lv - a Powerful Multilingual File Viewer / Grep
lv, lgrep
lv -h
lv -V
lv [-acdfgiklmnqsuvz] [+acdfgiklmnqsuvz]
[-Acoding-system] [-Icoding-system] [-Kcoding-system]
[-Ocoding-system] [-Pcoding-system] [-Dcoding-system]
[-Ssseq] [-Srseq] [-Sbseq] [-Suseq]
[-Shseq]
[-Tnumber] [-Wwidth] [-Hheight] [-E'editor'] [-+]
[+number] [+/grep-pattern]
[-] (grep-pattern) [files ...]
- Multilingual
file viewer
- lv is a powerful multilingual file viewer. Apparently, lv looks
like less (1), a representative file viewer on UNIX as you know, so
UNIX people (and less people on other OSs) don't have to learn a
burdensome new interface. lv can be used on MSDOS ANSI terminals and
almost all UNIX platforms. lv is a currently growing software, so your
feedback is welcome and helpful for us to refine the future lv.
- Multiple coding
systems
- lv can decode and encode multilingual streams through many coding systems,
for example, ISO 2022 based coding systems such as iso-2022-jp, and EUC
(Extended Unix Code) like euc-japan. Furthermore, localized coding systems
such as shift-jis, big5 and HZ are also supported. lv can be used not only
as a file viewer but also as a coding-system translation filter like
nkf (1) and tcs (1).
- Multilingual
regular expressions / Multilingual grep
- lv can recognize multi-bytes patterns as regular expressions, and lv also
provides multilingual grep (1) functionality by giving it another
name, lgrep. Pattern matching is conducted in the charset level, so
an EUC fragment, for example, can be found in the ISO 2022 tailored
streams, of course.
- Supporting the
Unicode standard
- lv provides Unicode facilities which enables you to handle Unicode streams
encoded in UTF-7 or UTF-8, and lv can also convert their code-points
between Unicode and other charsets. So you can display Unicode or foreign
texts on your terminal, using the code conversion function to your
favorite charsets via Unicode. (However, MSDOS version of lv has none of
the Unicode facility.)
- ANSI escape sequence
through
- lv can recognize ANSI escape sequences for text decoration. So you can
look ANSI-decorated streams such as colored source codes generated by
another software just like intended image on ANSI terminals.
- Completely
original
- lv is a completely original software including no code drawn from
less and grep and other programs at all.
- -A<coding-system>
- Set all coding systems to coding-system.
- -I<coding-system>
- Set input coding system to coding-system.
- -K<coding-system>
- Set keyboard coding system to coding-system. If it is not set,
output coding system will be applied to it.
- -O<coding-system>
- Set output coding system to coding-system.
- -P<coding-system>
- Set pathname coding system to coding-system.
- -D<coding-system>
- Set default (fall-back) coding system to coding-system.
- coding-system:
- a: auto-select
c: iso-2022-cn
j: iso-2022-jp
k: iso-2022-kr
ec: euc-china
ej: euc-japan
ek: euc-korea
et: euc-taiwan
u7: UTF-7
u8: UTF-8
l1..9: iso-8859-1..9
l0: iso-8859-10
lb,ld,le,lf,lg: iso-8859-11,13,14,15,16
s: shift-jis
b: big5
h: HZ
r: raw mode
- Examples:
- -Il2: input coding system is iso-8859-2
-Ks: keyboard coding system is shift-jis
-Oek: output coding system is euc-korea
-Ab: all coding systems are big5
- Coding-system
translations / Code-points conversions:
- iso-2022-cn, -jp, -kr can be converted into euc-china or -taiwan,
euc-japan, euc-korea, respectively (and vice versa). shift-jis uses the
same internal code-points as iso-2022-jp and euc-japan.
Since big5 characters can be converted into CNS 11643-1992
with negligible incompleteness, big5 streams can be translated into
iso-2022-cn or euc-taiwan (and vice versa) with code-points conversion.
Note that the iso-2022-cn referred here is not GB sequence, only just
CNS one. You should remember that lv cannot translate big5 into GB
directly.
The search function of lv may not work correctly when lv
additionally performs ``code-points'' conversion (not ``coding-system''
translation), because visible code and internal code are different from
each other. lv will try to avoid this problem with converting charsets
of search patterns automatically, but this function is not always
perfect.
- -W<number>
- Screen width
- -H<number>
- Screen height
- -E'<editor>'
(default 'vi -c %d')
- Editor name (default 'vi -c %d')
``%d'' means the line number of current position in a file.
- -q
- Assert there is delete/insert-lines control.
Please set this option on a MSDOS ANSI terminal that has capability to
delete and/or insert lines. As to termcap and terminfo version, it will be
set automatically.
- -Ss<seq>
- Set ANSI Standout sequence to seq (default "7")
- -Sr<seq>
- Set ANSI Reverse sequence to seq (default "7")
- -Sb<seq>
- Set ANSI Blink sequence to seq (default "5")
- -Su<seq>
- Set ANSI Underline sequence to seq (default "4")
- -Sh<seq>
- Set ANSI Highlight sequence to seq (default "1")
These sequences are inserted between ``ESC ['' and ``m'' to
construct full ANSI escape sequences.
- -T<number>
- Set Threshold-code which divides Unicode code-points in two regions.
Characters belonging to the lower region are assumed to have a width of
one, and the higher characters are equated to a width of two. (Default:
12288, = 0x3000)
- -m
- Force Unicode code-points which have the same glyphs as iso-8859-* to be
Mapped to iso-8859-* in a conversion from Unicode to another character set
which also has the corresponding code-points, in particular, Asian
charsets.
- -a
- Adjust character set for search pattern (default)
- -c
- Allow ANSI escape sequences for text decoration (Color)
- -d, -i
- Make regexp-searches ignore case (case folD search) (default)
- -f
- Substitute Fixed strings for regular expressions
- -k
- Convert X0201 Katakana to X0208 while decoding
- -l
- Allow physical lines of each logical line printed on the screen to be
concatenated for cut and paste after screen refresh
- -s
- Force old pages to be swept out from the screen Smoothly
- -u
- Unify several character sets, eg. JIS X0208 and C6226. In addition, lv
equates ISO 646 variants, eg. JIS X0201-Roman, and unknown charsets with
ASCII.
- -g
- Turn on lgrep mode.
- -n
- Prefix each line of output with the line number within its input file on
lgrep.
- -v
- Invert the sense of matching on lgrep.
- -z
- Enable HZ auto-detection (also enabled by run-time C-t).
- -+
- Clear all options
You can also turn OFF specified options, using ``+<option>'' like +c,
+d, ... +z.
- -
- Treat the following arguments as filenames
- grep-pattern
- lv works like grep (1) when its name is lgrep
- +number
- Jump to the specified line immediately when lv is invoked.
- +/grep-pattern
- Search the specified pattern immediately when lv is invoked.
- -V
- Show lv version
- -h
- Show this help
Options can be described in configuration file ``.lv'' (``_lv'' on
MSDOS) located at you HOME directory. If and only if you use MSDOS, you can
locate ``_lv'' at current working directory. They can be also described in
the environment variable LV. Every configuration will be overloaded in this
order if there is. Command line options are always read finally.
- 0..9:
- Argument
- g, <:
- Jump to the line number (default: top of the file)
- G, >:
- Jump to the line number (default: bottom of the file)
- p:
- Jump to the percentage position in line numbers (0-100)
- b, C-b:
- Previous page
- u, C-u:
- Previous half page
- k, w, C-k, y, C-y, C-p:
- Previous line
- j, C-j, e, C-e, C-n, CR:
- Next line
- d, C-d:
- Next half page
- f, C-f, C-v, SP:
- Next page
- F:
- Jump to the end of file, and wait for a data to be appended to the file
until interrupted.
- /<string>:
- Find a string in the forward direction (regular expression)
- ?<string>:
- Find a string in the backward direction (regular expression)
- n:
- Repeat previous search in forward direction
- N:
- Repeat previous search in backward direction (not REVERSE)
- C-l:
- Redisplay all lines
- r, C-r:
- Refresh screen and memory
- R:
- Reload current file
- :n:
- Examine the next file
- :p:
- Examine the previous file
- t:
- Toggle input coding systems
- T:
- Toggle input coding systems reversely
- C-t:
- Toggle HZ decoding mode
- v:
- Launch the editor defined by option -E
- C-g, =:
- Show file information (filename, position, coding system)
- V:
- Show LV version
- C-z:
- Suspend (call SHELL or ``command.com'' under MSDOS)
- q, Q:
- Quit
- UP/DOWN:
- Previous/Next line
- LEFT/RIGHT:
- Previous/Next half page
- PageUp/PageDown:
- Previous/Next page
- C-m, Enter:
- Enter the current string
- C-h, BS, DEL:
- Delete one character (backspace)
- C-u:
- Cancel the current string and try again
- C-p:
- Restore a few old strings incrementally (history)
- C-g:
- Quit
Special characters are ^, $, ., *, +, ?, [, ^, -, ], \. \|
specifies an alternative. \(, \) is a grouping construct. \1 and \2 matches
any charset consists of one- or two- column(s) characters respectively.
Mutually overlapping ranges (or charset) are not guaranteed.
LV Homepage: http://www.ff.iij4u.or.jp/~nrt/lv/
All rights reserved. Copyright (C) 1996-2004 by NARITA Tomio.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your
option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General
Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation,
Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA
Please send bug reports to: nrt@ff.iij4u.or.jp