Keyboard Shortcuts And Tab Completion Help - NETGEAR ProSafe WG302 Reference Manual

802.11g wireless access point
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Reference Manual for the NETGEAR ProSafe 802.11g Wireless Access Point WG302

Keyboard Shortcuts and Tab Completion Help

The CLI provides keyboard shortcuts to help you navigate the command line and build valid
commands, along with "tab completion" hints on available commands that match what you have
typed so far.
Table
8-2.describes the keyboard shortcuts available from the CLI.
Table 8-2. Keyboard Shortcuts
Keyboard Shortcut
Ctrl-a
Home
Ctrl-e
End
Ctrl-b
Left Arrow key
Ctrl-f
Right Arrow Key
Ctrl-c
Ctrl-h
Ctrl-W
Ctrl-k
Ctrl-U
Ctrl-l
Ctrl-p
Up Arrow key
Ctrl-n
Down Arrow key
Ctrl-d
C-8
Action on CLI
Move cursor to the beginning of the current line
Move cursor to the end of the current line
Move cursor back on the current line, one character at a time
Move the cursor forward on the current line, one character at a time
Start over at a blank command prompt (abandons the input on the current line)
Remove one character on the current line.
Remove the last word in the current command.
(Clears one word at a time from the current command line, always starting with
the last word on the line.)
Remove characters starting from cursor location to end of the current line.
(Clears the current line from the cursor forward.)
Remove all characters before the cursor.
(Clears the current line from the cursor back to the CLI prompt.)
Clear screen but keep current CLI prompt and input in place.
Display previous command in history.
(Ctrl-p and Ctrl-n let you cycle through a history of all executed commands like
Up and Down arrow keys typically do. Up/Down arrow keys also work for this.)
Display next command in history.
(Ctrl-p and Ctrl-n let you cycle through a history of all executed commands like
Up and Down arrow keys typically do. Up/Down arrow keys also work for this.)
Exit the CLI. (At a blank command prompt, typing Ctrl-d closes the CLI.)
(Typing Ctrl-d within command text also removes characters, one at a time, at
cursor location like Ctrl-h.)
v0.1, December 2005
Command Line Reference

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