more(1ucb) was written by Eric Shienbrood, who modeled from the
functionality from the ITS terminal function he was used to at MIT when he
became a grad student around the same time as I did.
As for before more(1ucb), we used ^S/^Q and remember many of us were on
30/120 cps dialup terminals. So it was not a problem until direct lines @
9600 baud became available (plus having enough power in the processor to
drive them).
Clem
On Wed, Nov 8, 2017 at 6:54 PM, Will Senn <will.senn(a)gmail.com> wrote:
Hi,
In looking around the system v7 environment, I don't see a more command
anywhere. I downloaded, converted, and attached 1bsd, 2bsd, and finally
3bsd and it was there that I found source for more... 3bsd looks like it's
for VAX, not PDP-11, and it doesn't want to compile (looking for some
externs that I gather are part of the distro's clib).
I may jump ship on V7 and head over to 2.9BSD, which, as I understand it,
is a V7 with fixes and these kind of additional tools...
In the meantime, how did folks page through text like man sh and such
before more? I know how to view sections of text using sed and ed's ok for
paging file text (painful, but workable). I just can't seem to locate the
idiomatic way of keeping everything from constantly scrolling out of view!
Obviously, this isn't a problem on my mac as terminal works fine, but I
like to try to stay in character as a 1970 time traveling unix user :).
Thanks,
Will
Sent from my iPhone