When you get used to pressing the up arrow for history items, the tab auto-complete feature and other handy features in the Linux terminal, it can be irritating when the occasional program behaves differently.
I have been using SICStus Prolog for my CS Prolog course and have been irritated by SICStus picking up the up arrow key as ^[[A and not retrieving the last thing I typed.
To get it to work like the Bash shell and other programs do, you can use rlwrap [program].
This program allows you to ‘wrap’ a program you’re running, like SICStus, in the readline attribute. This contains the features you’re used to. Just type something like this at the terminal, e.g.
1 |
rlwrap sicstus |
It will ‘wrap’ your program in the readline function and work as expected. Voila!
If you want more information on rlwrap, check out the man (manual) page.