# Lynx User Defaults File # This file contains options saved from the Lynx Options Screen (normally # with the '>' key). There is normally no need to edit this file manually, # since the defaults here can be controlled from the Options Screen, and the # next time options are saved from the Options Screen this file will be # completely rewritten. You have been warned... # If you are looking for the general configuration file - it is normally # called lynx.cfg, and it has different content and a different format. # It is not this file. # accept_all_cookies allows the user to tell Lynx to automatically # accept all cookies if desired. The default is "FALSE" which will # prompt for each cookie. Set accept_all_cookies to "TRUE" to accept # all cookies. accept_all_cookies=true # bookmark_file specifies the name and location of the default bookmark # file into which the user can paste links for easy access at a later # date. bookmark_file=./.lynx/lynx_bookmarks.html # If case_sensitive_searching is "on" then when the user invokes a search # using the 's' or '/' keys, the search performed will be case sensitive # instead of case INsensitive. The default is usually "off". case_sensitive_searching=off # The character_set definition controls the representation of 8 bit # characters for your terminal. If 8 bit characters do not show up # correctly on your screen you may try changing to a different 8 bit # set or using the 7 bit character approximations. # Current valid characters sets are: # Western (ISO-8859-1) # 7 bit approximations (US-ASCII) # Western (ISO-8859-15) # Western (cp850) # Western (windows-1252) # IBM PC US codepage (cp437) # DEC Multinational # Macintosh (8 bit) # NeXT character set # HP Roman8 # Chinese # Japanese (EUC-JP) # Japanese (Shift_JIS) # Korean # Taipei (Big5) # Vietnamese (VISCII) # Transparent # Eastern European (ISO-8859-2) # Eastern European (cp852) # Eastern European (windows-1250) # Latin 3 (ISO-8859-3) # Latin 4 (ISO-8859-4) # Baltic Rim (cp775) # Baltic Rim (windows-1257) # Cyrillic (ISO-8859-5) # Cyrillic (cp866) # Cyrillic (windows-1251) # Cyrillic (KOI8-R) # Arabic (ISO-8859-6) # Arabic (cp864) # Arabic (windows-1256) # Greek (ISO-8859-7) # Greek (cp737) # Greek2 (cp869) # Greek (windows-1253) # Hebrew (ISO-8859-8) # Hebrew (cp862) # Hebrew (windows-1255) # Turkish (ISO-8859-9) # ISO-8859-10 # UNICODE (UTF-8) # RFC 1345 w/o Intro # RFC 1345 Mnemonic # Ukrainian Cyrillic (cp866u) # Ukrainian Cyrillic (KOI8-U) # Cyrillic-Asian (PT154) character_set=UNICODE (UTF-8) # cookie_accept_domains and cookie_reject_domains are comma-delimited # lists of domains from which Lynx should automatically accept or reject # all cookies. If a domain is specified in both options, rejection will # take precedence. The accept_all_cookies parameter will override any # settings made here. cookie_accept_domains= # cookie_file specifies the file from which to read persistent cookies. # The default is ~/.lynx_cookies. cookie_file=~/.lynx/.lynx_cookies # cookie_loose_invalid_domains, cookie_strict_invalid_domains, and # cookie_query_invalid_domains are comma-delimited lists of which domains # should be subjected to varying degrees of validity checking. If a # domain is set to strict checking, strict conformance to RFC2109 will # be applied. A domain with loose checking will be allowed to set cookies # with an invalid path or domain attribute. All domains will default to # querying the user for an invalid path or domain. cookie_loose_invalid_domains= cookie_query_invalid_domains= cookie_reject_domains= cookie_strict_invalid_domains= # dir_list_order specifies the directory list order under DIRED_SUPPORT # (if implemented). The default is "ORDER_BY_NAME" dir_list_order=ORDER_BY_NAME # dir_list_styles specifies the directory list style under DIRED_SUPPORT # (if implemented). The default is "MIXED_STYLE", which sorts both # files and directories together. "FILES_FIRST" lists files first and # "DIRECTORIES_FIRST" lists directories first. dir_list_style=MIXED_STYLE # If emacs_keys is to "on" then the normal EMACS movement keys: # ^N = down ^P = up # ^B = left ^F = right # will be enabled. emacs_keys=off # file_editor specifies the editor to be invoked when editing local files # or sending mail. If no editor is specified, then file editing is disabled # unless it is activated from the command line, and the built-in line editor # will be used for sending mail. file_editor=nano # The file_sorting_method specifies which value to sort on when viewing # file lists such as FTP directories. The options are: # BY_FILENAME -- sorts on the name of the file # BY_TYPE -- sorts on the type of the file # BY_SIZE -- sorts on the size of the file # BY_DATE -- sorts on the date of the file file_sorting_method=BY_FILENAME # If keypad_mode is set to "NUMBERS_AS_ARROWS", then the numbers on # your keypad when the numlock is on will act as arrow keys: # 8 = Up Arrow # 4 = Left Arrow 6 = Right Arrow # 2 = Down Arrow # and the corresponding keyboard numbers will act as arrow keys, # regardless of whether numlock is on. # If keypad_mode is set to "LINKS_ARE_NUMBERED", then numbers will # appear next to each link and numbers are used to select links. # If keypad_mode is set to "LINKS_AND_FORM_FIELDS_ARE_NUMBERED", then # numbers will appear next to each link and visible form input field. # Numbers are used to select links, or to move the "current link" to a # form input field or button. In addition, options in popup menus are # indexed so that the user may type an option number to select an option in # a popup menu, even if the option isn't visible on the screen. Reference # lists and output from the list command also enumerate form inputs. # NOTE: Some fixed format documents may look disfigured when # "LINKS_ARE_NUMBERED" or "LINKS_AND_FORM_FIELDS_ARE_NUMBERED" are # enabled. keypad_mode=LINKS_ARE_NOT_NUMBERED # lineedit_mode specifies the key binding used for inputting strings in # prompts and forms. If lineedit_mode is set to "Default Binding" then # the following control characters are used for moving and deleting: # Prev Next Enter = Accept input # Move char: <- -> ^G = Cancel input # Move word: ^P ^N ^U = Erase line # Delete char: ^H ^R ^A = Beginning of line # Delete word: ^B ^F ^E = End of line # Current lineedit modes are: # Default Binding # Alternate Bindings # Bash-like Bindings lineedit_mode=Default Binding # The following allow you to define sub-bookmark files and descriptions. # The format is multi_bookmark=, # Up to 26 bookmark files (for the English capital letters) are allowed. # We start with "multi_bookmarkB" since 'A' is the default (see above). multi_bookmarkB= multi_bookmarkC= multi_bookmarkD= multi_bookmarkE= multi_bookmarkF= multi_bookmarkG= multi_bookmarkH= multi_bookmarkI= multi_bookmarkJ= multi_bookmarkK= multi_bookmarkL= multi_bookmarkM= multi_bookmarkN= multi_bookmarkO= multi_bookmarkP= multi_bookmarkQ= multi_bookmarkR= multi_bookmarkS= multi_bookmarkT= multi_bookmarkU= multi_bookmarkV= multi_bookmarkW= multi_bookmarkX= multi_bookmarkY= multi_bookmarkZ= # personal_mail_address specifies your personal mail address. The # address will be sent during HTTP file transfers for authorization and # logging purposes, and for mailed comments. # If you do not want this information given out, set the NO_FROM_HEADER # to TRUE in lynx.cfg, or use the -nofrom command line switch. You also # could leave this field blank, but then you won't have it included in # your mailed comments. personal_mail_address= # preferred_charset specifies the character set in MIME notation (e.g., # ISO-8859-2, ISO-8859-5) which Lynx will indicate you prefer in requests # to http servers using an Accept-Charset header. The value should NOT # include ISO-8859-1 or US-ASCII, since those values are always assumed # by default. May be a comma-separated list. # If a file in that character set is available, the server will send it. # If no Accept-Charset header is present, the default is that any # character set is acceptable. If an Accept-Charset header is present, # and if the server cannot send a response which is acceptable # according to the Accept-Charset header, then the server SHOULD send # an error response, though the sending of an unacceptable response # is also allowed. preferred_charset= # preferred_language specifies the language in MIME notation (e.g., en, # fr, may be a comma-separated list in decreasing preference) # which Lynx will indicate you prefer in requests to http servers. # If a file in that language is available, the server will send it. # Otherwise, the server will send the file in its default language. preferred_language=en # select_popups specifies whether the OPTIONs in a SELECT block which # lacks a MULTIPLE attribute are presented as a vertical list of radio # buttons or via a popup menu. Note that if the MULTIPLE attribute is # present in the SELECT start tag, Lynx always will create a vertical list # of checkboxes for the OPTIONs. A value of "on" will set popup menus # as the default while a value of "off" will set use of radio boxes. # The default can be overridden via the -popup command line toggle. select_popups=on # show_color specifies how to set the color mode at startup. A value of # "never" will force color mode off (treat the terminal as monochrome) # at startup even if the terminal appears to be color capable. A value of # "always" will force color mode on even if the terminal appears to be # monochrome, if this is supported by the library used to build lynx. # A value of "default" will yield the behavior of assuming # a monochrome terminal unless color capability is inferred at startup # based on the terminal type, or the -color command line switch is used, or # the COLORTERM environment variable is set. The default behavior always is # used in anonymous accounts or if the "option_save" restriction is set. # The effect of the saved value can be overridden via # the -color and -nocolor command line switches. # The mode set at startup can be changed via the "show color" option in # the 'o'ptions menu. If the option settings are saved, the "on" and # "off" "show color" settings will be treated as "default". show_color=default # show_cursor specifies whether to 'hide' the cursor to the right (and # bottom, if possible) of the screen, or to place it to the left of the # current link in documents, or current option in select popup windows. # Positioning the cursor to the left of the current link or option is # helpful for speech or braille interfaces, and when the terminal is # one which does not distinguish the current link based on highlighting # or color. A value of "on" will set positioning to the left as the # default while a value of "off" will set 'hiding' of the cursor. # The default can be overridden via the -show_cursor command line toggle. show_cursor=off # show_dotfiles specifies that the directory listing should include # "hidden" (dot) files/directories. If set "on", this will be # honored only if enabled via userdefs.h and/or lynx.cfg, and not # restricted via a command line switch. If display of hidden files # is disabled, creation of such files via Lynx also is disabled. show_dotfiles=off # If sub_bookmarks is not turned "off", and multiple bookmarks have # been defined (see below), then all bookmark operations will first # prompt the user to select an active sub-bookmark file. If the default # Lynx bookmark_file is defined (see above), it will be used as the # default selection. When this option is set to "advanced", and the # user mode is advanced, the 'v'iew bookmark command will invoke a # statusline prompt instead of the menu seen in novice and intermediate # user modes. When this option is set to "standard", the menu will be # presented regardless of user mode. sub_bookmarks=OFF # user_mode specifies the users level of knowledge with Lynx. The # default is "NOVICE" which displays two extra lines of help at the # bottom of the screen to aid the user in learning the basic Lynx # commands. Set user_mode to "INTERMEDIATE" to turn off the extra info. # Use "ADVANCED" to see the URL of the currently selected link at the # bottom of the screen. user_mode=INTERMEDIATE # If verbose_images is "on", lynx will print the name of the image # source file in place of [INLINE], [LINK] or [IMAGE] # See also VERBOSE_IMAGES in lynx.cfg verbose_images=on # If vi_keys is set to "on", then the normal VI movement keys: # j = down k = up # h = left l = right # will be enabled. These keys are only lower case. # Capital 'H', 'J' and 'K will still activate help, jump shortcuts, # and the keymap display, respectively. vi_keys=off # The visited_links setting controls how Lynx organizes the information # in the Visited Links Page. visited_links=LAST_REVERSED