2.4.7 Customizing the Prompt
The following variables are available for customizing the appearance of the command-line prompts. Octave allows the prompt to be customized by inserting a number of backslash-escaped special characters that are decoded as follows:
- ‘\t’
-
The time.
- ‘\d’
-
The date.
- ‘\n’
-
Begins a new line by printing the equivalent of a carriage return followed by a line feed.
- ‘\s’
-
The name of the program (usually just ‘octave’).
- ‘\w’
-
The current working directory.
- ‘\W’
-
The basename of the current working directory.
- ‘\u’
-
The username of the current user.
- ‘\h’
-
The hostname, up to the first ‘.’.
- ‘\H’
-
The hostname.
- ‘\#’
-
The command number of this command, counting from when Octave starts.
- ‘\!’
-
The history number of this command. This differs from ‘\#’ by the number of commands in the history list when Octave starts.
- ‘\$’
-
If the effective UID is 0, a ‘#’, otherwise a ‘$’.
- ‘\nnn’
-
The character whose character code in octal is nnn.
- ‘\\’
A backslash.
- val = PS1 ()
- old_val = PS1 (new_val)
- PS1 (new_val, "local")
-
Query or set the primary prompt string.
When executing interactively, Octave displays the primary prompt when it is ready to read a command.
The default value of the primary prompt string is
'octave:\#> '
. To change it, use a command likePS1 ("\\u@\\H> ")
which will result in the prompt ‘boris@kremvax> ’ for the user ‘boris’ logged in on the host ‘kremvax.kgb.su’. Note that two backslashes are required to enter a backslash into a double-quoted character string. See Strings.
You can also use ANSI escape sequences if your terminal supports them. This can be useful for coloring the prompt. For example,
PS1 ('\[\033[01;31m\]\s:\#> \[\033[0m\]')
will give the default Octave prompt a red coloring.
When called from inside a function with the
"local"
option, the variable is changed locally for the function and any subroutines it calls. The original variable value is restored when exiting the function.
- val = PS2 ()
- old_val = PS2 (new_val)
- PS2 (new_val, "local")
-
Query or set the secondary prompt string.
The secondary prompt is printed when Octave is expecting additional input to complete a command. For example, if you are typing a
for
loop that spans several lines, Octave will print the secondary prompt at the beginning of each line after the first. The default value of the secondary prompt string is"> "
.When called from inside a function with the
"local"
option, the variable is changed locally for the function and any subroutines it calls. The original variable value is restored when exiting the function.
- val = PS4 ()
- old_val = PS4 (new_val)
- PS4 (new_val, "local")
-
Query or set the character string used to prefix output produced when echoing commands is enabled.
The default value is
"+ "
. See Diary and Echo Commands, for a description of echoing commands.When called from inside a function with the
"local"
option, the variable is changed locally for the function and any subroutines it calls. The original variable value is restored when exiting the function.
© 1996–2020 John W. Eaton
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https://octave.org/doc/v5.2.0/Customizing-the-Prompt.html