Searched hist:"3 d2ddc9e" (Results 1 – 2 of 2) sorted by relevance
/freebsd/bin/ls/ |
H A D | ls.1 | 3d2ddc9e Sat Aug 12 22:40:14 GMT 2000 Josef Karthauser <joe@FreeBSD.org> A change to the way that colours are switched on in ls. The -G flag has been depricated, although it still works with a warning message, and replaced with an environment variable CLICOLOR (command line interface colour). This could be used by other tools that want to be able to control colour output.
In addition if the environment variable CLICOLOR_FORCE is defined colour sequences are output irrespective of whether the output is directed to a terminal (as long as TERM references a colour capable terminal of course ;)
PR: bin/20291 and bin/20483 3d2ddc9e Sat Aug 12 22:40:14 GMT 2000 Josef Karthauser <joe@FreeBSD.org> A change to the way that colours are switched on in ls. The -G flag has been depricated, although it still works with a warning message, and replaced with an environment variable CLICOLOR (command line interface colour). This could be used by other tools that want to be able to control colour output.
In addition if the environment variable CLICOLOR_FORCE is defined colour sequences are output irrespective of whether the output is directed to a terminal (as long as TERM references a colour capable terminal of course ;)
PR: bin/20291 and bin/20483 3d2ddc9e Sat Aug 12 22:40:14 GMT 2000 Josef Karthauser <joe@FreeBSD.org> A change to the way that colours are switched on in ls. The -G flag has been depricated, although it still works with a warning message, and replaced with an environment variable CLICOLOR (command line interface colour). This could be used by other tools that want to be able to control colour output.
In addition if the environment variable CLICOLOR_FORCE is defined colour sequences are output irrespective of whether the output is directed to a terminal (as long as TERM references a colour capable terminal of course ;)
PR: bin/20291 and bin/20483 3d2ddc9e Sat Aug 12 22:40:14 GMT 2000 Josef Karthauser <joe@FreeBSD.org> A change to the way that colours are switched on in ls. The -G flag has been depricated, although it still works with a warning message, and replaced with an environment variable CLICOLOR (command line interface colour). This could be used by other tools that want to be able to control colour output.
In addition if the environment variable CLICOLOR_FORCE is defined colour sequences are output irrespective of whether the output is directed to a terminal (as long as TERM references a colour capable terminal of course ;)
PR: bin/20291 and bin/20483 3d2ddc9e Sat Aug 12 22:40:14 GMT 2000 Josef Karthauser <joe@FreeBSD.org> A change to the way that colours are switched on in ls. The -G flag has been depricated, although it still works with a warning message, and replaced with an environment variable CLICOLOR (command line interface colour). This could be used by other tools that want to be able to control colour output.
In addition if the environment variable CLICOLOR_FORCE is defined colour sequences are output irrespective of whether the output is directed to a terminal (as long as TERM references a colour capable terminal of course ;)
PR: bin/20291 and bin/20483 3d2ddc9e Sat Aug 12 22:40:14 GMT 2000 Josef Karthauser <joe@FreeBSD.org> A change to the way that colours are switched on in ls. The -G flag has been depricated, although it still works with a warning message, and replaced with an environment variable CLICOLOR (command line interface colour). This could be used by other tools that want to be able to control colour output.
In addition if the environment variable CLICOLOR_FORCE is defined colour sequences are output irrespective of whether the output is directed to a terminal (as long as TERM references a colour capable terminal of course ;)
PR: bin/20291 and bin/20483 3d2ddc9e Sat Aug 12 22:40:14 GMT 2000 Josef Karthauser <joe@FreeBSD.org> A change to the way that colours are switched on in ls. The -G flag has been depricated, although it still works with a warning message, and replaced with an environment variable CLICOLOR (command line interface colour). This could be used by other tools that want to be able to control colour output.
In addition if the environment variable CLICOLOR_FORCE is defined colour sequences are output irrespective of whether the output is directed to a terminal (as long as TERM references a colour capable terminal of course ;)
PR: bin/20291 and bin/20483 3d2ddc9e Sat Aug 12 22:40:14 GMT 2000 Josef Karthauser <joe@FreeBSD.org> A change to the way that colours are switched on in ls. The -G flag has been depricated, although it still works with a warning message, and replaced with an environment variable CLICOLOR (command line interface colour). This could be used by other tools that want to be able to control colour output.
In addition if the environment variable CLICOLOR_FORCE is defined colour sequences are output irrespective of whether the output is directed to a terminal (as long as TERM references a colour capable terminal of course ;)
PR: bin/20291 and bin/20483
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H A D | ls.c | 3d2ddc9e Sat Aug 12 22:40:14 GMT 2000 Josef Karthauser <joe@FreeBSD.org> A change to the way that colours are switched on in ls. The -G flag has been depricated, although it still works with a warning message, and replaced with an environment variable CLICOLOR (command line interface colour). This could be used by other tools that want to be able to control colour output.
In addition if the environment variable CLICOLOR_FORCE is defined colour sequences are output irrespective of whether the output is directed to a terminal (as long as TERM references a colour capable terminal of course ;)
PR: bin/20291 and bin/20483 3d2ddc9e Sat Aug 12 22:40:14 GMT 2000 Josef Karthauser <joe@FreeBSD.org> A change to the way that colours are switched on in ls. The -G flag has been depricated, although it still works with a warning message, and replaced with an environment variable CLICOLOR (command line interface colour). This could be used by other tools that want to be able to control colour output.
In addition if the environment variable CLICOLOR_FORCE is defined colour sequences are output irrespective of whether the output is directed to a terminal (as long as TERM references a colour capable terminal of course ;)
PR: bin/20291 and bin/20483 3d2ddc9e Sat Aug 12 22:40:14 GMT 2000 Josef Karthauser <joe@FreeBSD.org> A change to the way that colours are switched on in ls. The -G flag has been depricated, although it still works with a warning message, and replaced with an environment variable CLICOLOR (command line interface colour). This could be used by other tools that want to be able to control colour output.
In addition if the environment variable CLICOLOR_FORCE is defined colour sequences are output irrespective of whether the output is directed to a terminal (as long as TERM references a colour capable terminal of course ;)
PR: bin/20291 and bin/20483 3d2ddc9e Sat Aug 12 22:40:14 GMT 2000 Josef Karthauser <joe@FreeBSD.org> A change to the way that colours are switched on in ls. The -G flag has been depricated, although it still works with a warning message, and replaced with an environment variable CLICOLOR (command line interface colour). This could be used by other tools that want to be able to control colour output.
In addition if the environment variable CLICOLOR_FORCE is defined colour sequences are output irrespective of whether the output is directed to a terminal (as long as TERM references a colour capable terminal of course ;)
PR: bin/20291 and bin/20483 3d2ddc9e Sat Aug 12 22:40:14 GMT 2000 Josef Karthauser <joe@FreeBSD.org> A change to the way that colours are switched on in ls. The -G flag has been depricated, although it still works with a warning message, and replaced with an environment variable CLICOLOR (command line interface colour). This could be used by other tools that want to be able to control colour output.
In addition if the environment variable CLICOLOR_FORCE is defined colour sequences are output irrespective of whether the output is directed to a terminal (as long as TERM references a colour capable terminal of course ;)
PR: bin/20291 and bin/20483 3d2ddc9e Sat Aug 12 22:40:14 GMT 2000 Josef Karthauser <joe@FreeBSD.org> A change to the way that colours are switched on in ls. The -G flag has been depricated, although it still works with a warning message, and replaced with an environment variable CLICOLOR (command line interface colour). This could be used by other tools that want to be able to control colour output.
In addition if the environment variable CLICOLOR_FORCE is defined colour sequences are output irrespective of whether the output is directed to a terminal (as long as TERM references a colour capable terminal of course ;)
PR: bin/20291 and bin/20483 3d2ddc9e Sat Aug 12 22:40:14 GMT 2000 Josef Karthauser <joe@FreeBSD.org> A change to the way that colours are switched on in ls. The -G flag has been depricated, although it still works with a warning message, and replaced with an environment variable CLICOLOR (command line interface colour). This could be used by other tools that want to be able to control colour output.
In addition if the environment variable CLICOLOR_FORCE is defined colour sequences are output irrespective of whether the output is directed to a terminal (as long as TERM references a colour capable terminal of course ;)
PR: bin/20291 and bin/20483 3d2ddc9e Sat Aug 12 22:40:14 GMT 2000 Josef Karthauser <joe@FreeBSD.org> A change to the way that colours are switched on in ls. The -G flag has been depricated, although it still works with a warning message, and replaced with an environment variable CLICOLOR (command line interface colour). This could be used by other tools that want to be able to control colour output.
In addition if the environment variable CLICOLOR_FORCE is defined colour sequences are output irrespective of whether the output is directed to a terminal (as long as TERM references a colour capable terminal of course ;)
PR: bin/20291 and bin/20483
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