This is the command yudit that can be run in the OnWorks free hosting provider using one of our multiple free online workstations such as Ubuntu Online, Fedora Online, Windows online emulator or MAC OS online emulator
PROGRAM:
NAME
yudit - Unicode Editor for The X Window System
SYNOPSIS
yudit [ -e encoding ] [[ file-name [ file-name... ]]
DESCRIPTION
yudit is an unicode text editors.
When a user runs yudit for the first time $HOME/.yudit, $HOME/.yudit/data, and
$HOME/.yudit/fonts are created.
The configuration file can be edited inside yudit. For the detailed description of usage
and configuration take a look at the on-line manual.
If you are planning to save files with yudit please note that the format preferred by edit
for unicode files is UTF8.
yudit can convert between different encodings, but if you do not need a GUI consider
uniconv.
ARGUMENTS
-e encoding
The encoding determines how yudit interacts with character streams: file input,
file output, cut and paste. XInput encoding is set up to use an independent, fixed
encoder.
If you received yudit through the yudit distribution, the following encodings are
inclusively supported:
UTF8, UTF7, 8859_1, 8859_2, 8859_5, 8859_7, 8859_9, KOI8_R, JIS, SJIS, EUC_JP,
ISO2022_KR, EUC_KR, JOHAB, UHC, GB2312_7, GB2312_8, HZ, BIG5, CTEXT_JA, 10646 JAVA.
For a detailed description of these please refer to uniconv man page.
file-name
is the file yudit should read into its buffer at start-up.
ENVIRONMENT
The environment variable HOME should point to the user's home directory, where the yudit
configuration file (.yuditrc) is kept. If the file is corrupt yudit exits with an error
dialog. Errors messages are usually replicated in the standard error output of the yudit.
Use yudit online using onworks.net services