What is the purpose of “paste newlines as carriage returns” in the Terminal app?
In the settings of the Terminal app, in the advanced tab, there is an option to "Paste newlines as carriage returns" which is enabled by default.
What is this good for?
macos terminal command-line
add a comment |
In the settings of the Terminal app, in the advanced tab, there is an option to "Paste newlines as carriage returns" which is enabled by default.
What is this good for?
macos terminal command-line
add a comment |
In the settings of the Terminal app, in the advanced tab, there is an option to "Paste newlines as carriage returns" which is enabled by default.
What is this good for?
macos terminal command-line
In the settings of the Terminal app, in the advanced tab, there is an option to "Paste newlines as carriage returns" which is enabled by default.
What is this good for?
macos terminal command-line
macos terminal command-line
edited Dec 22 at 2:42
bmike♦
156k46282606
156k46282606
asked Dec 22 at 0:32
Loax
23027
23027
add a comment |
add a comment |
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
What is it good for?
Sometimes you want to paste exactly what you've copied into something...say a document you're editing in nano
or vi
and want to preserve it exactly as it is.
Or, you could want to past the CR
so it executes the command.
Perhaps the default action to pastes exactly what was copied makes more sense than altering a paste buffer before the application processes the clipboard.
Heads up - I removed the side question from the main question. I tried to make your answer make more sense reflecting the change above.
– bmike♦
Dec 22 at 2:44
add a comment |
Converts the ASCII n bytes into r bytes, or line feeds into carriage returns. This way the system ignores any possible UNIX to MAC line-ending confusion when pasting from the Terminal.
New contributor
My understanding is that since many yeas ago Unix and MacOS line endings have become identical and thus there is no room for “confusion”. Please correct me if I’m wrong.
– Loax
Dec 22 at 9:55
Terminal has probably d that option since the beginning when most data would be in calssic Mac OS endings - when should the option have been removed
– Mark
Dec 22 at 11:05
add a comment |
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2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
What is it good for?
Sometimes you want to paste exactly what you've copied into something...say a document you're editing in nano
or vi
and want to preserve it exactly as it is.
Or, you could want to past the CR
so it executes the command.
Perhaps the default action to pastes exactly what was copied makes more sense than altering a paste buffer before the application processes the clipboard.
Heads up - I removed the side question from the main question. I tried to make your answer make more sense reflecting the change above.
– bmike♦
Dec 22 at 2:44
add a comment |
What is it good for?
Sometimes you want to paste exactly what you've copied into something...say a document you're editing in nano
or vi
and want to preserve it exactly as it is.
Or, you could want to past the CR
so it executes the command.
Perhaps the default action to pastes exactly what was copied makes more sense than altering a paste buffer before the application processes the clipboard.
Heads up - I removed the side question from the main question. I tried to make your answer make more sense reflecting the change above.
– bmike♦
Dec 22 at 2:44
add a comment |
What is it good for?
Sometimes you want to paste exactly what you've copied into something...say a document you're editing in nano
or vi
and want to preserve it exactly as it is.
Or, you could want to past the CR
so it executes the command.
Perhaps the default action to pastes exactly what was copied makes more sense than altering a paste buffer before the application processes the clipboard.
What is it good for?
Sometimes you want to paste exactly what you've copied into something...say a document you're editing in nano
or vi
and want to preserve it exactly as it is.
Or, you could want to past the CR
so it executes the command.
Perhaps the default action to pastes exactly what was copied makes more sense than altering a paste buffer before the application processes the clipboard.
edited Dec 22 at 2:43
bmike♦
156k46282606
156k46282606
answered Dec 22 at 1:17
Allan
42.1k1360154
42.1k1360154
Heads up - I removed the side question from the main question. I tried to make your answer make more sense reflecting the change above.
– bmike♦
Dec 22 at 2:44
add a comment |
Heads up - I removed the side question from the main question. I tried to make your answer make more sense reflecting the change above.
– bmike♦
Dec 22 at 2:44
Heads up - I removed the side question from the main question. I tried to make your answer make more sense reflecting the change above.
– bmike♦
Dec 22 at 2:44
Heads up - I removed the side question from the main question. I tried to make your answer make more sense reflecting the change above.
– bmike♦
Dec 22 at 2:44
add a comment |
Converts the ASCII n bytes into r bytes, or line feeds into carriage returns. This way the system ignores any possible UNIX to MAC line-ending confusion when pasting from the Terminal.
New contributor
My understanding is that since many yeas ago Unix and MacOS line endings have become identical and thus there is no room for “confusion”. Please correct me if I’m wrong.
– Loax
Dec 22 at 9:55
Terminal has probably d that option since the beginning when most data would be in calssic Mac OS endings - when should the option have been removed
– Mark
Dec 22 at 11:05
add a comment |
Converts the ASCII n bytes into r bytes, or line feeds into carriage returns. This way the system ignores any possible UNIX to MAC line-ending confusion when pasting from the Terminal.
New contributor
My understanding is that since many yeas ago Unix and MacOS line endings have become identical and thus there is no room for “confusion”. Please correct me if I’m wrong.
– Loax
Dec 22 at 9:55
Terminal has probably d that option since the beginning when most data would be in calssic Mac OS endings - when should the option have been removed
– Mark
Dec 22 at 11:05
add a comment |
Converts the ASCII n bytes into r bytes, or line feeds into carriage returns. This way the system ignores any possible UNIX to MAC line-ending confusion when pasting from the Terminal.
New contributor
Converts the ASCII n bytes into r bytes, or line feeds into carriage returns. This way the system ignores any possible UNIX to MAC line-ending confusion when pasting from the Terminal.
New contributor
New contributor
answered Dec 22 at 1:39
Richard Barber
1434
1434
New contributor
New contributor
My understanding is that since many yeas ago Unix and MacOS line endings have become identical and thus there is no room for “confusion”. Please correct me if I’m wrong.
– Loax
Dec 22 at 9:55
Terminal has probably d that option since the beginning when most data would be in calssic Mac OS endings - when should the option have been removed
– Mark
Dec 22 at 11:05
add a comment |
My understanding is that since many yeas ago Unix and MacOS line endings have become identical and thus there is no room for “confusion”. Please correct me if I’m wrong.
– Loax
Dec 22 at 9:55
Terminal has probably d that option since the beginning when most data would be in calssic Mac OS endings - when should the option have been removed
– Mark
Dec 22 at 11:05
My understanding is that since many yeas ago Unix and MacOS line endings have become identical and thus there is no room for “confusion”. Please correct me if I’m wrong.
– Loax
Dec 22 at 9:55
My understanding is that since many yeas ago Unix and MacOS line endings have become identical and thus there is no room for “confusion”. Please correct me if I’m wrong.
– Loax
Dec 22 at 9:55
Terminal has probably d that option since the beginning when most data would be in calssic Mac OS endings - when should the option have been removed
– Mark
Dec 22 at 11:05
Terminal has probably d that option since the beginning when most data would be in calssic Mac OS endings - when should the option have been removed
– Mark
Dec 22 at 11:05
add a comment |
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