Working with xterm and Friends (Unix Power Tools, 3rd Edition)
5.9. Working with xterm and Friends
xterm
is by far the most commonly used X client, although more and more
people are switching from xterm to similar or
related programs, such as
rxvt -- which is a lightweight
xterm derivative without the Tektronix terminal
emulation support. Regardless, the most commonly used clients are
largely derivatives of xterm, so
we're devoting the rest of this section to this
single client and its family.
xterm[20] gives you a window containing your
standard shell prompt (as specified in your
/etc/passwd entry). You can use this window to
run any command-line-oriented Unix program or to
start additional X applications.
[20]When we refer, throughout
the rest of the chapter, to xterm,
we're often referring to xterm
proper, as well as rxvt and other related terminal
programs.
The uncustomized xterm window should be sufficient
for many users' needs. Certainly you can do anything
in a vanilla xterm window that you can from a
character-based terminal. But xterm also has
special features you can use, and since you spend so much time in
xterm, you might as well use them.
The rest of this chapter gives you a set of tricks and tips about
using xterm, including the following:
Specifying and using a scrollbar (Section 5.11).
Copying and pasting text selections (Section 5.13).
Modifying text-selection behavior (Section 5.14).
Printing the current directory in the xterm
titlebar (Section 5.15).
Dynamically changing fonts and other features (Section 5.17, Section 5.18).
NOTE:
The articles in this chapter use terms that you may want defined:
A
pointer, or
pointing device, is a piece of hardware designed for navigating a
screen. Most people use a mouse as their pointer, but there are also
trackballs, touchpads, and others.
The best pointer to use with X has three buttons. When we refer to
the first button or button
1, we mean the button you click with your index finger.
For right-handed people, this is usually the left button on a mouse.
But the X client
xmodmap (Section 6.1) lets
left-handed users swap mouse buttons to make the rightmost button the
"first."
Even though the actual image on the screen is called a
cursor, throughout
this chapter we refer to "moving the
pointer" to avoid confusion with the standard text
cursor that can appear in an xterm window.
--LM, VQ, and SJC
5.8. Setting Your Erase, Kill, and Interrupt Characters5.10. Login xterms and rxvts
Copyright © 2003 O'Reilly & Associates. All rights reserved.
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