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NANO(1)								       NANO(1)

NAME
       nano - Nano's ANOther editor, an enhanced free Pico clone

SYNOPSIS
       nano [options] [[+line[,column]] file]...

DESCRIPTION
       nano  is	 a  small and friendly editor.	It copies the look and feel of
       Pico, but is free software, and implements several features  that  Pico
       lacks,  such as: opening multiple files, scrolling per line, undo/redo,
       syntax coloring, line numbering, and soft-wrapping overlong lines.

       When giving a filename on the command line, the cursor can be put on  a
       specific line by adding the line number with a plus sign (+) before the
       filename, and even in a specific column by adding it with a comma.

       As a special case: if instead of a filename a dash (-) is  given,  nano
       will read data from standard input.

EDITING
       Entering	 text  and  moving around in a file is straightforward: typing
       the letters and using the normal cursor movement	 keys.	 Commands  are
       entered by using the Control (^) and the Alt or Meta (M-) keys.	Typing
       ^K deletes the current line and puts it in the cutbuffer.   Consecutive
       ^Ks  will  put all deleted lines together in the cutbuffer.  Any cursor
       movement or executing any other command will cause the next ^K to over‐
       write  the cutbuffer.  A ^U will paste the current contents of the cut‐
       buffer at the current cursor position.

       When a more precise piece of text needs to be cut or  copied,  one  can
       mark  its  start	 with  ^6, move the cursor to its end (the marked text
       will be highlighted), and then use ^K to cut it, or M-6 to copy	it  to
       the cutbuffer.  One can also save the marked text to a file with ^O, or
       spell check it with ^T.

       Since nano-2.7.0, text can also be selected by holding Shift and moving
       the  cursor  with  the  arrow  keys.  Holding down the Alt key too will
       increase the stride.

       The two lines at the bottom of the screen show some important commands;
       the  built-in  help (^G) lists all the available ones.  The default key
       bindings can be changed via a nanorc file -- see nanorc(5).

OPTIONS
       -A, --smarthome
	      Make the Home key smarter.  When Home is pressed anywhere but at
	      the  very	 beginning of non-whitespace characters on a line, the
	      cursor will jump to that beginning  (either  forwards  or	 back‐
	      wards).  If the cursor is already at that position, it will jump
	      to the true beginning of the line.

       -B, --backup
	      When saving a file, back up the previous version	of  it,	 using
	      the current filename suffixed with a tilde (~).

       -C directory, --backupdir=directory
	      Make  and	 keep  not  just  one backup file, but make and keep a
	      uniquely numbered one every time a file is saved -- when backups
	      are enabled (-B).	 The uniquely numbered files are stored in the
	      specified directory.

       -D, --boldtext
	      Use bold text instead of reverse video text.

       -E, --tabstospaces
	      Convert typed tabs to spaces.

       -F, --multibuffer
	      Read a file into a new buffer by default.

       -G, --locking
	      Use vim-style file locking when editing files.

       -H, --historylog
	      Save the last hundred search strings and replacement strings and
	      executed	commands,  so  they can be easily reused in later ses‐
	      sions.

       -I, --ignorercfiles
	      Don't look at the system's nanorc nor at the user's nanorc.

       -K, --rebindkeypad
	      Interpret the numeric keypad keys so that they  all  work	 prop‐
	      erly.  You should only need to use this option if they don't, as
	      mouse support won't work properly with this option enabled.

       -L, --nonewlines
	      Don't add newlines to the ends of files.

       -N, --noconvert
	      Disable automatic conversion of files from DOS/Mac format.

       -O, --morespace
	      Use the blank line below the title bar as extra editing space.

       -P, --positionlog
	      For the 200 most recent files, log the last position of the cur‐
	      sor,  and	 place it at that position again upon reopening such a
	      file.  (The old form of this option, --poslog, is deprecated.)

       -Q "characters", --quotestr="characters"
	      Set  the	quoting	 string	 for  justifying.   The	  default   is
	      "^([ \t]*[#:>\|}])+"  if	extended regular expression support is
	      available, or "> " otherwise.  Note that \t stands for a Tab.

       -R, --restricted
	      Restricted mode: don't read or write to any file	not  specified
	      on  the  command	line;  don't read any nanorc files nor history
	      files; don't allow suspending nor spell checking; don't allow  a
	      file to be appended to, prepended to, or saved under a different
	      name if it already has one; and don't use	 backup	 files.	  This
	      restricted  mode	is  also  accessible by invoking nano with any
	      name beginning with 'r' (e.g. "rnano").

       -S, --smooth
	      Use smooth scrolling: text will scroll line-by-line, instead  of
	      the usual chunk-by-chunk behavior.

       -T number, --tabsize=number
	      Set  the	size (width) of a tab to number columns.  The value of
	      number must be greater than 0.  The default value is 8.

       -U, --quickblank
	      Do quick status-bar blanking: status-bar messages will disappear
	      after  1	keystroke  instead of 25.  Note that option -c (--con‐
	      stantshow) overrides this.

       -V, --version
	      Show the current version number and exit.

       -W, --wordbounds
	      Detect word boundaries differently by treating punctuation char‐
	      acters as part of a word.

       -X "characters", --wordchars="characters"
	      Specify  which other characters (besides the normal alphanumeric
	      ones) should be considered as part of a  word.   This  overrides
	      option -W (--wordbounds).

       -Y name, --syntax=name
	      Specify  the  name  of the syntax highlighting to use from among
	      the ones defined in the nanorc files.

       -a, --atblanks
	      When doing soft line wrapping, wrap lines at whitespace  instead
	      of always at the edge of the screen.

       -c, --constantshow
	      Constantly  show	the  cursor  position on the status bar.  Note
	      that this overrides option -U (--quickblank).

       -d, --rebinddelete
	      Interpret the Delete key differently so that both Backspace  and
	      Delete  work  properly.  You should only need to use this option
	      if Backspace acts like Delete on your system.

       -g, --showcursor
	      Make the cursor visible in the file browser, putting it  on  the
	      highlighted item.	 Useful for braille users.

       -h, --help
	      Show a summary of the available command-line options and exit.

       -i, --autoindent
	      Indent  new  lines  to  the previous line's indentation.	Useful
	      when editing source code.

       -k, --cutfromcursor
	      Make the 'Cut Text' command (normally ^K) cut from  the  current
	      cursor  position	to the end of the line, instead of cutting the
	      entire line.

       -l, --linenumbers
	      Display line numbers to the left of the text area.

       -m, --mouse
	      Enable mouse  support,  if  available  for  your	system.	  When
	      enabled,	mouse  clicks can be used to place the cursor, set the
	      mark (with a double click), and execute  shortcuts.   The	 mouse
	      will work in the X Window System, and on the console when gpm is
	      running.	Text can still be selected through dragging by holding
	      down the Shift key.

       -n, --noread
	      Treat  any  name	given on the command line as a new file.  This
	      allows nano to write to named pipes: it will start with a	 blank
	      buffer,  and  will  write	 to  the  pipe when the user saves the
	      "file".  This way nano can be used as an editor  in  combination
	      with  for instance gpg without having to write sensitive data to
	      disk first.

       -o directory, --operatingdir=directory
	      Set the operating directory.  This makes nano set	 up  something
	      similar to a chroot.

       -p, --preserve
	      Preserve	the XON and XOFF sequences (^Q and ^S) so they will be
	      caught by the terminal.

       -q, --quiet
	      Obsolete option.	Recognized but ignored.

       -r number, --fill=number
	      Hard-wrap lines at column number.	 If this value is 0  or	 less,
	      wrapping	will occur at the width of the screen less number col‐
	      umns, allowing the wrap point to vary along with	the  width  of
	      the  screen  if the screen is resized.  The default value is -8.
	      This option conflicts with -w (--nowrap) -- the last  one	 given
	      takes effect.

       -s program, --speller=program
	      Use this alternative spell checker command.

       -t, --tempfile
	      Save a changed buffer without prompting (when exiting with ^X).

       -u, --unix
	      Save  a  file  by default in Unix format.	 This overrides nano's
	      default behavior of saving a file in the	format	that  it  had.
	      (This option has no effect when you also use --noconvert.)

       -v, --view
	      Just view the file and disallow editing: read-only mode.

       -w, --nowrap
	      Disable  the hard-wrapping of long lines.	 This option conflicts
	      with -r (--fill) -- the last one given takes effect.

       -x, --nohelp
	      Don't show the two help lines at the bottom of the screen.

       -z, --suspend
	      Enable the suspend ability.

       -$, --softwrap
	      Enable 'soft wrapping'.  This will make nano attempt to  display
	      the  entire  contents of any line, even if it is longer than the
	      screen width, by	continuing  it	over  multiple	screen	lines.
	      Since  '$'  normally refers to a variable in the Unix shell, you
	      should specify this option last when using other	options	 (e.g.
	      'nano -wS$') or pass it separately (e.g. 'nano -wS -$').

       -b, -e, -f, -j
	      Ignored, for compatibility with Pico.

TOGGLES
       Several of the above options can be switched on and off also while nano
       is running.  For example, M-L toggles the hard-wrapping of long	lines,
       M-$  toggles  soft-wrapping,  M-# toggles line numbers, M-M toggles the
       mouse, M-I auto-indentation, and M-X the help lines.  See at the end of
       the ^G help text for a complete list.

INITIALIZATION FILE
       nano  will  read two configuration files: first the system's nanorc (if
       it exists), and then the user's nanorc (if it exists), either ~/.nanorc
       or  $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/nano/nanorc or ~/.config/nano/nanorc, whichever is
       encountered first.  See nanorc(5) for more information on the  possible
       contents of those files.

NOTES
       If  no  alternative  spell  checker command is specified on the command
       line nor in one of the nanorc files, nano will check the SPELL environ‐
       ment variable for one.

       In  some cases nano will try to dump the buffer into an emergency file.
       This will happen mainly if nano receives a SIGHUP or  SIGTERM  or  runs
       out of memory.  It will write the buffer into a file named nano.save if
       the buffer didn't have a name already, or will add a ".save" suffix  to
       the  current  filename.	 If  an	 emergency file with that name already
       exists in the current directory, it will	 add  ".save"  plus  a	number
       (e.g.  ".save.1")  to  the current filename in order to make it unique.
       In multibuffer mode, nano will write all	 the  open  buffers  to	 their
       respective emergency files.

BUGS
       Justifications (^J) are not yet covered by the general undo system.  So
       after a justification that is not  immediately  undone,	earlier	 edits
       cannot be undone any more.  The workaround is, of course, to exit with‐
       out saving.

       The recording and playback of keyboard macros works correctly only on a
       terminal emulator, not on a Linux console (VT), because the latter is a
       deficient terminal.  And it works only with recent versions of ncurses.

       Please report any other bugs that you encounter via:
       https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?group=nano.

HOMEPAGE
       https://nano-editor.org/

SEE ALSO
       nanorc(5)

       /usr/share/doc/nano/ (or equivalent on your system)

AUTHOR
       Chris Allegretta and others (see	 the  files  AUTHORS  and  THANKS  for
       details).  This manual page was originally written by Jordi Mallach for
       the Debian system (but may be used by others).

November 2017			 version 2.9.1			       NANO(1)
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