Provided by: less_668-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       lesskey - customize key bindings for less

SYNOPSIS (deprecated)

       lesskey [-o output] [--] [input]
       lesskey [--output=output] [--] [input]
       lesskey -V
       lesskey --version

SCOPE

       This  document  describes  the  format  of the lesskey source file, which is used by less version 582 and
       later.  In previous versions of less, a separate program called lesskey was used to compile  the  lesskey
       source  file  into  a  format  understood  by  less.  This compilation step is no longer required and the
       lesskey program is therefore deprecated, although the file format remains supported by less itself.

DESCRIPTION

       A lesskey file specifies a set of key bindings  and  environment  variables  to  be  used  by  subsequent
       invocations of less.

FILE FORMAT

       The  input  file  consists  of one or more sections.  Each section starts with a line that identifies the
       type of section.  Possible sections are:

       #command
              Customizes command key bindings.

       #line-edit
              Customizes line-editing key bindings.

       #env   Defines environment variables.

       Blank lines and lines which start with a hash mark (#) are ignored, except as noted below.

COMMAND SECTION

       The command section begins with the line

       #command

       If the command section is the first section in the file, this line may be omitted.  The  command  section
       consists of lines of the form:

            string <whitespace> action [extra-string] <newline>

       Whitespace  is  any  sequence  of one or more spaces and/or tabs.  The string is the command key(s) which
       invoke the action.  The string may be a single command key, or a sequence of up to 15 keys.   The  action
       is  the name of the less action, from the list below.  The characters in the string may appear literally,
       or be prefixed by a caret to indicate a control key.  A backslash followed by one to three  octal  digits
       may  be  used  to  specify  a  character  by its octal value.  A backslash followed by certain characters
       specifies input characters as follows:
            \b   BACKSPACE   (0x08)
            \e   ESCAPE      (0x1B)
            \n   NEWLINE     (0x0A)
            \r   RETURN      (0x0D)
            \t   TAB         (0x09)

            \k followed by a single character represents the char(s) produced when one of these keys is pressed:
            \kb   BACKSPACE (the BACKSPACE key)
            \kB   ctrl-BACKSPACE
            \kd   DOWN ARROW
            \kD   PAGE DOWN
            \ke   END
            \kh   HOME
            \ki   INSERT
            \kl   LEFT ARROW
            \kL   ctrl-LEFT ARROW
            \kr   RIGHT ARROW
            \kR   ctrl-RIGHT ARROW
            \kt   BACKTAB
            \ku   UP ARROW
            \kU   PAGE UP
            \kx   DELETE
            \kX   ctrl-DELETE
            \k1   F1

            A backslash followed by any other character indicates that  character  is  to  be  taken  literally.
            Characters  which  must  be  preceded  by  backslash  include  caret,  space, tab, hash mark and the
            backslash itself.

            An action may be followed by an "extra" string.  When such a command is entered while running  less,
            the  action  is performed, and then the extra string is parsed, just as if it were typed in to less.
            This feature can be used in certain cases to extend the functionality of a  command.   For  example,
            see  the "{" and ":t" commands in the example below.  The extra string has a special meaning for the
            "quit" action: when less quits, the ASCII value of the first character of the extra string  is  used
            as its exit status.

EXAMPLE

       The  following  input file describes the set of default command keys used by less.  Documentation on each
       command can be found in the less man page, under the key sequence which invokes the command.

            #command
            \r         forw-line
            \n         forw-line
            e          forw-line
            j          forw-line
            \kd        forw-line
            ^E         forw-line
            ^N         forw-line
            k          back-line
            y          back-line
            ^Y         back-line
            ^K         back-line
            ^P         back-line
            J          forw-line-force
            K          back-line-force
            Y          back-line-force
            d          forw-scroll
            ^D         forw-scroll
            u          back-scroll
            ^U         back-scroll
            \40        forw-screen
            f          forw-screen
            ^F         forw-screen
            ^V         forw-screen
            \kD        forw-screen
            b          back-screen
            ^B         back-screen
            \ev        back-screen
            \kU        back-screen
            z          forw-window
            w          back-window
            \e\40      forw-screen-force
            F          forw-forever
            \eF        forw-until-hilite
            R          repaint-flush
            r          repaint
            ^R         repaint
            ^L         repaint
            \eu        undo-hilite
            \eU        clear-search
            g          goto-line
            \kh        goto-line
            <          goto-line
            \e<        goto-line
            p          percent
            %          percent
            \e(        left-scroll
            \e)        right-scroll
            \kl        left-scroll
            \kr        right-scroll
            \e{        no-scroll
            \e}        end-scroll
            {          forw-bracket {}
            }          back-bracket {}
            (          forw-bracket ()
            )          back-bracket ()
            [          forw-bracket []
            ]          back-bracket []
            \e^F       forw-bracket
            \e^B       back-bracket
            G          goto-end
            \e>        goto-end
            >          goto-end
            \ke        goto-end
            \eG        goto-end-buffered
            =          status
            ^G         status
            :f         status
            /          forw-search
            ?          back-search
            \e/        forw-search *
            \e?        back-search *
            n          repeat-search
            \en        repeat-search-all
            N          reverse-search
            \eN        reverse-search-all
            ^O^N       osc8-forw-search
            ^On        osc8-forw-search
            ^O^P       osc8-back-search
            ^Op        osc8-back-search
            ^O^O       osc8-open
            &          filter
            m          set-mark
            M          set-mark-bottom
            \em        clear-mark
            '          goto-mark
            ^X^X       goto-mark
            E          examine
            :e         examine
            ^X^V       examine
            :n         next-file
            :p         prev-file
            t          next-tag
            T          prev-tag
            :x         index-file
            :d         remove-file
            -          toggle-option
            :t         toggle-option t
            s          toggle-option o
                       ## Use a long option name by starting the
                       ## extra string with ONE dash; eg:
                       ##   s toggle-option -log-file\n
            _          display-option
            |          pipe
            v          visual
            !          shell
            #          pshell
            +          firstcmd
            H          help
            h          help
            V          version
            0          digit
            1          digit
            2          digit
            3          digit
            4          digit
            5          digit
            6          digit
            7          digit
            8          digit
            9          digit
            q          quit
            Q          quit
            :q         quit
            :Q         quit
            ZZ         quit

PRECEDENCE

       Commands specified by lesskey take precedence over the default commands.  A default command  key  may  be
       disabled  by  including  it  in  the  input  file with the action "invalid".  Alternatively, a key may be
       defined to do nothing by using the action "noaction".  "noaction" is similar to "invalid", but less  will
       give  an error beep for an "invalid" command, but not for a "noaction" command.  In addition, ALL default
       commands may be disabled by adding this control line to the input file:

       #stop

       This will cause all default commands to be ignored.  The #stop line should  be  the  last  line  in  that
       section of the file.

       Be  aware  that  #stop  can  be  dangerous.   Since  all  default commands are disabled, you must provide
       sufficient commands before the #stop line to enable all  necessary  actions.   For  example,  failure  to
       provide a "quit" command can lead to frustration.

LINE EDITING SECTION

       The line-editing section begins with the line:

       #line-edit

       This section specifies new key bindings for the line editing commands, in a manner similar to the way key
       bindings  for ordinary commands are specified in the #command section.  The line-editing section consists
       of a list of keys and actions, one per line as in the example below.

EXAMPLE

       The following input file describes the set of default line-editing keys used by less:

            #line-edit
            \t           forw-complete
            \17          back-complete
            \e\t         back-complete
            ^L           expand
            ^V           literal
            ^A           literal
            \el          right
            \kr          right
            \eh          left
            \kl          left
            \eb          word-left
            \e\kl        word-left
            \ew          word-right
            \e\kr        word-right
            \ei          insert
            \ex          delete
            \kx          delete
            \eX          word-delete
            \ekx         word-delete
            \e\b         word-backspace
            \e0          home
            \kh          home
            \e$          end
            \ke          end
            \ek          up
            \ku          up
            \ej          down
            ^G           abort

LESS ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES

       The environment variable section begins with the line

       #env

       Following this line is a list of environment variable assignments.  Each line consists of an  environment
       variable  name, an equals sign (=) and the value to be assigned to the environment variable.  White space
       before and after the equals sign is ignored.  Variables assigned in this way are visible  only  to  less.
       If a variable is specified in the system environment and also in a lesskey file, the value in the lesskey
       file takes precedence.

       If  the  variable name is followed by += rather than =, the string is appended to the variable's existing
       value.  This currently works only if any  +=  lines  immediately  follow  the  same  variable's  original
       definition  (with an = line), without any intervening definitions of other variables.  It can append only
       to a variable defined earlier in the file; it cannot append to a variable in the system environment.  The
       string is appended literally, without any extra whitespace added, so if whitespace is desired, it  should
       be  appended  to  the  end  of the preceding line.  (It cannot be added to the beginning of the += string
       because space after the equals sign is ignored, as noted above.)

       In the string after the = sign, a substring of the form  ${NAME}  is  replaced  with  the  value  of  the
       environment  variable  "NAME".  The value of the variable may come from either the system environment, an
       earlier lesskey file, or an earlier definition in the current lesskey file.  Simple text replacements can
       be performed by using the syntax ${NAME/STRING/REPL}.  This replaces all instances  of  "STRING"  in  the
       named  environment  variable  with the text "REPL".  STRING is matched using a simple text comparison; no
       metacharacters are supported.  An instance of slash or right curly bracket in  STRING  or  REPL  must  be
       escaped  by  preceding  it with two backslashes.  If REPL is an empty string, all instances of STRING are
       removed.  A slash immediately before the right curly bracket may be omitted.  Multiple  replacements  may
       be performed by using the syntax ${NAME/STRING1/REPL1/STRING2/REPL2} and so on.

CONDITIONAL CONFIGURATION

       If  a  line begins with #version followed by a relational operator and a version number, the remainder of
       the line is parsed if and only if the running version of less (or lesskey) matches  the  operator.   This
       can be helpful if a lesskey file is used by different versions of less.

       For  example,  suppose that a new command named 'sideways-search' is added in less version 777.  Then the
       following line would assign the command to the Q key, but only in versions of less which support it.  The
       line would be ignored by versions earlier than 777.

            #version >= 777  Q sideways-search

       These six operators are supported:
             >    Greater than
             <    Less than
             >=   Greater than or equal to
             <=   Less than or equal to
             =    Equal to
             !=   Not equal to

       The  #version  feature is not supported in less and lesskey before version 594.  In those older versions,
       all #version lines are ignored.

EXAMPLE

       The following input file sets the -i and -S options when less is run and, on version 595 and higher, adds
       a --color option.

            #env
            ## (Note that there must be a space at the end of the next line,
            ##  to separate the --color option from the -S option.)
            LESS = -i -S
            #version >= 595  LESS += --color=Hkc

SEE ALSO

       less(1)

WARNINGS

       On MS-DOS and OS/2 systems, certain keys send a sequence of characters which start with a  NUL  character
       (0).  This NUL character should be represented as \340 in a lesskey file.

COPYRIGHT

       Copyright (C) 1984-2024  Mark Nudelman

       less is part of the GNU project and is free software.  You can redistribute it and/or modify it under the
       terms  of  either (1) the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; or (2)
       the  Less  License.   See  the  file  README  in  the  less  distribution  for  more  details   regarding
       redistribution.   You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with the source
       for less; see the file COPYING.  If not, write to the Free Software Foundation, 59  Temple  Place,  Suite
       330, Boston, MA  02111-1307, USA.  You should also have received a copy of the Less License; see the file
       LICENSE.

       less  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.

AUTHOR

       Mark Nudelman
       Report bugs at https://github.com/gwsw/less/issues.

                                            Version 668: 06 Oct 2024                                  LESSKEY(1)