Provided by: manpages-posix_2.16-1_all bug

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 .

       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 IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 or
       report an error describing the terminal-related deficiency.

OPTIONS

       The ex utility shall conform to  the  Base  Definitions  volume  of  IEEE Std 1003.1-2001,
       Section 12.2, Utility Syntax Guidelines.

       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  IEEE Std 1003.1-2001, 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  IEEE Std 1003.1-2001, 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 IEEE Std 1003.1-2001, 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 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>s, the
              current column shall be set to the last display line column on which  is  displayed
              any  part of the last non- <newline> 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:

                1. Exists

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

                3. 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:

                1. Exists

                2. 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

                3. 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 or one of the characters
           '`' or '" . 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 slashes ( '/' ) 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  slashes  "//"  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 marks ( '?' ) 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 marks "??" 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>s 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>s 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>s shall be skipped.

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

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

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

                2. 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.

                3. 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:

                               a    append   n    next    t    t
                               c    change   p    print   u    undo
                               ch   change   pr   print   un   undo
                               e    edit     r    read    v    v
                               m    move     re   read    w    write
                               ma   mark     s    s

       Implementation extensions with names causing similar ambiguities shall not be checked  for
       a  match  until  all  possible matches for commands specified by IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 have
       been checked.

        9. If the command is a ! command, or if the command is a read command followed by zero or
           more  <blank>s  and  a !, or if the command is a write command followed by one or more
           <blank>s 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>s 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>s 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:

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

                2. 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.

                3. 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>s,  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>s. 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>s 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 IEEE Std 1003.1-2001.

       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>s   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 '~' , '{' , '[' , '*' , '?' , '$' , '`' , '" , ' ,' and '\' ,  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>s 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 rh, except that
       printable characters and <blank>s 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>s 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>s within + 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
       slashes (shown in the Synopsis), as well as any non-alphanumeric  or  non-  <blank>  other
       than backslash, vertical line, double quote, or <newline>.

       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>s 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>s
           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>s 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  characters  '`'  and '" ; 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>s 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 slashes (shown
       in  the  Synopsis),  as  well  as  any alphanumeric, or non- <blank> other than backslash,
       vertical line, double quote, or <newline>.

       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 IEEE Std 1003.1-2001, 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 IEEE Std 1003.1-2001,
           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). If the size of a byte on the system is greater than  9  bits,
           the format used for non-printable characters is implementation-defined.

        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>s 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>s.

       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>s.  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 no option to turn them off;
       string and numeric options can be assigned by the form set option= value. Any <blank>s  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>s.

       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  '\'  , '|' , double quote, or <newline> 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>s  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>s, 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., 4., and 5., the write can be forced by appending the character '!' to
       the command name.

       For rules 2., 4., 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>s, 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>s 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>s  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>s.  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>s shall be deleted or changed into other <blank>s 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>s as a prefix to the line
       or changing leading <blank>s into other <blank>s.  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 IEEE Std 1003.1-2001, 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 '\' .  The
       characters '.' , '*' , '[' , and '~'  shall  be  treated  as  ordinary  characters  unless
       preceded  by a '\' ; when preceded by a '\' they shall regain their special meaning, or in
       the case of backslash, be handled as a single backslash. Backslashes 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 pattern enclosed in the nth set of parentheses '\(' and '\)' .

       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>s  as  possible, as determined by the editor option tabstop, and then using <space>s)
       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>s, <newline>s, and
       <form-feed>s, 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>s 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>s on the current line immediately preceding
           the last group of inserted non- <blank>s which was entered during the execution of the
           current  text input command, the <blank>s 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>s 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 IEEE Std 1003.1-2001, 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 freely redistributable implementation of ex/ vi, which
       is tracking IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 fairly closely, and  demonstrates  the  intended  changes
       between  historical implementations and IEEE Std 1003.1-2001, may be obtained by anonymous
       FTP from:

              ftp://ftp.rdg.opengroup.org/pub/mirrors/nvi

       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.  IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 requires conformance to historical practice. Historically,
       some implementations restricted the ex commands that  could  be  listed  as  part  of  the
       command  line  arguments.  For  consistency,  IEEE Std 1003.1-2001  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.  IEEE Std 1003.1-2001
       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 IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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. IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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.
       IEEE Std 1003.1-2001  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. IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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  are
       not  reentrant,  and  the  receipt  of SIGTSTP at the wrong time will cause them to crash.
       IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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. IEEE Std 1003.1-2001  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.
       IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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.  IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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.  IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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  IEEE Std 1003.1-2001  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.

       IEEE Std 1003.1-2001  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 IEEE Std 1003.1-2001.  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. IEEE Std 1003.1-2001
       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. IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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 IEEE Std 1003.1-2001; 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  IEEE Std 1003.1-2001;  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.   IEEE Std 1003.1-2001  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, IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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,
       IEEE Std 1003.1-2001  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, IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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
       IEEE Std 1003.1-2001,  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, IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 requires
       support for the former in the  few  commands  where  it  makes  sense,  and  disallows  it
       otherwise.  In  addition,  because  IEEE Std 1003.1-2001  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, IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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>s; 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.  IEEE Std 1003.1-2001  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,  IEEE Std 1003.1-2001  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. IEEE Std 1003.1-2001
       does not require or prohibit this behavior.

       Historically, the enhancements to basic regular expressions could be used  in  addressing;
       for  example,  '~'  ,  '\<'  ,  and  '\>'  .  IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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.
       IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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 IEEE Std 1003.1-2001; 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>s  (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.   IEEE Std 1003.1-2001  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. IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 requires  the  vi  behavior;  that  is,  a  single
       default  command  and  line  number  increment  for  each  command separator, and trailing
       <newline>s 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.  IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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>s by a flag character because in the command d p, p is interpreted as the buffer p.
       IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 requires conformance to historical practice.

       Historically, the k command could  be  followed  by  the  mark  name  without  intervening
       <blank>s.  IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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. IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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.
       IEEE Std 1003.1-2001  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,
       IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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.
       IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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.
       IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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, IEEE Std 1003.1-2001  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 IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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.
       IEEE Std 1003.1-2001  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 backslashes for quoting.  For
       those four commands, IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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. IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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.  IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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>s in ex commands was handled inconsistently. In most cases,
       the <newline> always terminated the command, regardless of any preceding escape character,
       because backslash characters did not escape <newline>s for most ex commands. However, some
       ex  commands  (for  example,  s, map, and abbreviation) permitted <newline>s to be escaped
       (although in the case of map and abbreviation, <control>-V characters escaped them instead
       of  backslashes).  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,
       IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 requires that it be possible to escape <newline>s in ex  commands  at
       all  times,  using  backslashes 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, IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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. IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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,  IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 requires that ex be implemented using canonical
       mode input processing, as was done historically.

       IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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.
       IEEE Std 1003.1-2001  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.

       IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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,  IEEE Std 1003.1-2001  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.
       IEEE Std 1003.1-2001  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).  IEEE Std 1003.1-2001  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.  IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 requires conformance to  historical
       practice.

       Historically,  the  use  of  flags  in  ex  commands could be obscure.  General historical
       practice was as described by IEEE Std 1003.1-2001, 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,  IEEE Std 1003.1-2001  does  not  permit  any of these
       exceptions to the general rule.

       IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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.  IEEE Std 1003.1-2001  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,  IEEE Std 1003.1-2001  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.  IEEE Std 1003.1-2001  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 IEEE Std 1003.1-2001.

       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.
       IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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. IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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>s, 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>s  in
       the  lhs. In addition, because of the historical quoting rules, it was impossible to enter
       a literal <control>-V in the lhs. IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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
       IEEE Std 1003.1-2001. 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
       IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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. IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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.  IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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  IEEE Std 1003.1-2001.
       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.  IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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 IEEE Std 1003.1-2001.

   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 IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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. IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 requires conformance to
       historical practice.

   Delete
       IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 requires support for the  historical  parsing  of  a  delete  command
       followed by flags, without any intervening <blank>s. 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,  IEEE Std 1003.1-2001
       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.
       IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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,  IEEE Std 1003.1-2001
       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, IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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. IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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.   IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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.  IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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 IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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.   IEEE Std 1003.1-2001  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  IEEE Std 1003.1-2001.
       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. IEEE Std 1003.1-2001
       requires conformance to historical practice.

       Historical implementations permitted digits to be used as a  map  command  lhs,  but  then
       ignored the map.  IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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 IEEE Std 1003.1-2001.

       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.
       IEEE Std 1003.1-2001  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. IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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, IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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. IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 requires conformance
       to historical practice. Historically, if marked lines were  deleted,  the  mark  was  also
       deleted,  but  would  reappear  if  the  change  was undone. IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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.  IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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,
       IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 does not permit this behavior.

       Historically, the next command positioned the cursor as if the file had never been  edited
       before,  regardless.   IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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.
       IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 does not require this command.

   Open
       Historically, the  open  command  would  fail  if  the  open  edit  option  was  not  set.
       IEEE Std 1003.1-2001  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, IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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,  IEEE Std 1003.1-2001  does  not  permit  this
       behavior.

       Historically,  the  open  command  only  permitted '/' characters to be used as the search
       pattern  delimiter.  For  consistency,  IEEE Std 1003.1-2001  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.  IEEE Std 1003.1-2001  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.
       IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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 IEEE Std 1003.1-2001.

       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.  IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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, IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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, IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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, IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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, IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 does not permit this behavior.

       Historically,  the  ex  and  vi message after a successful read or write command specified
       "characters", not "bytes". IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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.  IEEE Std 1003.1-2001  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 IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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.
       IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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 IEEE Std 1003.1-2001. 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, IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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

       IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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,
       IEEE Std 1003.1-2001  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.  IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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, IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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,  IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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.  IEEE Std 1003.1-2001  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. IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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". IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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 IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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. IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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.  IEEE Std 1003.1-2001
       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, IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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.)  IEEE Std 1003.1-2001  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 IEEE Std 1003.1-2001.

   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.  IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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.   IEEE Std 1003.1-2001  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
       IEEE Std 1003.1-2001;  implementations  are  encouraged  to  provide   it   if   possible.
       Historically,    the    <control>-D   command   took,   and   then   ignored,   a   count.
       IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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, IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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. IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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. IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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.  IEEE Std 1003.1-2001
       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.  IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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.
       IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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 IEEE Std 1003.1-2001. 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 IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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 IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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 IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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
              IEEE Std 1003.1-2001.

       optimize
              The  optimize  edit  option  historically  expedited text throughput by setting the
              terminal to not do automatic <carriage-return>s when printing more than one logical
              line  of  output.  This option was omitted from IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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
              IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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 IEEE Std 1003.1-2001  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  IEEE Std 1003.1-2001  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 IEEE Std 1003.1-2001  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.  IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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. IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 requires conformance to historical practice.

       Historically, the autoprint option only applied to the last of multiple  commands  entered
       using  vertical-bar  delimiters;  for example, delete <newline> was affected by autoprint,
       but delete|version  <newline>  was  not.   IEEE Std 1003.1-2001  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. IEEE Std 1003.1-2001  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 counterintuitive 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, IEEE Std 1003.1-2001
       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.  IEEE Std 1003.1-2001
       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 IEEE Std 1003.1-2001.

   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.  IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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 IEEE Std 1003.1-2001.

       The   smd   shorthand   for  the  showmode  option  was  not  present  in  all  historical
       implementations of the editor.  IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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.
       IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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.   IEEE Std 1003.1-2001  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 IEEE Std 1003.1-2001;
       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
       IEEE Std 1003.1-2001.   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 IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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.  IEEE Std 1003.1-2001
       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,
       IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 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>s 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.  IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 requires
       conformance to historical practice.

FUTURE DIRECTIONS

       None.

SEE ALSO

       Command Search and Execution , ctags , ed , sed , sh , stty , vi , the  System  Interfaces
       volume of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001, access()

COPYRIGHT

       Portions  of  this  text  are  reprinted  and  reproduced in electronic form from IEEE Std
       1003.1, 2003 Edition, Standard for Information Technology  --  Portable  Operating  System
       Interface  (POSIX), The Open Group Base Specifications Issue 6, Copyright (C) 2001-2003 by
       the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc and  The  Open  Group.  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.opengroup.org/unix/online.html .