![]() It provides DEC VT102/VT220 (VTxxx) and Tektronix 4014 compatible terminals for programs that cannot use the window system directly. shell Description The xterm program is a terminal emulator for the X Window System. *VT100.font2: -misc-fixed-medium-r-normal-8-80-75-75-c-50-koi8-r xterm (1) - Linux man page Name xterm - terminal emulator for X Synopsis xterm - toolkitoption. See the xterm manual page for more information on xterm-options. All arguments to uxterm are passed to xterm without processing the -class and -u8 options should not be specified because they are used by the wrapper. All arguments to uxterm are passed to xterm without. uxterm is a wrapper around the xterm (1) program that invokes the latter program with the UXTerm'' X resource class set. *VT100.font: -misc-fixed-medium-r-semicondensed-13-120-75-75-c-60-koi8-r UXTERM (1) X Window System UXTERM (1) NAME uxterm - X terminal emulator for Unicode (UTF-8) environments SYNOPSIS uxterm xterm-options DESCRIPTION uxterm is a wrapper around the xterm (1) program that invokes the latter program with the 'UXTerm' X resource class set. # opening /usr/share/X11/app-defaults/KOI8RXTerm # opening /usr/share/X11/app-defaults/UXTerm *5: -misc-fixed-medium-r-normal-18-120-100-100-c-90-iso10646-1 libxft libxkbfile libxmu libxpm libxrender libxt linux-header make man ncurses net-tools pkgconfig xorgproto sed sysfiles tar util-linux xorgproto zlib. *4: -misc-fixed-medium-r-normal-13-120-75-75-c-80-iso10646-1 There are two documents on xterm: the man page, xterm.man, which describes how to use it, and ctlseqs.ms, which describes the control sequences it understands. Here's a listing from a script ( find-xterm-fonts) which I wrote for checking whether the fonts needed by xterm are installed: # opening /usr/share/X11/app-defaults/XTerm Other systems will use different package names (and divide up the fonts in different ways). One package ( xorg-x11-fonts-misc) covers all but a special case for the menus. The apt-get command provides access to every single package in the Ubuntu repositories whereas the graphical tool is often lacking.With Redhat7 (or CentOS7), you need only two packages for bitmap-fonts with xterm. ![]() When using Ubuntu, it is actually easier to install software using the command line than it is to use the graphical software tools available. People use a wide array of different desktop environments as well as different Linux distributions, so the terminal commands are usually the same or are easier to narrow down than writing full graphical instructions for each and every combination. The Linux terminal provides access to all of the native Linux commands as well as command-line applications that often provide many more features than desktop applications.Īnother reason to learn how to use the terminal is that quite often, online help guides that help to solve problems with your Linux environment contain Linux terminal commands. ![]() Many users nowadays can do most of the things they want to do within Linuxwithout having to use the Linux terminal, but there are still a lot of good reasons to learn how to use it.
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