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EDIT ((ABORT-COMMAND | CHARACTER-DELETE | COMMENT-CHARACTER |

     CONTINUATION-CHARACTER | END-OF-COMMAND | ERROR-DELETE |
     FULL-RECOGNITION | HELP-CHARACTER | INDIRECT-FILE-PREFIX |
     LAST-LINE | LINE-DELETE | PARTIAL-RECOGNITION |
     QUOTE-NEXT-CHARACTER | REPEAT-COUNT |  RETYPE-LINE |
     WORD-DELETE) char) |
     SYSTEM-DEFAULTS

 In order  to  support  in-line editing  during  interactive  typein  of
 commands, the parsing  package provides  a number  of editing  options.
 Normally, those provided by the host operating system will be the  most
 natural to use,  and will  be chosen as  the default  options when  the
 parsing package is installed on  a given computer.  At times,  however,
 it may be convenient to temporarily change these, for which purpose the
 options of the EDIT command are provided.  Edit characters can be  one-
 or two-character sequences, or both,  and are provided either as  named
 ASCII control characters  or as quoted  character strings following  an
 option name.  Any  edit option may  be disabled by  defining it with  a
 null string (e.g. EDIT ABORT-COMMAND '').

 Because recognition and help requests  cause the current input line  to
 be retyped, after  which additional  text can  be entered  on the  same
 line, it is not directly possible with normal host terminal editing  to
 edit back  into  the previous  text.   The default  two-character  edit
 sequences allow this to be done.

 An EDIT command without any options will display the current  settings,
 and an "EDIT SYSTEM-DEFAULTS" command will restore all edit  characters
 to their default values for the host operating system.