Name Date Size

.. 2013-08-30 20:41:32 7

a.2631 2005-06-14 09:00:00 223

a.2631-c 2005-06-14 09:00:00 241

a.2631-e 2005-06-14 09:00:00 241

a.300 2005-06-14 09:00:00 302

a.300-12 2005-06-14 09:00:00 297

a.300s 2005-06-14 09:00:00 283

a.300s-12 2005-06-14 09:00:00 276

a.382 2005-06-14 09:00:00 285

a.4000a 2005-06-14 09:00:00 329

a.450 2005-06-14 09:00:00 268

a.450-12 2005-06-14 09:00:00 295

a.832 2005-06-14 09:00:00 265

a.lp 2005-06-14 09:00:00 221

ab.37 2005-06-14 09:00:00 1.5 KiB

ab.8510 2005-06-14 09:00:00 2.1 KiB

ab.tn300 2005-06-14 09:00:00 1.3 KiB

ab.X 2005-06-14 09:00:00 1.6 KiB

b.300 2005-06-14 09:00:00 1.6 KiB

b.lp 2005-06-14 09:00:00 1.1 KiB

Makefile 2013-08-30 20:41:32 1.2 KiB

README 2005-06-14 09:00:00 4 KiB

README

# Copyright 1989 Sun Microsystems, Inc. All rights reserved.
# Use is subject to license terms.
# Copyright (c) 1983, 1984, 1985, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989 AT&T
# All Rights Reserved
# Portions of this source code were derived from Berkeley 4.3 BSD
# under license from the Regents of the University of California.
#ident "%Z%%M% %I% %E% SMI"
Description of terminal tables for new nroff:
(In the following description, "white space" means any combination
of spaces, tabs and new-lines).
The first line should contain the name of the terminal -- just a string,
but with no embedded white space.
This is followed by a table of 25 lines (defining the first 25 items
in struct t, laid out in tw.h):
bset [integer] /*bits that must be set for printing*/
breset [integer] /*bits that must be reset for printing*/
Hor [integer] /*size of unit of horizontal motion*/
Vert [integer] /*size of unit of vertical motion*/
Newline [integer] /*size of line of vertical motion*/
Char [integer] /*size of character horizontally*/
Em [integer] /*size of Em of horizontal motion*/
Halfline [integer] /*size of half line of vertical motion*/
Adj [integer] /*horizontal resolution*/
twinit [string] /*sequence to initialize terminal*/
twrest [string] /*sequence to restore terminal*/
twnl [string] /*sequence to print newline*/
hlr [string] /*sequence for half-line reverse*/
hlf [string] /*sequence for half-line forward*/
flr [string] /*sequence for full-line reverse*/
bdon [string] /*sequence to turn on bold*/
bdoff [string] /*sequence to turn off bold*/
iton [string] /*sequence to turn on italic*/
itoff [string] /*sequence to turn off italic*/
ploton [string] /*sequence to enter plot mode*/
plotoff [string] /*sequence to leave plot mode*/
up [string] /*sequence to move up 1 space in plot mode*/
down [string] /*sequence to move down 1 space in plot mode*/
right [string] /*sequence to move right 1 space in plot mode*/
left [string] /*sequence to move left 1 space in plot mode*/
This table is fixed format, and the order cannot be changed.
Entries should be on separate lines, and should contain exactly
two fields (N.B. the comment should be omitted) separated by white space.
First field is the string identifying the value (this is not verified),
then white space, and then the value. The value is either an integer,
or a string, as specified above. An integer is a sequence of digits.
Integers describing sizes are expressed in units of 1/240 of an inch.
A string is a sequence of characters, probably surrounded by quotes
(to be on the safe side). For non-printable ascii characters, the
following escapes hold (as in C):
\b backspace
\t tab
\n newline
\r carriage return
\\ \
\" "
\ followed by 3 octal digits specifies the ascii character
with the value of those digits
This is followed by a line containing the word "charset", and then by the table of
special characters -- all the non-ASCII characters that nroff/troff
knows by 2-character names, e.g. \(hy and \(ga. The entries in this
table can be in any order (put the most used ones first), and
the entries should be restricted to only those characters that
can be printed on the terminal in question. The format of each line
(defining one special character) is: the (2-character) name of the
special character, followed by white space, followed by the width of
the character (in ems), followed by white space, followed by the
sequence needed to produce the character. This sequence may be
surrounded by quotes. The same escapes hold as for strings above.
The best way to create a terminal table for a new device is to take
a terminal table for an old device and modify it!
For example, here is the first page of the terminal table for lp:
lp
bset 0
breset 0
Hor 24
Vert 40
Newline 40
Char 24
Em 24
Halfline 20
Adj 24
twinit ""
twrest ""
twnl "\n"
hlr ""
hlf ""
flr "\0337"
bdon ""
bdoff ""
iton ""
itoff ""
ploton ""
plotoff ""
up ""
down ""
right ""
left ""
charset
em 1 -
hy 1 -
\- 1 -
bu 1 +\bo
sq 2 []
ru 1 _
14 3 1/4
12 3 1/2
34 3 3/4
de 1 \344o\304
dg 1 |\b-
fm 1 '
ct 1 c\b/
rg 1 r\bO
co 1 c\bO
pl 1 +
mi 1 -
eq 1 =
** 1 *