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by lmm
340 days ago
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> I believe you're misunderstanding the problem. The terminal doesn't "break" in the sense that it crashes or does something undefined for those cases. The terminal is doing something that is completely meaningful and well defined and probably has some realistic use cases, such as switching to a different character encoding. I'm aware of the details, but I think sometimes that knowledge leads people to miss the forest for the trees. If the user perceives the terminal as having "broken", that's a case of poor UX design at a minimum. Given that users can readily distinguish between legitimate coloured output etc. and terminals getting into a poor state, it really shouldn't be too hard for the terminal itself to do so. (E.g. it's pretty normal for today's terminals to display some kind of visible warning (complete with resume button) when you press Ctrl-S, rather than simply silently stopping). And while this is a much fuzzier and more contentious claim, I think the Rust community's mentality (as seen in e.g. their approach to compiler errors) nudges people towards such approaches. |
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A terminal is basically a function foo(char_stream) = formatted_char_stream. It has no idea whatsoever what the input means, or what the output is supposed to mean. Your Ctrl-S example is completely in line with this: it's one control code that the Terminal chooses to display/interpet in a certain way (older terminals would just stop, newer terminals display some warning text and wait for user input). Recognizing that the start-red-output control sequence should not be interpreted as a control sequence if it's coming from the output of `ls` is a fundamentally different type of change.
Would it be nice to have a different concept, a CmdDisplayer that takes as input (commands, command text, control text) and outputs formatted text while understanding its input? Maybe. But it wouldn't be a terminal, and it would require a fundamental redesign of every single program that wants to meaningfully interact with it - especially all shells and any TUI program that might make the most use of such a tool.