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Full Discussion: A Terminal Dilemma
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers A Terminal Dilemma Post 69207 by rocky_triton on Wednesday 13th of April 2005 08:36:53 AM
Old 04-13-2005
A Terminal Dilemma

Hi everyone, I hope this is the right place to ask this question...

I have a contract to convert a mainframe/DB2 application to using AIX/Oracle. Everything went fine but we are now running into a terminal problem. With the Mainframe app, the clients had great response time from remote locations. With the unix app, the response time is horrible. This seems to be because the mainframe application only sent data on tabs and returns. We need to be able to get our unix application to do this. I have been looking into this for some time and came up with a telnet LINEMODE option. The only problem is that it seems to be hard to find a client that supports this and still supports the ability for the client to position the cursor with the mouse (which is another requirement). Currently we are using PCOMM but can't get it to support this linemode option. I've tried putty which only supports sending on a return and not a tab, so I changed the code to have it send on tabs as well, but it doesn't support the ability to click on a field to position the mouse.

Could anyone offer me some advice here? Maybe some telnet clients that you might know of would be great!

Thanks,
-- Rocky
 

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XmTabListInsertTabs(library call)										 XmTabListInsertTabs(library call)

NAME
XmTabListInsertTabs -- A convenience function that inserts tabs into a tab list SYNOPSIS
#include <Xm/Xm.h> XmTabList XmTabListInsertTabs( XmTabList oldlist, XmTab *tabs, Cardinal tab_count, int position); DESCRIPTION
XmTabListInsertTabs creates a new tab list that includes the tabs in oldlist. This function copies specified tabs to the tab list at the given position. The first tab_count tabs of the tabs array are added to the tab list. If oldlist is NULL, XmTabListInsertTabs creates a new tab list containing only the tabs specified. oldlist Specifies the tab list to add the tabs to. The function deallocates oldlist after extracting the required information. tabs Specifies a pointer to the tabs to be added to the tab list. It is the caller's responsibility to free the tabs in tabs by using XmTabFree. tab_count Specifies the number of tabs in tabs. position Specifies the position of the first new tab in the tab list. A value of 0 (zero) makes the first new tab the first tab in the tab list, a value of 1 makes it the second tab, and so on. If position is greater than the number of tabs in oldlist, then the tabs will be inserted at the end. If position is negative, the count will be backwards from the end. A value of -1 makes the first new tab the last tab, and so on. RETURN
If tabs is NULL or tab_count is 0 (zero), this function returns oldlist. Otherwise, it returns a new tab list. The function allocates space to hold the returned tab list. The application is responsible for managing the allocated space. The application can recover the allocated space by calling XmTabListFree. RELATED
XmTabList(3) and XmTabListFree(3). XmTabListInsertTabs(library call)
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