| 1 | .\"*************************************************************************** | 
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| 2 | .\" Copyright (c) 1998-2002,2003 Free Software Foundation, Inc.              * | 
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| 3 | .\"                                                                          * | 
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| 11 | .\"                                                                          * | 
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| 14 | .\"                                                                          * | 
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| 22 | .\"                                                                          * | 
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| 27 | .\"*************************************************************************** | 
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| 28 | .\" | 
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| 29 | .\" $Id: term.7,v 1.14 2003/05/10 20:33:49 jmc Exp $ | 
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| 30 | .TH TERM 7 | 
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| 31 | .ds n 5 | 
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| 32 | .ds d @TERMINFO@ | 
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| 33 | .SH NAME | 
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| 34 | term \- conventions for naming terminal types | 
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| 35 | .SH DESCRIPTION | 
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| 36 | .PP | 
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| 37 | The environment variable \fBTERM\fR should normally contain the type name of | 
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| 38 | the terminal, console or display-device type you are using.  This information | 
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| 39 | is critical for all screen-oriented programs, including your editor and mailer. | 
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| 40 | .PP | 
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| 41 | A default \fBTERM\fR value will be set on a per-line basis by either | 
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| 42 | \fB/etc/inittab\fR (Linux and System-V-like UNIXes) or \fB/etc/ttys\fR (BSD | 
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| 43 | UNIXes).  This will nearly always suffice for workstation and microcomputer | 
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| 44 | consoles. | 
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| 45 | .PP | 
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| 46 | If you use a dialup line, the type of device attached to it may vary.  Older | 
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| 47 | UNIX systems pre-set a very dumb terminal type like `dumb' or `dialup' on | 
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| 48 | dialup lines.  Newer ones may pre-set `vt100', reflecting the prevalence of DEC | 
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| 49 | VT100-compatible terminals and personal-computer emulators. | 
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| 50 | .PP | 
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| 51 | Modern telnets pass your \fBTERM\fR environment variable from the local side to | 
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| 52 | the remote one.  There can be problems if the remote terminfo or termcap entry | 
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| 53 | for your type is not compatible with yours, but this situation is rare and | 
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| 54 | can almost always be avoided by explicitly exporting `vt100' (assuming you | 
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| 55 | are in fact using a VT100-superset console, terminal, or terminal emulator.) | 
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| 56 | .PP | 
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| 57 | In any case, you are free to override the system \fBTERM\fR setting to your | 
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| 58 | taste in your shell profile.  The \fBtset\fP(1) utility may be of assistance; | 
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| 59 | you can give it a set of rules for deducing or requesting a terminal type based | 
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| 60 | on the tty device and baud rate. | 
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| 61 | .PP | 
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| 62 | Setting your own \fBTERM\fR value may also be useful if you have created a | 
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| 63 | custom entry incorporating options (such as visual bell or reverse-video) | 
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| 64 | which you wish to override the system default type for your line. | 
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| 65 | .PP | 
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| 66 | Terminal type descriptions are stored as files of capability data underneath | 
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| 67 | \*d.  To browse a list of all terminal names recognized by the system, do | 
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| 68 |  | 
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| 69 | toe | more | 
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| 70 |  | 
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| 71 | from your shell.  These capability files are in a binary format optimized for | 
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| 72 | retrieval speed (unlike the old text-based \fBtermcap\fR format they replace); | 
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| 73 | to examine an entry, you must use the \fBinfocmp\fR(1) command.  Invoke it as | 
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| 74 | follows: | 
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| 75 |  | 
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| 76 | infocmp \fIentry-name\fR | 
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| 77 |  | 
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| 78 | where \fIentry-name\fR is the name of the type you wish to examine (and the | 
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| 79 | name of its capability file the subdirectory of \*d named for its first | 
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| 80 | letter).  This command dumps a capability file in the text format described by | 
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| 81 | \fBterminfo\fR(\*n). | 
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| 82 | .PP | 
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| 83 | The first line of a \fBterminfo\fR(\*n) description gives the names by which | 
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| 84 | terminfo knows a terminal, separated by `|' (pipe-bar) characters with the last | 
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| 85 | name field terminated by a comma.  The first name field is the type's | 
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| 86 | \fIprimary name\fR, and is the one to use when setting \fBTERM\fR.  The last | 
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| 87 | name field (if distinct from the first) is actually a description of the | 
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| 88 | terminal type (it may contain blanks; the others must be single words).  Name | 
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| 89 | fields between the first and last (if present) are aliases for the terminal, | 
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| 90 | usually historical names retained for compatibility. | 
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| 91 | .PP | 
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| 92 | There are some conventions for how to choose terminal primary names that help | 
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| 93 | keep them informative and unique.  Here is a step-by-step guide to naming | 
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| 94 | terminals that also explains how to parse them: | 
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| 95 | .PP | 
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| 96 | First, choose a root name.  The root will consist of a lower-case letter | 
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| 97 | followed by up to seven lower-case letters or digits.  You need to avoid using | 
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| 98 | punctuation characters in root names, because they are used and interpreted as | 
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| 99 | filenames and shell meta-characters (such as !, $, *, ?, etc.) embedded in them | 
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| 100 | may cause odd and unhelpful behavior.  The slash (/), or any other character | 
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| 101 | that may be interpreted by anyone's file system (\e, $, [, ]), is especially | 
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| 102 | dangerous (terminfo is platform-independent, and choosing names with special | 
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| 103 | characters could someday make life difficult for users of a future port).  The | 
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| 104 | dot (.) character is relatively safe as long as there is at most one per root | 
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| 105 | name; some historical terminfo names use it. | 
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| 106 | .PP | 
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| 107 | The root name for a terminal or workstation console type should almost always | 
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| 108 | begin with a vendor prefix (such as \fBhp\fR for Hewlett-Packard, \fBwy\fR for | 
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| 109 | Wyse, or \fBatt\fR for AT&T terminals), or a common name of the terminal line | 
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| 110 | (\fBvt\fR for the VT series of terminals from DEC, or \fBsun\fR for Sun | 
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| 111 | Microsystems workstation consoles, or \fBregent\fR for the ADDS Regent series. | 
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| 112 | You can list the terminfo tree to see what prefixes are already in common use. | 
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| 113 | The root name prefix should be followed when appropriate by a model number; | 
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| 114 | thus \fBvt100\fR, \fBhp2621\fR, \fBwy50\fR. | 
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| 115 | .PP | 
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| 116 | The root name for a PC-Unix console type should be the OS name, | 
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| 117 | i.e. \fBlinux\fR, \fBbsdos\fR, \fBfreebsd\fR, \fBnetbsd\fR.  It should | 
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| 118 | \fInot\fR be \fBconsole\fR or any other generic that might cause confusion in a | 
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| 119 | multi-platform environment!  If a model number follows, it should indicate | 
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| 120 | either the OS release level or the console driver release level. | 
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| 121 | .PP | 
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| 122 | The root name for a terminal emulator (assuming it doesn't fit one of the | 
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| 123 | standard ANSI or vt100 types) should be the program name or a readily | 
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| 124 | recognizable abbreviation of it (i.e. \fBversaterm\fR, \fBctrm\fR). | 
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| 125 | .PP | 
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| 126 | Following the root name, you may add any reasonable number of hyphen-separated | 
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| 127 | feature suffixes. | 
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| 128 | .TP 5 | 
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| 129 | 2p | 
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| 130 | Has two pages of memory.  Likewise 4p, 8p, etc. | 
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| 131 | .TP 5 | 
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| 132 | mc | 
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| 133 | Magic-cookie.  Some terminals (notably older Wyses) can only support one | 
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| 134 | attribute without magic-cookie lossage.  Their base entry is usually paired | 
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| 135 | with another that has this suffix and uses magic cookies to support multiple | 
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| 136 | attributes. | 
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| 137 | .TP 5 | 
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| 138 | -am | 
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| 139 | Enable auto-margin (right-margin wraparound). | 
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| 140 | .TP 5 | 
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| 141 | -m | 
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| 142 | Mono mode - suppress color support. | 
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| 143 | .TP 5 | 
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| 144 | -na | 
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| 145 | No arrow keys - termcap ignores arrow keys which are actually there on the | 
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| 146 | terminal, so the user can use the arrow keys locally. | 
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| 147 | .TP 5 | 
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| 148 | -nam | 
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| 149 | No auto-margin - suppress am capability. | 
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| 150 | .TP 5 | 
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| 151 | -nl | 
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| 152 | No labels - suppress soft labels. | 
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| 153 | .TP 5 | 
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| 154 | -nsl | 
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| 155 | No status line - suppress status line. | 
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| 156 | .TP 5 | 
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| 157 | -pp | 
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| 158 | Has a printer port which is used. | 
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| 159 | .TP 5 | 
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| 160 | -rv | 
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| 161 | Terminal in reverse video mode (black on white). | 
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| 162 | .TP 5 | 
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| 163 | -s | 
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| 164 | Enable status line. | 
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| 165 | .TP 5 | 
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| 166 | -vb | 
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| 167 | Use visible bell (flash) rather than beep. | 
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| 168 | .TP 5 | 
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| 169 | -w | 
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| 170 | Wide; terminal is in 132 column mode. | 
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| 171 | .PP | 
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| 172 | Conventionally, if your terminal type is a variant intended to specify a | 
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| 173 | line height, that suffix should go first.  So, for a hypothetical FuBarCo | 
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| 174 | model 2317 terminal in 30-line mode with reverse video, best form would be | 
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| 175 | \fBfubar-30-rv\fR (rather than, say, `fubar-rv-30'). | 
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| 176 | .PP | 
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| 177 | Terminal types that are written not as standalone entries, but rather as | 
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| 178 | components to be plugged into other entries via \fBuse\fP capabilities, | 
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| 179 | are distinguished by using embedded plus signs rather than dashes. | 
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| 180 | .PP | 
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| 181 | Commands which use a terminal type to control display often accept a -T | 
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| 182 | option that accepts a terminal name argument.  Such programs should fall back | 
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| 183 | on the \fBTERM\fR environment variable when no -T option is specified. | 
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| 184 | .SH PORTABILITY | 
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| 185 | For maximum compatibility with older System V UNIXes, names and aliases | 
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| 186 | should be unique within the first 14 characters. | 
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| 187 | .SH FILES | 
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| 188 | .TP 5 | 
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| 189 | \*d/?/* | 
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| 190 | compiled terminal capability data base | 
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| 191 | .TP 5 | 
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| 192 | /etc/inittab | 
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| 193 | tty line initialization (AT&T-like UNIXes) | 
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| 194 | .TP 5 | 
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| 195 | /etc/ttys | 
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| 196 | tty line initialization (BSD-like UNIXes) | 
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| 197 | .SH SEE ALSO | 
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| 198 | \fBcurses\fR(3X), \fBterminfo\fR(\*n), \fBterm\fR(\*n). | 
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| 199 | .\"# | 
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| 200 | .\"# The following sets edit modes for GNU EMACS | 
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| 201 | .\"# Local Variables: | 
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| 202 | .\"# mode:nroff | 
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| 203 | .\"# fill-column:79 | 
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| 204 | .\"# End: | 
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