Fix SI and SO

SI (0x0F or ^O) means Shift In, and it selects G1 charset definition,
and SO (0x0E or ^N) means Shift Out, and it selects G0 charset
definition, but st was doing just the inverse.
dev
Roberto E. Vargas Caballero 2014-10-08 10:30:20 +02:00
parent a7eef8f230
commit 0c8feecbf7
1 changed files with 3 additions and 5 deletions

8
st.c
View File

@ -2431,11 +2431,9 @@ tcontrolcode(uchar ascii) {
term.esc &= ~(ESC_CSI|ESC_ALTCHARSET|ESC_TEST); term.esc &= ~(ESC_CSI|ESC_ALTCHARSET|ESC_TEST);
term.esc |= ESC_START; term.esc |= ESC_START;
return; return;
case '\016': /* SO */ case '\016': /* SO (LS1 -- Locking shift 1) */
term.charset = 0; case '\017': /* SI (LS0 -- Locking shift 0) */
return; term.charset = 1 - (ascii - '\016');
case '\017': /* SI */
term.charset = 1;
return; return;
case '\032': /* SUB */ case '\032': /* SUB */
tsetchar(question, &term.c.attr, term.c.x, term.c.y); tsetchar(question, &term.c.attr, term.c.x, term.c.y);