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・ Picnic Point-North Lynnwood, Washington
・ Picnic table
・ Picnic with Weissmann
・ Picnic – A Breath of Fresh Air
・ Picnic, Florida
・ Picnic, Lightning
・ Picnicface
・ Picnicface (TV series)
・ Picnicking Through Purgatory (And Other Things to Do at Night)
・ Picnik
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・ Pico
・ Pico (Los Angeles Metro station)
・ Pico (programming language)
Pico (text editor)
・ Pico 31 de Março
・ Pico Airport
・ Pico Alexander
・ Pico Almanzor
・ Pico Almenara
・ Pico Alto
・ Pico Alto (Santa Maria)
・ Pico and Sepulveda
・ Pico Basilé
・ Pico Bolívar
・ Pico Bonito National Park
・ Pico Bonpland
・ Pico Boulevard
・ PICO Building (Sanford, Florida)


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Pico (text editor) : ウィキペディア英語版
Pico (text editor)

Pico (Pine composer) is a text editor for Unix and Unix-based computer systems. It is integrated with the Pine e-mail client, which was designed by the Office of Computing and Communications at the University of Washington.
From the Pine FAQ: "Pine's message composition editor is also available as a separate stand-alone program, called PICO. PICO is a very simple and easy-to-use text editor offering paragraph justification, cut/paste, and a spelling checker..."
Pico does not support working with several files simultaneously and cannot perform a find and replace across multiple files. It also cannot copy text from one file to another (though it is possible to read text into the editor from a file in its working directory). Pico does support search and replace operations.
Pico's interface is in many ways very similar to that found in Windows editors, such as Notepad.
By comparison, some popular Unix text editors such as vi and Emacs provide a greater number of features than Pico, including regular expression search and replace, and working with multiple files at the same time. However, they are generally harder to learn.
The GNU Project has a clone of Pico called nano which has been developed because Pico's license was not a free software license, since distribution of a modified version of the code was ambiguously forbidden. By default nano attempts to mimic Pico to replicate the environment users are used to. However it can be configured to offer mouse support, auto indentation, regular expression searches and even syntax highlighting making it more useful.
==Basic commands and navigation==

Pico features a number of commands for editing. Arrow keys move the cursor a character at the time in the direction of the movement. Inserting a character is done by pressing the corresponding character key in the keyboard, while giving commands (such as save, spell check, justify, search, etc.) is done using a control key.
The CTRL-T command is used to spell check. The speller is defined from the command line using the -s option. When a person writes files in different languages, the speller can be set to be a script that interacts with the user to select the language to be spelled. Care must be taken that the speller do not leave backup files when spelling the file, as these are not deleted by Pico.
The CTRL-J command is used to left justify text. Text is flowed in each line of a paragraph up to a limit set with the -r option in the command line. If no limit is given in the command line, then a default value of 72 characters per line is used. This limit is used to wrap lines during composition, as well as to justify text. The CTRL-J command justifies the text in the paragraph that the cursor is placed on. The command CTRL-W CTRL-U is used to justify the full file. In case that justification is not done correctly, or by mistake, it can be undone by pressing the CTRL-U command immediately after justification has been done.
The CTRL-W command is used to search for text. Search is done in a case insensitive way, so searching for "Pico" matches "pico", "Pico", and "PICO", The search and replace command is not available by default, but must be enabled through the -b option in the command line.
Two commands allow you to save the current text being edited. The CTRL-X and CTRL-O commands save the contents of the editor. The former command exits the editor after saving, while the latter command allows for continued editing after saving.
Moving inside the editor can be done using the keyboard by using the arrow keys. Keys such as Page Up, or Page Down, scroll the text up or down (towards the beginning or end of the file, respectively). The commands CTRL-W CTRL-Y, and CTRL-W CTRL-V move the cursor to the beginning or end of the file respectively, while the commands CTRL-A and CTRL-E move the cursor to the beginning and the end of the line that the cursor is located on.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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