From 34eaa3c702ea64c7dbb26e468111e970d1bc21a9 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: "David E. O'Brien" Date: Wed, 22 Aug 2001 18:54:19 +0000 Subject: Our -man package does not understand .PN and .MS. So use .B (bold) until I figure out what is the correct spelling for .PN and .MS. --- vietnamese/vnterm/files/vnterm.1V | 38 ++++++++++++++++++++------------------ 1 file changed, 20 insertions(+), 18 deletions(-) (limited to 'vietnamese/vnterm') diff --git a/vietnamese/vnterm/files/vnterm.1V b/vietnamese/vnterm/files/vnterm.1V index 253a67a66a35..ddf10878d573 100644 --- a/vietnamese/vnterm/files/vnterm.1V +++ b/vietnamese/vnterm/files/vnterm.1V @@ -13,18 +13,18 @@ vnterm \- X-terminal with Vietnamese [\fIregular_xterm_options\fP] .SH DESCRIPTION .NXR "vnterm command" -Version 3.3 of -.PN vnterm -is an adaptation of the X11R5 -.MS xterm 1X +Version 3.4 of +.B vnterm +is an adaptation of the X11R6.5.1 +.B xterm 1X command. This manual page describes only those features specific to -.PN vnterm ; +.B vnterm ; please consult the manual page for -.MS xterm 1X +.B xterm 1X for the rest of the story. .PP -.PN Vnterm +.B Vnterm allows the X-environment user to type and display Vietnamese text. The keyboard input scheme follows the @@ -34,7 +34,7 @@ Vietnamese networking convention of placing Vietnamese diacritical marks after the vowel, for example: "Vie^.t Nam". .PP With the appropriate font setting, -.PN vnterm +.B vnterm can display both 7-bit and 8-bit Vietnamese text. The 7-bit text is assumed to follow the @@ -47,7 +47,7 @@ both published by the Viet-Std working group (Viet-Std@Haydn.Stanford.EDU). .PP On start-up, -.PN vnterm +.B vnterm attempts to set the tty line to 8-bit mode, with canonical echoing of control characters turned off (because the Vietnamese characters "A(? A(~ A^~ Y? Y~ Y." @@ -64,7 +64,7 @@ can also be found and set in the "VT\ Options" menu of -.PN vnterm , +.B vnterm , which you may access by clicking the CTRL-middle-mouse-button combination. The corresponding X resources are: @@ -87,7 +87,7 @@ Vietnamese composition takes place. The erase character (which is needed to backspace over the Vietnamese letter being composed) is figured from the terminal settings at the time -.PN vnterm +.B vnterm is invoked. In those cases where it is necessary to specify another erase character, .I vnEraseCharacter @@ -164,17 +164,19 @@ in which almost all keys are passed literally. .IP o If your shell is tcsh, you may find that it's unfriendly to 8-bit data; this means Vietnamese characters cannot -be used. Use csh in the -.PN vnterm +be used. Use +.I sh +in the +.B vnterm window instead. .PP .IP o In some cases -.PN vnterm +.B vnterm may fail to set the terminal mode correctly for 8-bits. This will happen when your shell is "smart" and undoes the settings performed by -.PN vnterm +.B vnterm on start-up. In this case issue the command: .EX @@ -188,7 +190,7 @@ with 7-bit Vietnamese that is conformant to the VIQR standard. With the Viet-Net style text alone, there are potential ambiguities which -.PN vnterm +.B vnterm will not interpret correctly, e.g., in displaying the question "La`m chi?", where the question mark will be taken to be a hook-above (da^'u ho?i), @@ -203,9 +205,9 @@ causing it not to display Vietnamese properly afterwards. When this happens, simply turn the screen filter off and on again, by using the CTRL-middle-mouse-button menu of -.PN vnterm. +.B vnterm. .SH AUTHOR -4.4BSD porting by David O'Brien +4.4BSD porting and X11R6 updating by David O'Brien .PP Adapted from X11R5's xterm by Tin Le -- cgit v1.2.3