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Command line interface
This will cover how to start Ox from your command line and the options you can use to launch Ox in a specific way.
You can access the help menu by running
ox --help
This will display the help menu and provide a list of all the arguments available.
Ox can be started up by using the command
ox
This will launch Ox into a blank document, ready to be edited.
You can open files by providing the names like so:
ox file.rs
This will automatically open up the file file.rs
You can also open multiple files at once.
ox file1.rs file2.rs file3.rs
After running this, you'll see all your files (file1.rs
, file2.rs
, file3.rs
in this case) opened in tabs across your screen.
You can check your version by running
ox --version
You can also change the configuration directory by running
ox --config /path/to/configuration.ron
The editor will read a specific configuration file on your system.
In versions above 0.2.7, you can use a handy trick from the command line to jump to a specific location in the file. You can do this by formatting your files like this:
ox file.txt:100
This above will open file.txt
and automatically go to the 100th line in the file
Here's another example:
ox file.txt:100:10
This is another format in where it will open up file.txt
and jump to the 100th line and 10th character across.
In general, the format of this feature is as follows:
ox FILENAME:LINE:CHARACTER
Also in 0.2.7 and above, you can access a read only mode by providing the -r
argument
ox -r file.txt
This will open file.txt
in read only mode. This means that you will not be able to edit the file.