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Introduction to the Form and Menu Language Interpreter (FMLI)

Navigating in a menu

There are two methods of navigating in a menu frame. One is to use a navigation key. As an example of how navigation keys work, you can try the menu navigation keys in the example menu TOP MENU. The following list shows some of the keys you can use to navigate in a menu:

As you navigate in the menu, the ``>'' symbol shows which menu item is current. In a scrollable (by definition, single-column) menu, pressing <->> or <DOWN ARROW> when the cursor is on the last item of the display will roll the contents of the menu up one line; pressing <LEFT ARROW> or <UP ARROW> when the cursor is on the first line of the display will roll the contents of the menu down one line. Note that pressing the named keys <SCROLL-UP> or <SCROLL-DOWN> will roll the contents of a scrollable menu up or down one line, respectively, without moving the cursor.

The other method of navigating in a menu frame is to type the name of the item to which you want to move. You do not have to type the full name, or worry about upper and lower case. When you type a character, the cursor moves to the first item in the menu that matches the string typed so far. If you type the letter w, for example, the cursor moves to the first menu item that starts with w or W. If you then type r, the cursor moves to the first item that starts with the letters wr. When a string cannot be matched, the terminal bell sounds, or the screen flashes, depending on the terminal, and an error message is displayed on the message line. The cursor wraps around when it reaches either end of the menu. In a scrollable menu the display scrolls as necessary.


NOTE: If you start to type the name of a menu item and the cursor moves, and you then decide to select something else, you must use <BACKSPACE> to erase the characters already typed, or press one of the navigation keys before character matching can be used again.


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UnixWare 7 Release 7.1.4 - 27 April 2004