NetBSD/bin/ed
alm ba4d688de2 fix line addressing so that 1,2, == 2,2 (as per SunOS ed) not 1,2
add global-active routines to replace some bad hacks
remove obsolescent Addison-Wesley copyrights
1993-11-12 10:48:43 +00:00
..
test Make paths explicit to handle case where . is not in PATH. 1993-08-02 20:43:57 +00:00
buf.c fix line addressing so that 1,2, == 2,2 (as per SunOS ed) not 1,2 1993-11-12 10:48:43 +00:00
cbc.c fix line addressing so that 1,2, == 2,2 (as per SunOS ed) not 1,2 1993-11-12 10:48:43 +00:00
ed.1 fix line addressing so that 1,2, == 2,2 (as per SunOS ed) not 1,2 1993-11-12 10:48:43 +00:00
ed.c fix line addressing so that 1,2, == 2,2 (as per SunOS ed) not 1,2 1993-11-12 10:48:43 +00:00
ed.h fix line addressing so that 1,2, == 2,2 (as per SunOS ed) not 1,2 1993-11-12 10:48:43 +00:00
Makefile Use new POSIX.2 compatible regex routines in C library instead of -lgnuregex. 1993-11-11 01:29:52 +00:00
POSIX fix line addressing so that 1,2, == 2,2 (as per SunOS ed) not 1,2 1993-11-12 10:48:43 +00:00
re.c fix line addressing so that 1,2, == 2,2 (as per SunOS ed) not 1,2 1993-11-12 10:48:43 +00:00
README fix line addressing so that 1,2, == 2,2 (as per SunOS ed) not 1,2 1993-11-12 10:48:43 +00:00

ed is an 8-bit-clean, POSIX-compliant line editor.  It should work with
any regular expression package that conforms to the POSIX interface
standard, such as GNU regex(3).

If reliable signals are supported (e.g., POSIX sigaction(2)), it should
compile with little trouble.  Otherwise, the macros spl1() and spl0()
should be redefined to disable interrupts.

The following compiler directives are recognized:
DES		- use to add encryption support (requires crypt(3))
NO_REALLOC_NULL	- use if realloc(3) does not accept a NULL pointer
BACKWARDS	- use for backwards compatibility

The file `POSIX' describes extensions to and deviations from the POSIX
standard.

The ./test directory contains regression tests for ed. The README
file in that directory explains how to run these.

For a description of the ed algorithm, see Kernighan and Plauger's book
"Software Tools in Pascal," Addison-Wesley, 1981.