Typically a program has to provide any fancy editing features. As the ever-popular Anonymous Monk mentions, the package Term::Readline package can give you access to one of the line input libraries. If you get it set up with the Gnu libreadline library, you can get history and quite a bit of editing functionality.
...roboticus
When your only tool is a hammer, all problems look like your thumb.
In reply to Re: What editing mode am I in when interacting with a Perl script using OS X Terminal? Because the keyboard works differently to a normal shell.
by roboticus
in thread What editing mode am I in when interacting with a Perl script using OS X Terminal? Because the keyboard works differently to a normal shell.
by Cody Fendant
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