The Terminal and xterm Compared (Mac OS X for Unix Geeks)
1.2. The Terminal and xterm Compared
There are several important
differences between Mac OS X's Terminal application
and the
xterm common to Unix
systems running X Windows:
You cannot customize the characteristics of the Terminal with
command-line switches such as
-fn, -fg, and
-bg. Instead, you must use the
Terminal's Show Info dialog.
Unlike xterm, in which each window corresponds
to a separate process, a single master process controls the Terminal.
However, each shell session is run as a separate child process of the
Terminal.
The Terminal selection is not automatically put into the
clipboard. Use
-C to copy,
-V to paste. Even before you press
-C, the current text selection is
contained in a selection called the pasteboard. The operations
described in Section 1.4, later in this chapter, use the pasteboard.
The value of $TERM is vt100
when running under Terminal (it's set to
xterm under xterm by
default).
Pressing PageUp or PageDown scrolls the Terminal window, rather than
letting the running program handle it.
On compatible systems (generally, a system with an ATI Radeon or
NVidia GeForce AGP graphics adapter), the Mac OS X Terminal (and all
of the Aqua user interface) will use Quartz Extreme acceleration to
make everything faster and smoother.
If you need an xterm, you can have it; however,
you will have to install a compatible version of the X Window System
first. See Chapter 9 for more information about
the X Window System.
1. The Mac OS X Command Line1.3. Using the Terminal
Copyright © 2003 O'Reilly & Associates. All rights reserved.
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