ex  and  vi  did not correctly handle multiple ex commands, separated by
       <vertical-line> characters, that entered or exited visual mode or the editor. Because implementations  of
       vi exist that do not exhibit this failure mode, POSIX.1‐2008 does not permit it.

       The  requirement  that  alphabetic command names consist of all following alphabetic characters up to the
       next non-alphabetic character means that alphabetic command names must be separated from their  arguments
       by  one  or more non-alphabetic characters, normally a <blank> or '!'  character, except as specified for
       the exceptions, the delete, k, and s commands.

       Historically, the repeated execution of the ex  default  print  commands  (<control>‐D,  eof,  <newline>,
       <carriage-return>)  erased  any  prompting  character  and displayed the next lines without scrolling the
       terminal; that is, immediately below any previously displayed lines. This provided a cleaner presentation
       of  the  lines  in  the  file for the user. POSIX.1‐2008 does not require this behavior because it may be
       impossible in some situations; however, implementations are strongly encouraged to provide this  semantic
       if possible.

       Historically,  it  was  possible  to  change  files  in the middle of a command, and have the rest of the
       command executed in the new file; for example:

           :edit +25 file.c | s/abc/ABC/ | 1

       was a valid command, and the substitution was attempted in the newly edited file.  POSIX.1‐2008  requires
       conformance to historical practice. The following commands are examples that exercise the ex parser:

           echo 'foo | bar' > file1; echo 'foo/bar' > file2;
           vi
           :edit +1 | s/|/PIPE/ | w file1 | e file2 | 1 | s/\//SLASH/ | wq

       Historically,  there  was no protection in editor implementations to avoid ex global, v, @, or * commands
       changing edit buffers during execution of their associated commands. Because this would almost invariably
       result  in  catastrophic failure of the editor, and implementations exist that do exhibit these problems,
       POSIX.1‐2008 requires that changing the edit buffer during a global or v command, or  during  a  @  or  *
       command  for  which  there  will be more than a single execution, be an error. Implementations supporting
       multiple edit buffers simultaneously are strongly encouraged to apply the  same  semantics  to  switching
       between buffers as well.

       The   ex  command  quoting  required  by  POSIX.1‐2008  is  a  superset  of  the  quoting  in  historical
       implementations of the editor. For example, it was not historically possible to escape  a  <blank>  in  a
       filename;  for  example,  :edit foo\\\ bar  would report that too many filenames had been entered for the
       edit command, and there was no method of escaping a <blank> in the first argument of an edit,  ex,  next,
       or  visual  command  at all. POSIX.1‐2008 extends historical practice, requiring that quoting behavior be
       made consistent across all ex commands, except for the map, unmap, abbreviate, and unabbreviate commands,
       which  historically  used  <control>‐V  instead  of  <backslash>  characters  for quoting. For those four
       commands, POSIX.1‐2008 requires conformance to historical practice.

       Backslash quoting in ex is non-intuitive.  <backslash>-escapes are ignored unless they escape  a  special
       character;  for example, when performing file argument expansion, the string "\\%" is equivalent to '\%',
       not "\<current pathname>".  This can be confusing for users because <backslash> is  usually  one  of  the
       characters  that  causes shell expansion to be performed, and therefore shell quoting rules must be taken
       into consideration. Generally, quoting characters are only considered if they escape a special character,
       and a quoting character must be provided for each layer of parsing for which the character is special. As
       another example, only a single <backslash> is necessary for the '\l' sequence in  substitute  replacement
       patterns, because the character 'l' is not special to any parsing layer above it.

       <control>‐V  quoting  in  ex  is  slightly  different  from backslash quoting. In the four commands where
       <control>‐V quoting applies (abbreviate, unabbreviate, map, and unmap), any character may be escaped by a
       <control>‐V  whether  it  would  have  a  special  meaning  or  not. POSIX.1‐2008 requires conformance to
       historical practice.

       Historical implementations of the editor did not  require  delimiters  within  character  classes  to  be
       escaped;  for example, the command :s/[/]// on the string "xxx/yyy" would delete the '/' from the string.
       POSIX.1‐2008 disallows this historical practice for consistency and because it places a large  burden  on
       implementations by requiring that knowledge of regular expressions be built into the editor parser.

       Historically,  quoting <newline> characters in ex commands was handled inconsistently. In most cases, the
       <newline> character always terminated the command, regardless of any preceding escape character,  because
       <backslash>  characters  did  not  escape  <newline>  characters  for  most ex commands. However, some ex
       commands (for example, s, map, and abbreviation) permitted <newline> characters to be  escaped  (although
       in  the  case  of  map  and  abbreviation,  <control>‐V  characters  escaped  them instead of <backslash>
       characters). This was true in not only the command line, but also .exrc and sourced files.  For  example,
       the command:

           map = foo<control-V><newline>bar

       would  succeed,  although  it  was  sometimes difficult to get the <control>‐V and the inserted <newline>
       passed to the ex parser. For consistency and simplicity of specification, POSIX.1‐2008 requires  that  it
       be  possible to escape <newline> characters in ex commands at all times, using <backslash> characters for
       most ex commands, and using <control>‐V characters for the map and abbreviation  commands.  For  example,
       the  command print<newline>list is required to be parsed as the single command print<newline>list.  While
       this differs from historical practice, POSIX.1‐2008 developers believed it unlikely that  any  script  or
       user depended on the historical behavior.

       Historically,  an  error  in  a  command  specified  using the −c option did not cause the rest of the −c
       commands to be discarded. POSIX.1‐2008 disallows this for consistency with mapped keys,  the  @,  global,
       source, and v commands, the EXINIT environment variable, and the .exrc files.

   Input Editing in ex
       One  of the common uses of the historical ex editor is over slow network connections. Editors that run in
       canonical mode can require far less traffic to and from, and far less processing on, the host machine, as
       well  as more easily supporting block-mode terminals. For these reasons, POSIX.1‐2008 requires that ex be
       implemented using canonical mode input processing, as was done historically.

       POSIX.1‐2008 does not require the historical 4 BSD input editing characters ``word erase''  or  ``literal
       next''.  For  this  reason,  it  is  unspecified  how they are handled by ex, although they must have the
       required effect. Implementations that resolve them after the line has been ended  using  a  <newline>  or
       <control>‐M  character,  and implementations that rely on the underlying system terminal support for this
       processing, are both conforming.  Implementations  are  strongly  urged  to  use  the  underlying  system
       functionality, if at all possible, for compatibility with other system text input interfaces.

       Historically,  when  the  eof  character  was used to decrement the autoindent level, the cursor moved to
       display the new end of the autoindent characters, but did not move the cursor to a new line, nor  did  it
       erase  the  <control>‐D  character from the line. POSIX.1‐2008 does not specify that the cursor remain on
       the same line or that the rest of the line is erased; however, implementations are strongly encouraged to
       provide  the  best  possible  user interface; that is, the cursor should remain on the same line, and any
       <control>‐D character on the line should be erased.

       POSIX.1‐2008 does not require the historical 4 BSD input  editing  character  ``reprint'',  traditionally
       <control>‐R,  which  redisplayed  the  current  input  from  the  user.  For this reason, and because the
       functionality cannot be implemented after the line has been terminated by the user, POSIX.1‐2008 makes no
       requirements  about  this  functionality.  Implementations  are  strongly  urged  to make this historical
       functionality available, if possible.

       Historically, <control>‐Q did not perform a literal next function in ex, as it did in  vi.   POSIX.1‐2008
       requires conformance to historical practice to avoid breaking historical ex scripts and .exrc files.

   eof
       Whether  the  eof  character  immediately  modifies  the  autoindent  characters  in  the  prompt is left
       unspecified so that implementations can conform in the presence of  systems  that  do  not  support  this
       functionality.  Implementations  are  encouraged  to  modify  the  line  and redisplay it immediately, if
       possible.

       The specification of the handling of the eof character differs from historical practice only in that  eof
       characters  are not discarded if they follow normal characters in the text input. Historically, they were
       always discarded.

   Command Descriptions in ex
       Historically, several commands (for example, global, v, visual, s, write, wq, yank, !, <, >,  &,  and  ~)
       were executable in empty files (that is, the default address(es) were 0), or permitted explicit addresses
       of 0 (for example, 0 was a valid address, or 0,0 was a valid range). Addresses of 0, or command execution
       in  an  empty  file,  make sense only for commands that add new text to the edit buffer or write commands
       (because users may wish to write empty files). POSIX.1‐2008 requires this behavior for such commands  and
       disallows it otherwise, for consistency and simplicity of specification.

       A  count  to an ex command has been historically corrected to be no greater than the last line in a file;
       for example, in a five-line file, the command 1,6print  would  fail,  but  the  command  1print300  would
       succeed. POSIX.1‐2008 requires conformance to historical practice.

       Historically,  the  use  of  flags  in  ex  commands could be obscure. General historical practice was as
       described by POSIX.1‐2008, but there were some special cases. For instance, the list, number,  and  print
       commands  ignored trailing address offsets; for example, 3p +++# would display line 3, and 3 would be the
       current line after the execution of the command. The open and visual commands ignored both  the  trailing
       offsets  and  the trailing flags.  Also, flags specified to the open and visual commands interacted badly
       with the list edit option, and setting and then unsetting it during the open/visual session  would  cause
       vi  to  stop  displaying  lines in the specified format. For consistency and simplicity of specification,
       POSIX.1‐2008 does not permit any of these exceptions to the general rule.

       POSIX.1‐2008 uses the word copy in several places when discussing buffers. This is not intended to  imply
       implementation.

       Historically,  ex  users could not specify numeric buffers because of the ambiguity this would cause; for
       example, in the command 3 delete 2, it is unclear whether 2 is a buffer name or  a  count.   POSIX.1‐2008
       requires conformance to historical practice by default, but does not preclude extensions.

       Historically,  the  contents  of the unnamed buffer were frequently discarded after commands that did not
       explicitly affect it; for example, when using the edit command  to  switch  files.  For  consistency  and
       simplicity of specification, POSIX.1‐2008 does not permit this behavior.

       The  ex utility did not historically have access to the numeric buffers, and, furthermore, deleting lines
       in ex did not modify their contents. For example, if, after doing a delete in vi, the  user  switched  to
       ex,  did another delete, and then switched back to vi, the contents of the numeric buffers would not have
       changed. POSIX.1‐2008 requires conformance to historical practice. Numeric buffers are described  in  the
       ex utility in order to confine the description of buffers to a single location in POSIX.1‐2008.

       The  metacharacters that trigger shell expansion in file arguments match historical practice, as does the
       method for doing shell expansion. Implementations wishing to provide users with the flexibility to  alter
       the set of metacharacters are encouraged to provide a shellmeta string edit option.

       Historically,  ex  commands executed from vi refreshed the screen when it did not strictly need to do so;
       for example, :!date > /dev/null does not require a screen refresh because the output  of  the  UNIX  date
       command  requires only a single line of the screen. POSIX.1‐2008 requires that the screen be refreshed if
       it has been overwritten, but makes  no  requirements  as  to  how  an  implementation  should  make  that
       determination. Implementations may prompt and refresh the screen regardless.

   Abbreviate
       Historical  practice  was  that  characters that were entered as part of an abbreviation replacement were
       subject to map expansions, the showmatch edit option, further abbreviation expansions, and  so  on;  that
       is,  they  were  logically  pushed  onto  the  terminal  input  queue, and were not a simple replacement.
       POSIX.1‐2008 requires conformance to historical practice.  Historical practice was that whenever  a  non-
       word  character (that had not been escaped by a <control>‐V) was entered after a word character, vi would
       check for abbreviations. The check was based on the  type  of  the  character  entered  before  the  word
       character  of  the  word/non-word  pair that triggered the check. The word character of the word/non-word
       pair that triggered the check and all characters entered before the trigger pair that were of  that  type
       were  included  in  the  check,  with  the  exception  of  <blank> characters, which always delimited the
       abbreviation.

       This means that, for the abbreviation to work, the lhs must end with a word character, there  can  be  no
       transitions from word to non-word characters (or vice versa) other than between the last and next-to-last
       characters in the lhs, and there can be no <blank> characters in the lhs.  In addition,  because  of  the
       historical  quoting  rules,  it  was  impossible to enter a literal <control>‐V in the lhs.  POSIX.1‐2008
       requires conformance to historical  practice.  Historical  implementations  did  not  inform  users  when
       abbreviations that could never be used were entered; implementations are strongly encouraged to do so.

       For example, the following abbreviations will work:

           :ab (p  REPLACE
           :ab p   REPLACE
           :ab ((p REPLACE

       The following abbreviations will not work:

           :ab (   REPLACE
           :ab (pp REPLACE

       Historical  practice  is  that words on the vi colon command line were subject to abbreviation expansion,
       including the arguments to the abbrev (and more interestingly) the unabbrev command.  Because  there  are
       implementations  that  do not do abbreviation expansion for the first argument to those commands, this is
       permitted, but not required, by POSIX.1‐2008. However, the following sequence:

           :ab foo bar
           :ab foo baz

       resulted in the addition of an abbreviation of "baz" for the string "bar" in historical  ex/vi,  and  the
       sequence:

           :ab foo1 bar
           :ab foo2 bar
           :unabbreviate foo2

       deleted  the  abbreviation "foo1", not "foo2".  These behaviors are not permitted by POSIX.1‐2008 because
       they clearly violate the expectations of the user.

       It was historical practice that <control>‐V, not  <backslash>,  characters  be  interpreted  as  escaping
       subsequent  characters  in  the  abbreviate  command.  POSIX.1‐2008  requires  conformance  to historical
       practice; however, it should be noted that an abbreviation containing a <blank> will never work.

   Append
       Historically, any text following a <vertical-line> command separator after an append, change,  or  insert
       command became part of the insert text. For example, in the command:

           :g/pattern/append|stuff1

       a  line  containing  the  text  "stuff1"  would  be  appended  to each line matching pattern. It was also
       historically valid to enter:

           :append|stuff1
           stuff2
           .

       and the text on the ex command line would be appended along with the text inserted after it.   There  was
       an  historical  bug,  however,  that  the  user  had  to  enter two terminating lines (the '.'  lines) to
       terminate text input mode in this case. POSIX.1‐2008 requires conformance  to  historical  practice,  but
       disallows the historical need for multiple terminating lines.

   Change
       See  the  RATIONALE  for  the append command. Historical practice for cursor positioning after the change
       command when no text is input, is as described in POSIX.1‐2008. However, one System V  implementation  is
       known to have been modified such that the cursor is positioned on the first address specified, and not on
       the line before the first address. POSIX.1‐2008 disallows this modification for consistency.

       Historically, the change command did not support buffer arguments, although  some  implementations  allow
       the  specification  of  an  optional  buffer.  This  behavior  is  neither  required  nor  disallowed  by
       POSIX.1‐2008.

   Change Directory
       A common extension in ex implementations is to use the  elements  of  a  cdpath  edit  option  as  prefix
       directories  for path arguments to chdir that are relative pathnames and that do not have '.'  or ".." as
       their first component. Elements in the cdpath edit option are <colon>-separated.  The  initial  value  of
       the  cdpath  edit  option  is  the  value  of the shell CDPATH environment variable. This feature was not
       included in POSIX.1‐2008 because it does not exist in any of the  implementations  considered  historical
       practice.

   Copy
       Historical  implementations  of  ex permitted copies to lines inside of the specified range; for example,
       :2,5copy3 was a valid command. POSIX.1‐2008 requires conformance to historical practice.

   Delete
       POSIX.1‐2008 requires support for the historical parsing of a delete command followed by  flags,  without
       any intervening <blank> characters. For example:

       1dp     Deletes the first line and prints the line that was second.

       1delep  As for 1dp.

       1d      Deletes the first line, saving it in buffer p.

       1d p1l  (Pee-one-ell.)  Deletes  the  first  line,  saving  it in buffer p, and listing the line that was
               second.

   Edit
       Historically, any ex command could be entered as a +command argument to the edit command,  although  some
       (for  example,  insert  and append) were known to confuse historical implementations. For consistency and
       simplicity of specification, POSIX.1‐2008 requires that any command be supported as an  argument  to  the
       edit command.

       Historically,  the  command argument was executed with the current line set to the last line of the file,
       regardless of whether the edit command was executed  from  visual  mode  or  not.  POSIX.1‐2008  requires
       conformance to historical practice.

       Historically,  the  +command  specified to the edit and next commands was delimited by the first <blank>,
       and there was no way to quote them. For consistency, POSIX.1‐2008 requires that the  usual  ex  backslash
       quoting be provided.

       Historically, specifying the +command argument to the edit command required a filename to be specified as
       well; for example, :edit +100 would  always  fail.  For  consistency  and  simplicity  of  specification,
       POSIX.1‐2008 does not permit this usage to fail for that reason.

       Historically, only the cursor position of the last file edited was remembered by the editor. POSIX.1‐2008
       requires that this be supported; however, implementations are  permitted  to  remember  and  restore  the
       cursor position for any file previously edited.

   File
       Historical  versions  of  the  ex editor file command displayed a current line and number of lines in the
       edit buffer of 0 when the file was empty, while the vi <control>‐G command displayed a current  line  and
       number  of  lines  in  the  edit  buffer  of  1  in the same situation. POSIX.1‐2008 does not permit this
       discrepancy, instead requiring that a message be displayed indicating that the file is empty.

   Global
       The two-pass operation of the global and v commands is not intended to  imply  implementation,  only  the
       required result of the operation.

       The  current  line  and  column  are set as specified for the individual ex commands. This requirement is
       cumulative; that is, the current line and column must track across  all  the  commands  executed  by  the
       global or v commands.

   Insert
       See the RATIONALE for the append command.

       Historically,  insert  could  not  be used with an address of zero; that is, not when the edit buffer was
       empty. POSIX.1‐2008 requires that this command behave consistently with the append command.

   Join
       The action of the join command in relation to the special characters is only defined for the POSIX locale
       because  the correct amount of white space after a period varies; in Japanese none is required, in French
       only a single space, and so on.

   List
       The historical output of the list command was potentially ambiguous.  The  standard  developers  believed
       correcting  this  to  be  more  important than adhering to historical practice, and POSIX.1‐2008 requires
       unambiguous output.

   Map
       Historically, command mode maps only applied to command names; for example,  if  the  character  'x'  was
       mapped  to  'y',  the  command  fx  searched  for  the 'x' character, not the 'y' character. POSIX.1‐2008
       requires this behavior. Historically, entering <control>‐V as the first character of a vi command was  an
       error.  Several  implementations  have  extended the semantics of vi such that <control>‐V means that the
       subsequent command character is not mapped.  This  is  permitted,  but  not  required,  by  POSIX.1‐2008.
       Regardless,  using  <control>‐V  to escape the second or later character in a sequence of characters that
       might match a map command, or any character in text input mode, is historical  practice,  and  stops  the
       entered keys from matching a map. POSIX.1‐2008 requires conformance to historical practice.

       Historical  implementations  permitted  digits to be used as a map command lhs, but then ignored the map.
       POSIX.1‐2008 requires that the mapped digits not be ignored.

       The historical implementation of the map command did not permit map commands that were more than a single
       character  in  length if the first character was printable. This behavior is permitted, but not required,
       by POSIX.1‐2008.

       Historically, mapped characters were remapped unless the remap edit option was not set, or the prefix  of
       the mapped characters matched the mapping characters; for example, in the map:

           :map ab abcd

       the  characters  "ab"  were  used  as  is  and  were not remapped, but the characters "cd" were mapped if
       appropriate. This  can  cause  infinite  loops  in  the  vi  mapping  mechanisms.  POSIX.1‐2008  requires
       conformance to historical practice, and that such loops be interruptible.

       Text  input maps had the same problems with expanding the lhs for the ex map!  and unmap!  command as did
       the ex  abbreviate  and  unabbreviate  commands.  See  the  RATIONALE  for  the  ex  abbreviate  command.
       POSIX.1‐2008 requires similar modification of some historical practice for the map and unmap commands, as
       described for the abbreviate and unabbreviate commands.

       Historically, maps that were subsets of other maps behaved differently depending on the  order  in  which
       they were defined.  For example:

           :map! ab     short
           :map! abc    long

       would  always  translate the characters "ab" to "short", regardless of how fast the characters "abc" were
       entered. If the entry order was reversed:

           :map! abc    long
           :map! ab     short

       the characters "ab" would cause the editor to pause, waiting for the completing 'c'  character,  and  the
       characters  might  never  be  mapped  to  "short".   For  consistency  and  simplicity  of specification,
       POSIX.1‐2008 requires that the shortest match be used at all times.

       The length of time the editor spends waiting for the  characters  to  complete  the  lhs  is  unspecified
       because  the  timing  capabilities  of systems are often inexact and variable, and it may depend on other
       factors such as the speed of the connection. The time should be long enough for the user to  be  able  to
       complete  the sequence, but not long enough for the user to have to wait. Some implementations of vi have
       added a keytime option, which permits users to set the number of 0,1 seconds the  editor  waits  for  the
       completing  characters.  Because  mapped  terminal  function  and cursor keys tend to start with an <ESC>
       character, and <ESC> is the key ending vi text input  mode,  maps  starting  with  <ESC>  characters  are
       generally exempted from this timeout period, or, at least timed out differently.

   Mark
       Historically,  users  were  able  to  set  the ``previous context'' marks explicitly. In addition, the ex
       commands '' and '` and the vi commands '', ``, `', and '` all referred to the same mark. In addition, the
       previous  context  marks  were  not  set  if  the  command,  with  which the address setting the mark was
       associated, failed. POSIX.1‐2008 requires conformance to historical  practice.  Historically,  if  marked
       lines  were deleted, the mark was also deleted, but would reappear if the change was undone. POSIX.1‐2008
       requires conformance to historical practice.

       The description of the special events that set the  `  and  '  marks  matches  historical  practice.  For
       example,  historically  the  command /a/,/b/ did not set the ` and ' marks, but the command /a/,/b/delete
       did.

   Next
       Historically, any ex command could be entered as a +command argument to the next command,  although  some
       (for  example, insert and append) were known to confuse historical implementations. POSIX.1‐2008 requires
       that any command be permitted and that it behave as specified. The next command can accept more than  one
       file, so usage such as:

           next `ls [abc] `

       is  valid;  it need not be valid for the edit or read commands, for example, because they expect only one
       filename.

       Historically, the next command behaved differently from the :rewind command in that it ignored the  force
       flag if the autowrite flag was set. For consistency, POSIX.1‐2008 does not permit this behavior.

       Historically,  the  next  command  positioned  the  cursor  as  if the file had never been edited before,
       regardless. POSIX.1‐2008 does not permit this behavior, for consistency with the edit command.

       Implementations wanting to provide a counterpart to the next command that edited the previous  file  have
       used the command prev[ious], which takes no file argument. POSIX.1‐2008 does not require this command.

   Open
       Historically,  the  open  command  would  fail if the open edit option was not set. POSIX.1‐2008 does not
       mention the open edit option and does not require this behavior. Some historical implementations  do  not
       permit entering open mode from open or visual mode, only from ex mode. For consistency, POSIX.1‐2008 does
       not permit this behavior.

       Historically, entering open mode from the  command  line  (that  is,  vi  +open)  resulted  in  anomalous
       behaviors;  for  example,  the ex file and set commands, and the vi command <control>‐G did not work. For
       consistency, POSIX.1‐2008 does not permit this behavior.

       Historically, the open command only permitted '/' characters to be used as the search pattern  delimiter.
       For  consistency,  POSIX.1‐2008 requires that the search delimiters used by the s, global, and v commands
       be accepted as well.

   Preserve
       The preserve command does not historically cause the file to be considered unmodified for the purposes of
       future commands that may exit the editor. POSIX.1‐2008 requires conformance to historical practice.

       Historical  documentation  stated that mail was not sent to the user when preserve was executed; however,
       historical implementations did  send  mail  in  this  case.  POSIX.1‐2008  requires  conformance  to  the
       historical implementations.

   Print
       The  writing  of  NUL  by  the  print  command  is  not  specified as a special case because the standard
       developers did not want to require ex to support NUL characters. Historically, characters were  displayed
       using the ARPA standard mappings, which are as follows:

        1. Printable characters are left alone.

        2. Control  characters  less  than \177 are represented as '^' followed by the character offset from the
           '@' character in the ASCII map; for example, \007 is represented as '^G'.

        3. \177 is represented as '^' followed by '?'.

       The display of characters having their eighth bit set was less standard. Existing implementations use hex
       (0x00),  octal  (\000), and a meta-bit display. (The latter displayed bytes that had their eighth bit set
       as the two characters "M−" followed by the seven-bit display as described above.) The latter probably has
       the  best  claim  to historical practice because it was used for the −v option of 4 BSD and 4 BSD-derived
       versions of the cat utility since 1980.

       No specific display format is required by POSIX.1‐2008.

       Explicit dependence on the ASCII character set has been avoided where possible,  hence  the  use  of  the
       phrase an ``implementation-defined multi-character sequence'' for the display of non-printable characters
       in preference to the historical usage  of,  for  instance,  "^I"  for  the  <tab>.   Implementations  are
       encouraged to conform to historical practice in the absence of any strong reason to diverge.

       Historically,  all  ex commands beginning with the letter 'p' could be entered using capitalized versions
       of the commands; for example, P[rint], Pre[serve], and Pu[t] were all valid command  names.  POSIX.1‐2008
       permits, but does not require, this historical practice because capital forms of the commands are used by
       some implementations for other purposes.

   Put
       Historically, an ex put command, executed from open or visual mode, was the same as the  open  or  visual
       mode  P  command, if the buffer was named and was cut in character mode, and the same as the p command if
       the buffer was named and cut in line mode. If the unnamed buffer was the source of the text,  the  entire
       line from which the text was taken was usually put, and the buffer was handled as if in line mode, but it
       was possible to get extremely anomalous behavior. In addition, using the Q  command  to  switch  into  ex
       mode, and then doing a put often resulted in errors as well, such as appending text that was unrelated to
       the (supposed) contents of the buffer. For consistency and simplicity of specification, POSIX.1‐2008 does
       not permit these behaviors. All ex put commands are required to operate in line mode, and the contents of
       the buffers are not altered by changing the mode of the editor.

   Read
       Historically, an ex read command executed from open or visual mode, executed in an empty  file,  left  an
       empty  line  as the first line of the file. For consistency and simplicity of specification, POSIX.1‐2008
       does not permit this behavior.  Historically, a read in open or visual  mode  from  a  program  left  the
       cursor  at  the  last  line  read  in,  not the first. For consistency, POSIX.1‐2008 does not permit this
       behavior.

       Historical implementations of ex were unable to undo read  commands  that  read  from  the  output  of  a
       program. For consistency, POSIX.1‐2008 does not permit this behavior.

       Historically,  the  ex  and vi message after a successful read or write command specified ``characters'',
       not ``bytes''. POSIX.1‐2008 requires that the number of bytes be displayed, not the number of characters,
       because  it  may  be  difficult in multi-byte implementations to determine the number of characters read.
       Implementations are encouraged to clarify the message displayed to the user.

       Historically, reads were not permitted on files other than type regular, except that FIFO files could  be
       read  (probably  only  because  they  did  not exist when ex and vi were originally written). Because the
       historical ex evaluated read!  and read !  equivalently, there can be no optional way to force the  read.
       POSIX.1‐2008 permits, but does not require, this behavior.

   Recover
       Some  historical implementations of the editor permitted users to recover the edit buffer contents from a
       previous edit session, and then exit without saving those contents (or explicitly discarding  them).  The
       intent  of  POSIX.1‐2008  in  requiring that the edit buffer be treated as already modified is to prevent
       this user error.

   Rewind
       Historical implementations supported the rewind command when the user was editing the first file  in  the
       list;  that  is,  the  file  that  the  rewind  command  would edit. POSIX.1‐2008 requires conformance to
       historical practice.

   Substitute
       Historically, ex accepted an r option to the s command. The effect of the r option was to  use  the  last
       regular  expression  used  in  any command as the pattern, the same as the ~ command. The r option is not
       required by POSIX.1‐2008. Historically, the c and g  options  were  toggled;  for  example,  the  command
       :s/abc/def/  was  the same as s/abc/def/ccccgggg.  For simplicity of specification, POSIX.1‐2008 does not
       permit this behavior.

       The tilde command is often used to replace the last search RE. For example, in the sequence:

           s/red/blue/
           /green
           ~

       the ~ command is equivalent to:

           s/green/blue/

       Historically, ex accepted all of the following forms:

           s/abc/def/
           s/abc/def
           s/abc/
           s/abc

       POSIX.1‐2008 requires conformance to this historical practice.

       The s command presumes that the '^' character only occupies a single column in the display. Much  of  the
       ex and vi specification presumes that the <space> only occupies a single column in the display. There are
       no known character sets for which this is not true.

       Historically, the final column position  for  the  substitute  commands  was  based  on  previous  column
       movements;  a  search for a pattern followed by a substitution would leave the column position unchanged,
       while a 0 command followed by a substitution would change the column position to the  first  non-<blank>.
       For  consistency  and  simplicity  of specification, POSIX.1‐2008 requires that the final column position
       always be set to the first non-<blank>.

   Set
       Historical implementations redisplayed all of the  options  for  each  occurrence  of  the  all  keyword.
       POSIX.1‐2008 permits, but does not require, this behavior.

   Tag
       No  requirement  is  made  as  to  where  ex  and vi shall look for the file referenced by the tag entry.
       Historical practice has been to look for the path found in the tags file, based on the current directory.
       A  useful  extension  found in some implementations is to look based on the directory containing the tags
       file that held the entry, as well. No requirement is made as to which reference for the tag in  the  tags
       file  is  used. This is deliberate, in order to permit extensions such as multiple entries in a tags file
       for a tag.

       Because users often specify many different tags files, some of which need not be relevant or exist at any
       particular  time, POSIX.1‐2008 requires that error messages about problem tags files be displayed only if
       the requested tag is not found, and then, only once for each time that the tag edit option is changed.

       The requirement that the current edit buffer be unmodified is only necessary if the file indicated by the
       tag  entry  is  not  the same as the current file (as defined by the current pathname). Historically, the
       file would be reloaded if the filename had changed, as well as if the filename  was  different  from  the
       current  pathname.  For  consistency  and  simplicity of specification, POSIX.1‐2008 does not permit this
       behavior, requiring that the name be the only factor in the decision.

       Historically, vi only searched for tags in the current file from the current cursor to  the  end  of  the
       file,  and  therefore,  if the wrapscan option was not set, tags occurring before the current cursor were
       not found. POSIX.1‐2008 considers this a bug, and implementations are required to search  for  the  first
       occurrence in the file, regardless.

   Undo
       The  undo  description  deliberately uses the word ``modified''. The undo command is not intended to undo
       commands that replace the contents of the edit buffer, such as edit, next, tag, or recover.

       Cursor positioning after the undo command was inconsistent in the historical vi, sometimes attempting  to
       restore  the  original  cursor position (global, undo, and v commands), and sometimes, in the presence of
       maps, placing the cursor on the last line added or changed instead of the first. POSIX.1‐2008 requires  a
       simplified behavior for consistency and simplicity of specification.

   Version
       The  version command cannot be exactly specified since there is no widely-accepted definition of what the
       version  information  should  contain.   Implementations  are  encouraged  to  do  something   reasonably
       intelligent.

   Write
       Historically,  the  ex  and vi message after a successful read or write command specified ``characters'',
       not ``bytes''. POSIX.1‐2008 requires that the number of bytes be displayed, not the number of  characters
       because  it may be difficult in multi-byte implementations to determine the number of characters written.
       Implementations are encouraged to clarify the message displayed to the user.

       Implementation-defined tests are permitted so  that  implementations  can  make  additional  checks;  for
       example, for locks or file modification times.

       Historically, attempting to append to a nonexistent file caused an error. It has been left unspecified in
       POSIX.1‐2008 to permit implementations to let the write succeed, so that the append semantics are similar
       to those of the historical csh.

       Historical  vi  permitted  empty edit buffers to be written. However, since the way vi got around dealing
       with ``empty'' files was to always have a line in the edit buffer, no matter what, it wrote them as files
       of a single, empty line. POSIX.1‐2008 does not permit this behavior.

       Historically,  ex  restored standard output and standard error to their values as of when ex was invoked,
       before writes to programs were performed. This could disturb the terminal configuration as well as  be  a
       security  issue  for some terminals. POSIX.1‐2008 does not permit this, requiring that the program output
       be captured and displayed as if by the ex print command.

   Adjust Window
       Historically, the line count was set to the value of the scroll option if the type character was  end-of-
       file. This feature was broken on most historical implementations long ago, however, and is not documented
       anywhere. For this reason, POSIX.1‐2008 is resolutely silent.

       Historically, the z command was <blank>-sensitive and z + and z  did different things  than  z+  and  z−
       because  the  type  could  not be distinguished from a flag. (The commands z .  and z = were historically
       invalid.) POSIX.1‐2008 requires conformance to this historical practice.

       Historically,  the  z  command  was  further  <blank>-sensitive  in  that  the   count   could   not   be
       <blank>-delimited;  for  example,  the commands z= 5 and z− 5 were also invalid. Because the count is not
       ambiguous with respect to either the type character or the flags, this is not permitted by POSIX.1‐2008.

   Escape
       Historically, ex filter commands only read the standard output of the commands,  letting  standard  error
       appear  on  the terminal as usual. The vi utility, however, read both standard output and standard error.
       POSIX.1‐2008 requires the latter behavior for both ex and vi, for consistency.

   Shift Left and Shift Right
       Historically, it was possible to add shift characters to increase the effect of the command; for example,
       <<< outdented (or >>> indented) the lines 3 levels of indentation instead of the default 1.  POSIX.1‐2008
       requires conformance to historical practice.

   <control>‐D
       Historically, the <control>‐D command erased the prompt, providing the user with an unbroken presentation
       of  lines  from  the edit buffer. This is not required by POSIX.1‐2008; implementations are encouraged to
       provide it if possible.   Historically,  the  <control>‐D  command  took,  and  then  ignored,  a  count.
       POSIX.1‐2008 does not permit this behavior.

   Write Line Number
       Historically,  the  ex  = command, when executed in ex mode in an empty edit buffer, reported 0, and from
       open or visual mode, reported 1. For consistency and simplicity of specification, POSIX.1‐2008  does  not
       permit this behavior.

   Execute
       Historically,  ex did not correctly handle the inclusion of text input commands (that is, append, insert,
       and change) in executed buffers. POSIX.1‐2008 does not permit this exclusion for consistency.

       Historically, the logical contents of the buffer being executed did not change if the buffer itself  were
       modified  by  the commands being executed; that is, buffer execution did not support self-modifying code.
       POSIX.1‐2008 requires conformance to historical practice.

       Historically, the @ command took a range of lines, and the @ buffer was executed once per line, with  the
       current line ('.')  set to each specified line. POSIX.1‐2008 requires conformance to historical practice.

       Some  historical implementations did not notice if errors occurred during buffer execution. This, coupled
       with the ability to specify a range of lines for the ex @ command, makes it trivial to cause them to drop
       core.   POSIX.1‐2008  requires  that  implementations  stop  buffer execution if any error occurs, if the
       specified line doesn't exist, or if the contents of the edit buffer itself are replaced (for example, the
       buffer executes the ex :edit command).

   Regular Expressions in ex
       Historical  practice  is that the characters in the replacement part of the last s command—that is, those
       matched by entering a '~' in the regular expression—were not further expanded by the  regular  expression
       engine.  So,  if  the characters contained the string "a.," they would match 'a' followed by ".," and not
       'a' followed by any character. POSIX.1‐2008 requires conformance to historical practice.

   Edit Options in ex
       The following paragraphs describe the historical behavior  of  some  edit  options  that  were  not,  for
       whatever  reason,  included  in  POSIX.1‐2008.  Implementations are strongly encouraged to only use these
       names if the functionality described here is fully supported.

       extended  The extended edit option has been used in  some  implementations  of  vi  to  provide  extended
                 regular  expressions  instead  of  basic  regular  expressions  This  option  was  omitted from
                 POSIX.1‐2008 because it is not widespread historical practice.

       flash     The flash edit option historically caused the screen to flash instead of beeping on error. This
                 option   was   omitted   from   POSIX.1‐2008  because  it  is  not  found  in  some  historical
                 implementations.

       hardtabs  The hardtabs edit option historically defined  the  number  of  columns  between  hardware  tab
                 settings.  This  option  was  omitted from POSIX.1‐2008 because it was believed to no longer be
                 generally useful.

       modeline  The modeline (sometimes named modelines) edit option historically caused ex or vi to  read  the
                 five  first and last lines of the file for editor commands.  This option is a security problem,
                 and vendors are strongly encouraged to delete it from historical implementations.

       open      The open edit option historically disallowed the ex open and visual commands. This edit  option
                 was omitted because these commands are required by POSIX.1‐2008.

       optimize  The  optimize edit option historically expedited text throughput by setting the terminal to not
                 do automatic <carriage-return> characters when printing more than one logical line  of  output.
                 This  option  was  omitted  from  POSIX.1‐2008  because  it  was intended for terminals without
                 addressable cursors, which are rarely, if ever, still used.

       ruler     The ruler edit option has been used  in  some  implementations  of  vi  to  present  a  current
                 row/column  ruler  for  the  user.  This option was omitted from POSIX.1‐2008 because it is not
                 widespread historical practice.

       sourceany The sourceany edit option historically caused ex or vi to source start-up files that were owned
                 by users other than the user running the editor. This option is a security problem, and vendors
                 are strongly encouraged to remove it from their implementations.

       timeout   The timeout edit option historically enabled the (now standard) feature of only waiting  for  a
                 short period before returning keys that could be part of a macro. This feature was omitted from
                 POSIX.1‐2008 because its behavior is now standard, it is not widely useful, and it  was  rarely
                 documented.

       verbose   The verbose edit option has been used in some implementations of vi to cause vi to output error
                 messages for common errors; for example, attempting to move the cursor past  the  beginning  or
                 end  of  the  line  instead  of  only  alerting the screen. (The historical vi only alerted the
                 terminal and presented no message for such errors. The historical editor option terse  did  not
                 select  when  to  present  error  messages,  it  only made existing error messages more or less
                 verbose.) This option was omitted from POSIX.1‐2008 because it  is  not  widespread  historical
                 practice; however, implementors are encouraged to use it if they wish to provide error messages
                 for naive users.

       wraplen   The wraplen edit option has been used in some implementations of vi  to  specify  an  automatic
                 margin  measured  from  the  left  margin instead of from the right margin. This is useful when
                 multiple screen sizes are being used to edit a  single  file.  This  option  was  omitted  from
                 POSIX.1‐2008  because  it  is  not  widespread  historical  practice; however, implementors are
                 encouraged to use it if they add this functionality.

   autoindent, ai
       Historically, the command 0a did not do any autoindentation, regardless of  the  current  indentation  of
       line 1. POSIX.1‐2008 requires that any indentation present in line 1 be used.

   autoprint, ap
       Historically, the autoprint edit option was not completely consistent or based solely on modifications to
       the edit buffer. Exceptions were the read command (when reading from a file, but not from a filter),  the
       append,  change, insert, global, and v commands, all of which were not affected by autoprint, and the tag
       command, which was affected by autoprint.  POSIX.1‐2008 requires conformance to historical practice.

       Historically, the autoprint option only applied to the last of multiple commands entered using <vertical-
       line>  delimiters;  for example, delete <newline> was affected by autoprint, but delete|version <newline>
       was not. POSIX.1‐2008 requires conformance to historical practice.

   autowrite, aw
       Appending the '!'  character to the ex next command to  avoid  performing  an  automatic  write  was  not
       supported  in  historical  implementations.  POSIX.1‐2008  requires  that the behavior match the other ex
       commands for consistency.

   ignorecase, ic
       Historical implementations of case-insensitive matching (the ignorecase edit  option)  lead  to  counter-
       intuitive  situations when uppercase characters were used in range expressions. Historically, the process
       was as follows:

        1. Take a line of text from the edit buffer.

        2. Convert uppercase to lowercase in text line.

        3. Convert uppercase to lowercase in regular expressions, except in character class specifications.

        4. Match regular expressions against text.

       This would mean that, with ignorecase in effect, the text:

           The cat sat on the mat

       would be matched by

           /^the/

       but not by:

           /^[A−Z]he/

       For consistency with other commands implementing regular expressions, POSIX.1‐2008 does not  permit  this
       behavior.

   paragraphs, para
       The  ISO POSIX‐2:1993  standard  made  the  default  paragraphs and sections edit options implementation-
       defined, arguing they were historically  oriented  to  the  UNIX  system  troff  text  formatter,  and  a
       ``portable  user''  could  use  the  {,  }, [[, ]], (, and ) commands in open or visual mode and have the
       cursor stop in unexpected places. POSIX.1‐2008 specifies their values in the  POSIX  locale  because  the
       unusual  grouping  (they  only work when grouped into two characters at a time) means that they cannot be
       used for general-purpose movement, regardless.

   readonly
       Implementations are encouraged to provide the best possible information to the user as to  the  read-only
       status  of  the  file, with the exception that they should not consider the current special privileges of
       the process. This provides users with a safety net because they must force  the  overwrite  of  read-only
       files, even when running with additional privileges.

       The  readonly  edit  option specification largely conforms to historical practice. The only difference is
       that historical implementations did not notice that the user had set the readonly edit  option  in  cases
       where  the  file  was  already  marked  read-only  for  some reason, and would therefore reinitialize the
       readonly edit option the next time the contents of the  edit  buffer  were  replaced.  This  behavior  is
       disallowed by POSIX.1‐2008.

   report
       The  requirement  that  lines  copied  to  a buffer interact differently than deleted lines is historical
       practice. For example, if the report edit option is set to 3, deleting 3 lines will cause a report to  be
       written, but 4 lines must be copied before a report is written.

       The requirement that the ex global, v, open, undo, and visual commands present reports based on the total
       number of lines added or deleted during the command execution, and that commands executed by  the  global
       and  v  commands not present reports, is historical practice. POSIX.1‐2008 extends historical practice by
       requiring that buffer execution be treated similarly. The reasons for this  are  two-fold.  Historically,
       only  the  report  by  the  last  command executed from the buffer would be seen by the user, as each new
       report would overwrite the last. In addition, the standard developers believed that buffer execution  had
       more  in  common  with  global  and  v  commands  than  it  did with other ex commands, and should behave
       similarly, for consistency and simplicity of specification.

   showmatch, sm
       The length of time the cursor spends  on  the  matching  character  is  unspecified  because  the  timing
       capabilities  of  systems  are often inexact and variable. The time should be long enough for the user to
       notice, but not long enough for the user to become annoyed. Some  implementations  of  vi  have  added  a
       matchtime  option  that  permits users to set the number of 0,1 second intervals the cursor pauses on the
       matching character.

   showmode
       The showmode option has been used in some historical implementations of ex and vi to display the  current
       editing  mode  when  in  open  or  visual mode. The editing modes have generally included ``command'' and
       ``input'', and sometimes other modes such as ``replace'' and ``change''. The string was usually displayed
       on  the  bottom  line  of the screen at the far right-hand corner. In addition, a preceding '*' character
       often denoted whether the contents of the edit buffer had been modified. The latter display has sometimes
       been part of the showmode option, and sometimes based on another option. This option was not available in
       the 4 BSD historical implementation of vi, but was viewed as generally  useful,  particularly  to  novice
       users, and is required by POSIX.1‐2008.

       The  smd  shorthand  for  the  showmode  option  was not present in all historical implementations of the
       editor.  POSIX.1‐2008 requires it, for consistency.

       Not  all  historical  implementations  of  the  editor  displayed  a  mode  string  for   command   mode,
       differentiating  command  mode from text input mode by the absence of a mode string. POSIX.1‐2008 permits
       this behavior for consistency with historical practice, but implementations are encouraged to  provide  a
       display string for both modes.

   slowopen
       Historically,  the  slowopen  option  was  automatically set if the terminal baud rate was less than 1200
       baud, or if the baud rate was 1200 baud and the redraw option was not set. The slowopen  option  had  two
       effects.  First, when inserting characters in the middle of a line, characters after the cursor would not
       be pushed ahead, but would appear to be overwritten. Second, when creating a  new  line  of  text,  lines
       after  the  current  line  would not be scrolled down, but would appear to be overwritten. In both cases,
       ending text input mode would cause the screen to be refreshed to match the actual contents  of  the  edit
       buffer.  Finally,  terminals  that were sufficiently intelligent caused the editor to ignore the slowopen
       option. POSIX.1‐2008 permits most historical behavior, extending historical practice to require  slowopen
       behaviors if the edit option is set by the user.

   tags
       The  default  path  for  tags  files  is  left  unspecified  as  implementations  may have their own tags
       implementations that do not correspond to the historical ones.  The  default  tags  option  value  should
       probably at least include the file ./tags.

   term
       Historical  implementations  of  ex  and  vi  ignored  changes  to the term edit option after the initial
       terminal information was  loaded.  This  is  permitted  by  POSIX.1‐2008;  however,  implementations  are
       encouraged to permit the user to modify their terminal type at any time.

   terse
       Historically,  the  terse  edit option optionally provided a shorter, less descriptive error message, for
       some error messages. This is permitted, but not required,  by  POSIX.1‐2008.  Historically,  most  common
       visual  mode  errors (for example, trying to move the cursor past the end of a line) did not result in an
       error message, but simply alerted the terminal. Implementations wishing to provide  messages  for  novice
       users are urged to do so based on the edit option verbose, and not terse.

   window
       In  historical  implementations,  the  default  for  the window edit option was based on the baud rate as
       follows:

        1. If the baud rate was less than 1200, the edit option w300 set the  window  value;  for  example,  the
           line:

               set w300=12

           would set the window option to 12 if the baud rate was less than 1200.

        2. If the baud rate was equal to 1200, the edit option w1200 set the window value.

        3. If the baud rate was greater than 1200, the edit option w9600 set the window value.

       The  w300, w1200, and w9600 options do not appear in POSIX.1‐2008 because of their dependence on specific
       baud rates.

       In historical implementations, the size of the window displayed by various commands was related  to,  but
       not  necessarily  the same as, the window edit option. For example, the size of the window was set by the
       ex command visual 10, but it did not change the value of the window edit option.  However,  changing  the
       value  of  the  window edit option did change the number of lines that were displayed when the screen was
       repainted. POSIX.1‐2008 does not permit this behavior in the interests of consistency and  simplicity  of
       specification, and requires that all commands that change the number of lines that are displayed do it by
       setting the value of the window edit option.

   wrapmargin, wm
       Historically, the wrapmargin option did not affect maps inserting characters  that  also  had  associated
       counts;  for  example  :map K 5aABC DEF.   Unfortunately,  there are widely used maps that depend on this
       behavior.  For consistency and simplicity of specification, POSIX.1‐2008 does not permit this behavior.

       Historically, wrapmargin was calculated using the column display width of all characters on  the  screen.
       For  example,  an  implementation  using "^I" to represent <tab> characters when the list edit option was
       set, where '^' and 'I' each took up a single column on the screen, would calculate the  wrapmargin  based
       on  a  value  of  2 for each <tab>.  The number edit option similarly changed the effective length of the
       line as well.  POSIX.1‐2008 requires conformance to historical practice.

       Earlier versions of this standard allowed for implementations with bytes other than eight bits, but  this
       has been modified in this version.

FUTURE DIRECTIONS

       None.

SEE ALSO

       Section 2.9.1.1, Command Search and Execution, ctags, ed, sed, sh, stty, vi

       The  Base Definitions volume of POSIX.1‐2008, Table 5-1, Escape Sequences and Associated Actions, Chapter
       8, Environment Variables, Section 9.3, Basic Regular Expressions, Section 12.2, Utility Syntax Guidelines

       The System Interfaces volume of POSIX.1‐2008, access()

COPYRIGHT

       Portions of this text are reprinted and reproduced in electronic form from IEEE Std 1003.1, 2013 Edition,
       Standard  for  Information Technology -- Portable Operating System Interface (POSIX), The Open Group Base
       Specifications Issue 7, Copyright (C) 2013 by the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers,  Inc
       and  The  Open Group.  (This is POSIX.1-2008 with the 2013 Technical Corrigendum 1 applied.) In the event
       of any discrepancy between this version and the original IEEE and The Open Group Standard,  the  original
       IEEE and The Open Group Standard is the referee document. The original Standard can be obtained online at
       http://www.unix.org/online.html .

       Any typographical or formatting errors that appear in this page are most likely to have  been  introduced
       during   the   conversion  of  the  source  files  to  man  page  format.  To  report  such  errors,  see
       https://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/reporting_bugs.html .