The xterm Menus (Unix Power Tools, 3rd Edition)
5.17. The xterm Menus
xterm
has four different menus, each providing items that serve different
purposes. You display a menu by placing the pointer on the window and
simultaneously pressing the CTRL (keyboard) key and a pointer button.
When you're using a window manager that provides a
titlebar or frame, the pointer must rest within the window proper and
not on any window decoration.
Table 5-3 describes the menus and how to display
them.
Table 5-3. The xterm menus
Menu title
Display by holding
Use to
Main Options
CTRL, pointer button 1
Enter secure mode; interrupt, stop, etc., the xterm process.
VT Options
CTRL, pointer button 2
Toggle user preferences, including scrollbar, reverse video, margin
bell; toggle Tektronix/VT100 mode.
VT Fonts
CTRL, pointer button 3
Select alternative display font.
Tek Options
CTRL, pointer button 2, on Tektronix
window
Toggle VT100/Tektronix mode; select display font.
As shown in Table 5-3, three of the four
xterm menus are divided into sections separated by
horizontal lines. The top portion of each divided menu contains
various modes that can be toggled. (The one exception is the
Redraw Window item on the Main Options menu, which is a command.) A
check mark appears next to a mode that is currently active. Selecting
one of these modes toggles its state.
The items on the VT Fonts menu
change the font in which text is displayed in the
xterm window. Only one of these fonts can be
active at a time. To turn one off, you must activate another. See
Section 5.18 for information on using the
VT Fonts menu.
When you display an xterm menu, the pointer
becomes the arrow pointer and initially appears in the
menu's title. Once the menu appears, you can release
any keyboard key. The menu will remain visible as long as you
continue to hold down the appropriate pointer button. (You can move
the pointer off the menu without it disappearing.) To toggle a
mode or activate a command, drag the
pointer down the menu and release the pointer button on the item you
want.
If you decide not to select a menu item after the menu has appeared,
move the pointer off the menu and release the button. The menu
disappears and no action is taken.
You probably won't use the xterm
menus too often. You can set most mode entries by using command-line
options when invoking xterm or by using entries in
a resource file (Section 6.5). See the xterm manpage for
a complete list of options and resource variables.
The various modes on the menus are very helpful if
you've set (or failed to set) a particular mode on
the command line and then decide you want the opposite
characteristic. For instance, say you've run
xterm without a scrollbar and then decide you want
one. You can toggle the scrollbar from the VT
Options
menu.
The sections below the modes portion of each menu contain various
commands. Selecting one of these commands performs the indicated
function. Many of these functions can be invoked only from the
xterm menus. However, some functions can be
invoked in other ways, which are often more convenient. For example,
you can remove the xterm window using several of
the items on the Main Options menu,
but it's probably simpler to type
exit or logout, or use a window
manager menu or button. Of course, the xterm menus
can be very helpful when other methods fail to invoke a function. And
some functions (such as Secure
Keyboard) are not available in any other way -- unless
you do a little customizing.
Most people tend to use the mode toggles on the VT Options menu (which allow you to turn
features like the scrollbar on and off) and the items on the
VT Fonts menu (which allow you to change the
display font once the client is running). If you're
concerned about
security, you may want to invoke secure
keyboard mode from the Main Options
menu before typing passwords or other sensitive information.
Note that a Release 5 patch (Section 20.9) has
eliminated xterm's logging
capability for security reasons. If this patch has been applied, your
Main Options menu will not offer the
Log to File
option.
--VQ and SJC
5.16. The Simple Way to Pick a Font5.18. Changing Fonts Dynamically
Copyright © 2003 O'Reilly & Associates. All rights reserved.
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