st

fork of suckless's simple terminal
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commit 331033f1f6abe259218666e6f6a848f38d884078
parent f7398434b8fa949af7bf43472caaefdd97eed0f3
Author: Klemens Nanni <kl3@posteo.org>
Date:   Thu, 13 Oct 2016 16:28:50 +0200

Add missing device path to '-l' example

Also, it's ttyS0 not ttySO.

Diffstat:
Mst.1 | 8++++----
1 file changed, 4 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-)
diff --git a/st.1 b/st.1
@@ -96,18 +96,18 @@ use a tty
 .I line
 instead of a pseudo terminal.
 .I line
-should be a (pseudo-)serial device (e.g. /dev/ttySO on Linux for serial port
+should be a (pseudo-)serial device (e.g. /dev/ttyS0 on Linux for serial port
 0).
 When this flag is given
 remaining arguments are used as flags for
 .BR stty(1).
 By default st initializes the serial line to 8 bits, no parity, 1 stop bit
 and a 38400 baud rate. The speed is set by appending it as last argument
-(e.g. 'st -l 115200'). Arguments before the last one are
+(e.g. 'st -l /dev/ttyS0 115200'). Arguments before the last one are
 .BR stty(1)
 flags. If you want to set odd parity on 115200 baud use for example 'st -l
-parenb parodd 115200'. Set the number of bits by using for example 'st -l cs7
-115200'. See
+/dev/ttyS0 parenb parodd 115200'. Set the number of bits by using for
+example 'st -l /dev/ttyS0 cs7 115200'. See
 .BR stty(1)
 for more arguments and cases.
 .TP