Difference between revisions of "Editor: nano"

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<source lang="bash">nano -w filename</source>
 
<source lang="bash">nano -w filename</source>
  
You may want to make this a default by aliasing the command:
+
To tell nano to not wrap lines by default, add (or uncomment) this line in /etc/nanorc:
  
<source lang="bash">echo 'alias nano="nano -w"' >> ~/.bashrc</source>
+
<code>set nowrap</code>
  
Now, whenever you run 'nano', it'll run 'nano -w' instead.
 
  
 
[[Category: Editors]]
 
[[Category: Editors]]

Revision as of 21:48, 7 April 2009

Expand: This needs expansion.

By default nano quietly adds linebreaks to the file that you're working on, not just word-wraps it for display in the editor. This can cause trouble with generating patches, and because it's indistinguishable from word-wrapping in the editor, it can take you a while to diagnose it. To prevent this from happening, when you call nano, do it with the -w flag, which will turn off auto-linebreaking:

nano -w filename

To tell nano to not wrap lines by default, add (or uncomment) this line in /etc/nanorc:

set nowrap