ftp.nice.ch/peanuts/GeneralData/Usenet/news/1991/CSN-91.tar.gz#/comp-sys-next/1991/Feb/unwanted-Terminal-shutdown

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Date: Sun 22-Feb-1991 00:42:54 From: petcher@wuphys.wustl.edu (Donald N. Petcher) Subject: unwanted Terminal shutdown I recently got a NeXT slab for my daily workstation, and I must say I have been very pleased in general. However there is one annoying thing about which I would like to ask about a way to prevent. The generic way of exiting a program is to use Command-q. Since I primarily work in csh running under Terminal, I use this normally when I jump out to look something up in the manual or so. However, occasionally I don't notice that the Terminal program is the 'current' program (meaning the one governed by the active menu - I haven't yet learned 'NeXTese' so I don't know if this is correct parlance) and I hit Command-q intending to close up some other program, and ALL MY csh PROCESSES GET KILLED without so much as an inquiry. Is there a flag to set that at least allows this to be vetoed when I make a mistake? It has happened a little too often to be just annoying. thanks, Don Petcher petcher@wuphys.wustl.edu petcher@ebenezer.wustl.edu
Date: Sun 23-Feb-1991 22:30:42 From: mdixon@parc.xerox.com (Mike Dixon) Subject: Re: unwanted Terminal shutdown ... and I hit Command-q intending to close up some other program, and ALL MY csh PROCESSES GET KILLED without so much as an inquiry. Is there a flag to set that at least allows this to be vetoed when I make a mistake? your best choice is to dump Terminal and get Scott Hess's Stuart (shareware at all the archives). it fixes this and a few zillion other problems with Terminal. (alternatively, if you really can't afford the small amount of $$ asked for Stuart, you could probably use the recently-posted nib extractor to pull Terminal's menu and remove the command-key equivalent for 'Quit'.)
Date: Sun 24-Feb-1991 04:58:58 From: ddj@zardoz.club.cc.cmu.edu (Doug DeJulio) Subject: Re: unwanted Terminal shutdown In article <1991Feb22.004254.11244@wuphys.wustl.edu> petcher@wuphys.UUCP (Donald N. Petcher) writes: >The generic way of exiting a program is to use Command-q. Since I >primarily work in csh running under Terminal, I use this normally when I >jump out to look something up in the manual or so. However, >occasionally I don't notice that the Terminal program is the 'current' >program (meaning the one governed by the active menu - I haven't yet >learned 'NeXTese' so I don't know if this is correct parlance) and I hit >Command-q intending to close up some other program, and ALL MY csh >PROCESSES GET KILLED without so much as an inquiry. Is there a flag to >set that at least allows this to be vetoed when I make a mistake? It has >happened a little too often to be just annoying. My solution was to use one of the many NIB file extracting/combining tools to make a new version of terminal (/LocalApps/MyTerm on my machine), and just remove the little 'q' from the quit option in the main menu. Works like a charm.

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