On Sat, Dec 30, 2017 at 01:09:02PM -0500, Thomas Dickey wrote: > On Sat, Dec 30, 2017 at 06:38:16PM +0100, Kamil Rytarowski wrote: > > On 30.12.2017 17:41, Thomas Dickey wrote: > > > On Sat, Dec 30, 2017 at 11:39:38AM -0500, Thomas Dickey wrote: > > >> On Sat, Dec 30, 2017 at 03:53:35PM +0100, Kamil Rytarowski wrote: > > >>> How to setup correctly vt100 in a terminal? > > >>> > > >>> I've set exported TERM=vt100, called tset and stty and I keep observing > > >>> artifacts. setting $TERM won't help with VMS :-) Now... you could use the xterm option to tell it (in effect) to tell the host not to send 8-bit controls: man xterm: -ti term_id Specify the name used by xterm to select the correct response to terminal ID queries. It also specifies the emulation level, used to determine the type of response to a DA control sequence. Valid values include vt52, vt100, vt101, vt102, vt220, and vt240 (the “vt” is optional). The default is “vt420”. The term_id argument specifies the terminal ID to use. (This is the same as the decTerminalID resource). That is, xterm -ti 100 or xterm -ti 102 and if the host is behaving properly, it'll give up on 8-bit controls. Of course, VT100's have no function keys (F1-F12), nor Home/End, PageUp/PageDown, but cursor-keys should work. Your experience here will depend on what the applications are using. -- Thomas E. Dickey <dickey%invisible-island.net@localhost> https://invisible-island.net ftp://ftp.invisible-island.net
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