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author | Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org> | 2024-05-06 01:12:14 +0000 |
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committer | Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org> | 2024-05-06 01:12:14 +0000 |
commit | 982972c2aada53f83389987317fb6cbee9ce5a91 (patch) | |
tree | 25420c3b905b2e00f02a895d877fd0669025ee35 /lynx_help/keystrokes/option_help.html | |
parent | Initial commit. (diff) | |
download | lynx-982972c2aada53f83389987317fb6cbee9ce5a91.tar.xz lynx-982972c2aada53f83389987317fb6cbee9ce5a91.zip |
Adding upstream version 2.8.9rel.1.upstream/2.8.9rel.1upstream
Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'lynx_help/keystrokes/option_help.html')
-rw-r--r-- | lynx_help/keystrokes/option_help.html | 834 |
1 files changed, 834 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/lynx_help/keystrokes/option_help.html b/lynx_help/keystrokes/option_help.html new file mode 100644 index 0000000..19b16f5 --- /dev/null +++ b/lynx_help/keystrokes/option_help.html @@ -0,0 +1,834 @@ +<!-- $LynxId: option_help.html,v 1.32 2017/04/28 21:12:53 tom Exp $ --> +<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01//EN"> + +<html> +<head> + <meta name="generator" content= + "HTML Tidy for Linux (vers 25 March 2009), see www.w3.org"> + + <title>Form-based Options Menu : Help</title> + <link rev="made" href="mailto:lynx-dev@nongnu.org"> + <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content= + "text/html; charset=us-ascii"> + <meta name="description" content= + "Lynx's options menu allows you to set and modify many features. Some features persist only during the current session unless specially enabled in lynx.cfg"> + </head> + +<body> + <h2><a name="overview" id="overview">Options Menu</a></h2> + + <p>The <em>Options Menu</em> allows you to set and modify many + Lynx features.<br> + <strong>Lynx</strong>'s <em>Options Menu</em> is grouped visually + (by skipping a line) into sections. This description follows the + same arrangement. Some options appear on the screen only if they + have been compiled in or chosen in + <code><strong>lynx.cfg</strong></code>.</p> + + <div class="nav"> + <ul> + <li><a href="#overview">Options Menu</a></li> + + <li> + <a href="#GP">General Preferences</a> + + <ul> + <li><a href="#UM">User Mode</a></li> + + <li><a href="#ED">Editor</a></li> + + <li><a href="#ST">Type of Search</a></li> + </ul> + </li> + + <li> + <a href="#SP">Security and Privacy</a> + + <ul> + <li><a href="#CK">Cookies</a></li> + + <li><a href="#IK">Invalid-Cookie Prompting</a></li> + + <li><a href="#SK">SSL Prompting</a></li> + </ul> + </li> + + <li> + <a href="#KI">Keyboard Input</a> + + <ul> + <li><a href="#KM">Keypad mode</a></li> + + <li><a href="#EM">Emacs keys</a></li> + + <li><a href="#VI">VI keys</a></li> + + <li><a href="#LE">Line edit style</a></li> + </ul> + </li> + + <li> + <a href="#DP">Display and Character Set</a> + + <ul> + <li><a href="#LC">Use locale-based character set</a></li> + + <li><a href="#H5">Use HTML5 charset replacements</a></li> + + <li><a href="#DC">Display Character set</a></li> + + <li><a href="#AD">Assumed document character set</a></li> + + <li><a href="#JK">Raw 8-bit or CJK mode</a></li> + + <li><a href="#DV">X DISPLAY variable</a></li> + </ul> + </li> + + <li> + <a href="#AP">Document Appearance</a> + + <ul> + <li><a href="#SC">Show color</a></li> + + <li><a href="#CS">Color style</a></li> + + <li><a href="#C0">Default colors</a></li> + + <li><a href="#CL">Show cursor for current link or + option</a></li> + + <li><a href="#UK">Underline links</a></li> + + <li><a href="#SS">Show scrollbar</a></li> + + <li><a href="#PU">Pop-ups for select fields</a></li> + + <li><a href="#tagsoup">HTML error recovery</a></li> + + <li><a href="#BH">Bad HTML messages</a></li> + + <li><a href="#SI">Show Images</a></li> + + <li><a href="#VB">Verbose Images</a></li> + </ul> + </li> + + <li> + <a href="#HP">Headers Transferred to Remote Servers</a> + + <ul> + <li><a href="#PM">Personal mail address</a></li> + + <li><a href="#PN">Personal name for mail</a></li> + + <li><a href="#PW">Password for anonymous ftp</a></li> + + <li><a href="#PT">Preferred media type</a></li> + + <li><a href="#PE">Preferred encoding</a></li> + + <li><a href="#PC">Preferred Document Charset</a></li> + + <li><a href="#PL">Preferred Document Language</a></li> + + <li><a href="#SA">Send User-Agent header</a></li> + + <li><a href="#UA">User Agent</a></li> + </ul> + </li> + + <li> + <a href="#LP">Listing and Accessing Files</a> + + <ul> + <li><a href="#PF">Use Passive FTP</a></li> + + <li><a href="#FT">FTP sort criteria</a></li> + + <li><a href="#LD">Local directory sort criteria</a></li> + + <li><a href="#LO">Local directory sort order</a></li> + + <li><a href="#DF">Show dot files</a></li> + + <li><a href="#PZ">Pause when showing message</a></li> + + <li><a href="#LL">Execution links</a></li> + + <li><a href="#TX">Show transfer rate</a></li> + </ul> + </li> + + <li>Special Files and Screens + + <ul> + <li><a href="#MB">Multi-bookmarks</a></li> + + <li><a href="#BF">Bookmark file</a></li> + + <li><a href="#AZ">Auto Session</a></li> + + <li><a href="#SZ">Session file</a></li> + + <li><a href="#VP">Visited Pages</a></li> + </ul> + </li> + </ul> + </div> + + <h2><a name="GP" id="GP">General Preferences</a></h2> + + <h3><a name="UM" id="UM">User Mode</a></h3> + + <dl> + <dt><em>Novice</em>: Shows 2 extra lines of help at the bottom + of the screen for beginners.</dt> + + <dt><em>Intermediate (normal)</em>: Normal status-line messages + appear.</dt> + + <dt><em>Advanced</em>: The URL is shown on the status + line.</dt> + </dl> + + <h3><a name="ED" id="ED">Editor</a></h3> + + <p>This is the editor to be invoked when editing browsable files, + sending mail or comments, or filling form's textarea (multiline + input field). The full pathname of the editor command should be + specified when possible. It is assumed the text editor supports + the same character set you have for "display character set" in + Lynx.</p> + + <h3><a name="ST" id="ST">Type of Search</a></h3> + + <p>This allows you to tell Lynx whether to search the current + document ignoring case (case insensistive) or not.</p> + + <h2><a name="SP" id="SP">Security and Privacy</a></h2> + + <h3><a name="CK" id="CK">Cookies</a></h3> + + <p>This can be set to accept or reject all cookies or to ask each + time. See the Users Guide for details of <a href= + "../Lynx_users_guide.html#Cookies">cookie usage</a>.</p> + + <h3><a name="IK" id="IK">Invalid-Cookie Prompting</a></h3> + + <p>This allows you to tell how to handle invalid cookies:</p> + + <ul> + <li><em>prompt normally</em> to prompt for each cookie</li> + + <li><em>force yes-response</em> to reply "yes" to each + prompt</li> + + <li><em>force no-response</em> to reply "no" to each + prompt.</li> + </ul> + + <h3><a name="SK" id="SK">SSL Prompting</a></h3> + + <p>This allows you to tell how to handle errors detected in SSL + connections:</p> + + <ul> + <li><em>prompt normally</em> to prompt for each cookie</li> + + <li><em>force yes-response</em> to reply "yes" to each + prompt</li> + + <li><em>force no-response</em> to reply "no" to each + prompt.</li> + </ul> + + <h2><a name="KI" id="KI">Keyboard Input</a></h2> + + <h3><a name="KM" id="KM">Keypad mode</a></h3> + + <p>This gives the choice between navigating with the keypad (as + arrows; see Lynx Navigation) and having every link numbered + (numbered links) so that the links may be selected by numbers + instead of moving to them with the arrow keys. You can also + number form fields.</p> + + <h3><a name="EM" id="EM">Emacs keys</a></h3> + + <p>If set to “ON” then the CTRL-P, CTRL-N, CTRL-F and + CTRL-B keys will be mapped to up-arrow, down-arrow, right-arrow + and left-arrow respectively. Otherwise, they remain mapped to + their configured bindings (normally UP_TWO lines, DOWN_TWO lines, + NEXT_PAGE and PREV_PAGE respectively).</p> + + <p>Note: setting emacs keys does not affect the line-editor + bindings.</p> + + <h3><a name="VI" id="VI">VI keys</a></h3> + + <p>If set to “ON” then the lowercase h, j, k and l + keys will be mapped to left-arrow, down-arrow, up-arrow and + right-arrow respectively.</p> + + <p>The uppercase H, J, K, and L keys remain mapped to their + configured bindings (normally HELP, JUMP, KEYMAP and LIST, + respectively).</p> + + <p>Note: setting vi keys does not affect the line-editor + bindings.</p> + + <h3><a name="LE" id="LE">Line edit style</a></h3> + + <p>This allows you to set alternate key bindings for the built-in + line editor, if <a href="alt_edit_help.html">Alternate + Bindings</a> have been installed. Otherwise, Lynx uses the + <a href="edit_help.html">Default Binding</a>.</p> + + <h2><a name="DP" id="DP">Display and Character Set</a></h2> + + <h3><a name="LC" id="LC">Use locale-based character set</a></h3> + + <p>This option allows you to request lynx to obtain a MIME name + from the operating system which corresponds to your locale + setting. If successful, it overrides the normal setting of the + display character set.</p> + + <h3><a name="H5" id="H5">Use HTML5 charset replacements</a></h3> + + <p>This option allows lynx to treat pages with ISO-8859-1 + (Latin1) or ASCII encoding as if they were Windows 1252. That + allows a few punctuation characters to be shown.</p> + + <h3><a name="DC" id="DC">Display Character set</a></h3> + + <p>This allows you to set up the default character set for your + specific terminal. The display character set provides a mapping + from the character encodings of viewed documents and from HTML + entities into viewable characters. It should be set according to + your terminal's character set so that characters other than 7-bit + ASCII can be displayed correctly, using approximations if + necessary, <a href="test_display.html">try the test here</a>.</p> + + <h3><a name="AD" id="AD">Assumed document character set</a></h3> + + <p>This changes the handling of documents which do not explicitly + specify a charset. Normally Lynx assumes that 8-bit characters in + those documents are encoded according to iso-8859-1 (the official + default for HTTP protocol). Unfortunately, many non-English web + pages forget to include proper charset info; this option helps + you browse those broken pages if you know somehow what the + charset is. When the value given here or by an -assume_charset + command-line flag is in effect, Lynx will treat documents as if + they were encoded accordingly. Option is active when “Raw + 8-bit or CJK Mode” is OFF.</p> + + <h3><a name="JK" id="JK">Raw 8-bit or CJK mode</a></h3> + + <p>This is set automatically, but can be toggled manually in + certain cases: it toggles whether 8-bit characters are assumed to + correspond with the display character set and therefore are + processed without translation via the chartrans conversion + tables. ON by default when the display character set is one of + the Asian (CJK) sets and the 8-bit characters are Kanji + multibytes. OFF for the other display character sets, but can be + turned ON when the document's charset is unknown (e.g., is not + ISO-8859-1 and no charset parameter was specified in a reply + header from an HTTP server to indicate what it is), but you have + no better idea than viewing it as from display character set (see + “assumed document character set” for best choice). + Should be OFF when an Asian (CJK) set is selected but the + document is ISO-8859-1 or another “assumed document + character set”. The setting can also be toggled via the + RAW_TOGGLE command, normally mapped to “@”, and at + startup via the -raw switch.</p> + + <h3><a name="DV" id="DV">X DISPLAY variable</a></h3> + + <p>This option is only relevant to X Window users. It specifies + the DISPLAY (Unix) or DECW$DISPLAY (VMS) variable. It is picked + up automatically from the environment if it has been previously + set.</p> + + <h2><a name="AP" id="AP">Document Appearance</a></h2> + + <h3><a name="SC" id="SC">Show color</a></h3> + + <p>This will be present if color support is available.</p> + + <ul> + <li>If set to ON or ALWAYS, color mode will be forced on if + possible. If (n)curses color support is available but cannot be + used for the current terminal type, selecting ON is rejected + with a message.</li> + + <li>If set to OFF or NEVER, color mode will be turned off.</li> + + <li>ALWAYS and NEVER are not offered in anonymous accounts. If + saved to a “.lynxrc” file in non-anonymous + accounts, ALWAYS will cause Lynx to set color mode on at + startup if supported.</li> + </ul> + + <p>If Lynx is built with slang, this is equivalent to having + included the -color command line switch or having the COLORTERM + environment variable set. If color support is provided by curses + or ncurses, this is equivalent to the default behavior of using + color when the terminal type supports it. If (n)curses color + support is available but cannot be used for the current terminal + type, the preference can still be saved but will have no + effect.</p> + + <p>A saved value of NEVER will cause Lynx to assume a monochrome + terminal at start-up. It is similar to the -nocolor switch, but + (when the slang library is used) can be overridden with the + -color switch. If the setting is OFF or ON when the current + options are saved to a “.lynxrc” file, the default + start-up behavior is retained, such that color mode will be + turned on at startup only if the terminal info indicates that you + have a color-capable terminal, or (when slang is used) if forced + on via the -color switch or COLORTERM variable. This default + behavior always is used in anonymous accounts, or if the + “option”_save restriction is set explicitly. If for + any reason the start-up color mode is incorrect for your + terminal, set it appropriately on or off via this option.</p> + + <h3><a name="CS" id="CS">Color style</a></h3> + + <p>At startup, Lynx identifies the available color-style + configuration files in the same directory as its default ".lss" + file. At runtime, you can switch between these files using this + options-menu feature.</p> + + <h3><a name="C0" id="C0">Default colors</a></h3> + + <p>Depending on the default foreground and background colors + which your terminal uses, some color-styles would look better if + Lynx did not use those in combination with the style for the + background. Use this option to enable/disable the default-color + feature.</p> + + <h3><a name="CL" id="CL">Show cursor for current link or + option</a></h3> + + <p>Lynx normally hides the cursor by positioning it to the right + and if possible the very bottom of the screen, so that the + current link or OPTION is indicated solely by its highlighting or + color. If show cursor is set to ON, the cursor will be positioned + at the left of the current link or OPTION. This is helpful when + Lynx is being used with a speech or braille interface. It is also + useful for sighted users when the terminal cannot distinguish the + character attributes used to distinguish the current link or + OPTION from the others in the display.</p> + + <h3><a name="UK" id="UK">Underline links</a></h3> + + <p>Use underline-attribute rather than bold for links.</p> + + <h3><a name="SS" id="SS">Show scrollbar</a></h3> + + <p>This allows you to enable (show) or disable (hide) the + scrollbar on the right-margin of the display. This feature is + available with ncurses or slang libraries.</p> + + <h3><a name="PU" id="PU">Pop-ups for select fields</a></h3> + + <p>Lynx normally uses a pop-up window for the OPTIONs in form + SELECT fields when the field does not have the MULTIPLE attribute + specified, and thus only one OPTION can be selected. The use of + pop-up windows can be disabled by changing this setting to OFF, + in which case the OPTIONs will be rendered as a list of radio + buttons. Note that if the SELECT field does have the MULTIPLE + attribute specified, the OPTIONs always are rendered as a list of + checkboxes.</p> + + <h3><a name="tagsoup" id="tagsoup">HTML error recovery</a></h3> + + <p>Lynx often has to deal with invalid HTML markup. It always + tries to recover from errors, but there is no universally correct + way for doing this. As a result, there are two parsing modes: + "<dfn>SortaSGML</dfn>" attempts to enforce valid nesting of most + tags at an earlier stage of processing, while + "<dfn>TagSoup</dfn>" relies more on the HTML rendering stage to + mimic the behavior of some other browsers. You can also switch + between these modes with the CTRL-V key, and the default can be + changed in lynx.cfg or with the -tagsoup command line switch.</p> + + <p>The "SortaSGML" mode will often appear to be more strict, and + makes some errors apparent that are otherwise unnoticeable. One + particular difference is the handling of block elements or + <li>..</li> inside <a + HREF="some.url">..</a>. Invalid nesting like this may + turn anchors into hidden links which cannot be easily followed, + this is avoided in "TagSoup" mode. See the <a href= + "follow_help.html">help on following links by number</a> for more + information on hidden links. Often pages may be more readable in + "TagSoup" mode, but sometimes the opposite is true. Most + documents with valid HTML, and documents with only minor errors, + should be rendered the same way in both modes.</p> + + <p>If you are curious about what goes on behind the scenes, but + find that the information from the -trace switch is just too + much, Lynx can be started with the -preparsed switch; going into + SOURCE mode (“\” key) and toggling the parsing mode + (with CTRL-V) should then show some of the differences.</p> + + <h3><a name="BH" id="BH">Bad HTML messages</a></h3> + + <p>Suppress or redirect Lynx's messages about "Bad HTML":</p> + + <dl> + <dt>Ignore</dt> + + <dd>do not warn; no details are written to the trace-file.</dd> + + <dt>Add to trace-file</dt> + + <dd>add the detailed warning message to the trace-file.</dd> + + <dt>Add to LYNXMESSAGES</dt> + + <dd>add the detailed warning message to the message page at + "LYNXMESSAGES:".</dd> + + <dt>Warn, point to trace-file</dt> + + <dd>show a warning message on the status line; the complete + message is written to the trace-file.</dd> + </dl> + + <h3><a name="SI" id="SI">Show Images</a></h3> + + <p>This option combines the effects of the “*” & + “[” keys as follows:</p> + <pre> + <em>ignore</em> all images which lack an ALT= text string, + <em>show labels</em>, e.g. [INLINE] — see “Verbose Images” below — , + <em>use links</em> for every image, enabling downloading. +</pre> + + <p>This option setting cannot be saved between sessions. See + <a href="../Lynx_users_guide.html#Images">Users Guide</a> & + <em>lynx.cfg</em> for more details.</p> + + <h3><a name="VB" id="VB">Verbose Images</a></h3> + + <p>This allows you to replace [LINK], [INLINE] and [IMAGE] + — for images without ALT — with filenames: this can + be helpful by revealing which images are important & which + are merely decoration, e.g. <em>button.gif</em>, + <em>line.gif</em>. See <a href= + "../Lynx_users_guide.html#Images">Users Guide</a> & + <em>lynx.cfg</em> for more details.</p> + + <h2><a name="HP" id="HP">Headers Transferred to Remote + Servers</a></h2> + + <h3><a name="PM" id="PM">Personal Mail Address</a></h3> + + <p>You may set your mail address here so that when mailing + messages to other people or mailing files to yourself, your email + address can be automatically filled in. Your email address will + also be sent to HTTP servers in a “from:” field.</p> + + <h3><a name="PN" id="PN">Personal mail name</a></h3> + + <p>This mail name will be included as the "X-Personal_Name" field + in any mail or comments that you send if that header has not been + disabled via the NO_ANONYMOUS_EMAIL definition in + <em>lynx.cfg</em>.</p> + + <h3><a name="PW" id="PW">Password for anonymous ftp</a></h3> + + <p>If this is blank, Lynx will use your personal mail address as + the anonymous ftp password. Though that is the convention, some + users prefer to use some other string which provides less + information. If the given value lacks a "@", Lynx also will use + your computer's hostname as part of the password. If both this + field and the personal mail address are blank, Lynx will use your + $USER environment variable, or "WWWuser" if even the environment + variable is unset.</p> + + <h3><a name="PT" id="PT">Preferred media type</a></h3> + + <p>When doing a GET, lynx lists the MIME types which it knows how + to present (the "Accept:" string). Depending on your system + configuration, the mime.types or other data given by the + GLOBAL_EXTENSION_MAP may include many entries that lynx really + does not handle. Use this option to select one of the built-in + subsets of the MIME types that lynx could list in the Accept.</p> + + <dl> + <dt>Accept lynx's internal types</dt> + + <dd>list only the types that are compiled into lynx.</dd> + + <dt>Also accept lynx.cfg's types</dt> + + <dd>lists types defined in lynx.cfg, e.g., the VIEWER and Cern + RULE or RULESFILE settings.</dd> + + <dt>Also accept user's types</dt> + + <dd>lists types from the PERSONAL_EXTENSION_MAP setting in + lynx.cfg</dd> + + <dt>Also accept system's types</dt> + + <dd>lists types from the GLOBAL_EXTENSION_MAP setting in + lynx.cfg</dd> + + <dt>Accept all types</dt> + + <dd>adds the types that are in lynx's built-in tables for + external programs that may be used to present a document.</dd> + </dl> + + <h3><a name="PE" id="PE">Preferred encoding</a></h3> + + <p>When doing a GET, lynx tells what types of compressed data it + can decompress (the "Accept-Encoding:" string). This is + determined by compiled-in support for decompression or external + decompression programs. Use this option to select none, one or + all of the supported decompression types.</p> + + <h3><a name="PC" id="PC">Preferred Document Charset</a></h3> + + <p>The character set you prefer if sets in addition to ISO-8859-1 + and US-ASCII are available from servers. Use MIME notation (e.g., + ISO-8859-2) and do not include ISO-8859-1 or US-ASCII, since + those values are always assumed by default. Can be a + comma-separated list, which may be interpreted by servers as + descending order of preferences; you can make your order of + preference explicit by using “q factors” as defined + by the HTTP protocol, for servers which understand it: e.g., + <kbd>iso-8859-5, utf-8;q=0.8</kbd>.</p> + + <h3><a name="PL" id="PL">Preferred Document Language</a></h3> + + <p>The language you prefer if multi-language files are available + from servers. Use RFC 1766 tags, e.g., “en” English, + “fr” French. Can be a comma-separated list, and you + can use “q factors” (see previous help item): e.g., + <kbd>da, en-gb;q=0.8, en;q=0.7</kbd> .</p> + + <h3><a name="SA" id="SA">Send User-Agent header</a></h3> + + <p>This controls whether the user-agent string will be sent.</p> + + <h3><a name="UA" id="UA">User Agent header</a></h3> + + <p>The header string which Lynx sends to servers to indicate the + User-Agent is displayed here. Changes may be disallowed via the + -restrictions switch. Otherwise, the header can be changed + temporarily to e.g., L_y_n_x/2.8.3 for access to sites which + discriminate against Lynx based on checks for the presence of + “Lynx” in the header. If changed during a Lynx + session, the default User-Agent header can be restored by + deleting the modified string in the Options Menu. Whenever the + User-Agent header is changed, the current document is reloaded, + with the no-cache flags set, on exit from Options Menu. Changes + of the header are not saved in the .lynxrc file.</p> + + <p>Caveat: Netscape Communications Corp. (for example) claimed + that false transmissions of “Mozilla” as the + User-Agent are a copyright infringement, which would be + prosecuted. The <em>Options Menu</em> issues a warning about + possible copyright infringement whenever the header is changed to + one which does not include <strong>Lynx</strong> or + <strong>lynx</strong>.</p> + + <h2><a name="LP" id="LP">Listing and Accessing Files</a></h2> + + <h3><a name="PF" id="PF">Use Passive FTP</a></h3> + + <p>This allows you to change whether Lynx uses passive ftp + connections.</p> + + <h3><a name="FT" id="FT">FTP sort criteria</a></h3> + + <p>This allows you to specify how files will be sorted within FTP + listings. The current options include + “By Filename”, “By Size”, + “By Type”, “By Date”.</p> + + <h3><a name="LD" id="LD">List directory style</a></h3> + + <p>Applies to Directory Editing. Files and directories can be + presented in the following ways:</p> + + <dl> + <dt><em>Mixed style</em>: Files and directories are listed + together in alphabetical order.</dt> + + <dt><em>Directories first</em>: Files and directories are + separated into 2 alphabetical lists: directories are listed + first.</dt> + + <dt><em>Files first</em>: Files and directories are separated + into 2 alphabetical lists: files are listed first.</dt> + </dl> + + <h3><a name="LO" id="LO">Local directory sort order</a></h3> + + <p>Lynx also allows you to sort by the file attributes:</p> + + <dl> + <dt>By name</dt> + + <dd>by filename (the default)</dd> + + <dt>By size</dt> + + <dd>by file size, in descending order</dd> + + <dt>By date</dt> + + <dd>by file modification time, in descending order</dd> + + <dt>By mode</dt> + + <dd>by file protection</dd> + + <dt>By type</dt> + + <dd>by filename suffix, e.g., the text beginning with + “.”</dd> + + <dt>By user</dt> + + <dd>by file owner's user-id</dd> + + <dt>By group</dt> + + <dd>by file owner's group-id</dd> + </dl> + + <h3><a name="DF" id="DF">Show dot files</a></h3> + + <p>If display/creation of hidden (dot) files/directories is + enabled, you can turn the feature on or off via this setting.</p> + + <h3><a name="PZ" id="PZ">Pause when showing message</a></h3> + + <p>If set to "off", this overrides the INFOSECS setting in + lynx.cfg, to eliminate pauses when displaying informational + messages, like the "-nopause" command line option.</p> + + <h3><a name="LL" id="LL">Execution links</a></h3> + + <p>If set to “ALWAYS ON”, Lynx will locally execute + commands contained inside any links. This can be <strong>HIGHLY + DANGEROUS</strong>, so it is recommended that they remain + “ALWAYS OFF” or “FOR LOCAL FILES + ONLY”.</p> + + <h3><a name="TX" id="TX">Show transfer rate</a></h3> + + <p>This allows you to select the way in which Lynx shows its + progress in downloading large pages. It displays its progress in + the status line. These are the available selections:</p> + + <ul> + <li>Do not show rate</li> + + <li>Local directory sort order</li> + + <li>Show dot files</li> + + <li>Execution links</li> + + <li>Pause when showing message</li> + + <li>Show transfer rate</li> + </ul> + + <h3><a name="MB" id="MB">Multi-bookmarks</a></h3> + + <p>Manage multiple bookmark files:</p> + + <ul> + <li>When OFF, the default bookmark file is used for the + “v”iew-bookmarks and “a”dd-bookmark + link commands.</li> + + <li>If set to STANDARD, a menu of available bookmarks is always + invoked when you seek to view a bookmark file or add a link, + and you select the bookmark file by its letter token in that + menu.</li> + + <li>If set to ADVANCED, you are instead prompted for the letter + of the desired bookmark file, but can enter “=” to + invoke the STANDARD selection menu, or RETURN for the default + bookmark file.</li> + </ul> + + <h3><a name="BF" id="BF">Bookmark file</a></h3> + + <p>Manage the default bookmark file:</p> + + <ul> + <li>If non-empty and multi-bookmarks is OFF, it specifies your + default “<a href="bookmark_help.html">Bookmark + file</a>”.</li> + + <li>If multi-bookmarks is STANDARD or ADVANCED, entering + “B” will invoke a menu in which you can specify + filepaths and descriptions of up to 26 bookmark files.</li> + </ul> + + <p>The filepaths must be from your home directory and begin with + “./” if subdirectories are included (e.g., + “./BM/lynx_bookmarks.html”).</p> + + <p>Lynx will create bookmark files when you first + “a”dd a link, but any subdirectories in the filepath + must already exist.</p> + + <h3><a name="AZ" id="AZ">Auto Session</a></h3> + + <p>Lynx can save and restore useful information about your + browsing history. Use this setting to enable or disable the + feature.</p> + + <h3><a name="SZ" id="SZ">Session file</a></h3> + + <p>Define the file name where lynx will store user sessions. This + setting is used only when <em>Auto Session</em> is enabled.</p> + + <h3><a name="VP" id="VP">Visited Pages</a></h3> + + <p>This allows you to change the appearance of the <a href= + "visited_help.html">Visited Links Page</a> Normally it shows a + list, in reverse order of the pages visited. The popup menu + allows you these choices:</p> + + <dl> + <dt><em>By First Visit</em>: The default appearance, shows the + pages based on when they were first visited. The list is shown + in reverse order, to make the current page (usually) at the top + of the list.</dt> + + <dt><em>By First Visit Reversed</em> The default appearance, + shows the pages based on when they were first visited. The list + is shown in order, to make the current page (usually) at the + bottom of the list.</dt> + + <dt><em>As Visit Tree</em> Combines the first/last visited + information, showing the list in order of the first visit, but + using the indentation level of the page immediately previous to + determine indentation of new entries. That gives a clue to the + order of visiting pages when moving around in the History or + Visited Pages lists.</dt> + + <dt><em>By Last Visit</em> The default appearance, shows the + pages based on when they were last visited. The list is shown + in reverse order, to make the current page (usually) at the top + of the list.</dt> + + <dt><em>By Last Visit Reversed</em> The default appearance, + shows the pages based on when they were last visited. The list + is shown in order, to make the current page (usually) at the + bottom of the list.</dt> + </dl> +</body> +</html> |