Mercurial > hg
view mercurial/help/pager.txt @ 32555:b3083be7dcb9
match: drop support for empty pattern list in patternmatcher
Since the caller now deals with empty pattern lists, we can drop that
support in the patternmatcher. It now gets the more logical behavior
of matching nothing when no patterns are given (although there is no
in-core caller that will pass no patterns).
author | Martin von Zweigbergk <martinvonz@google.com> |
---|---|
date | Fri, 19 May 2017 11:58:16 -0700 |
parents | edbbd18a47ab |
children | 85b978031a75 |
line wrap: on
line source
Some Mercurial commands can produce a lot of output, and Mercurial will attempt to use a pager to make those commands more pleasant. To set the pager that should be used, set the application variable:: [pager] pager = less -FRX If no pager is set, Mercurial uses the environment variable $PAGER. If neither pager.pager, nor $PAGER is set, a default pager will be used, typically `less` on Unix and `more` on Windows. .. container:: windows On Windows, `more` is not color aware, so using it effectively disables color. MSYS and Cygwin shells provide `less` as a pager, which can be configured to support ANSI color codes. See :hg:`help config.color.pagermode` to configure the color mode when invoking a pager. You can disable the pager for certain commands by adding them to the pager.ignore list:: [pager] ignore = version, help, update To ignore global commands like :hg:`version` or :hg:`help`, you have to specify them in your user configuration file. To control whether the pager is used at all for an individual command, you can use --pager=<value>: - use as needed: `auto`. - require the pager: `yes` or `on`. - suppress the pager: `no` or `off` (any unrecognized value will also work). To globally turn off all attempts to use a pager, set:: [ui] paginate = never which will prevent the pager from running.