BIXTEP 0.2-dev (Development branch)


 
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Old 07-27-2008
BIXTEP 0.2-dev (Development branch)

ImageBIXTEP is a tool for organizing information in theBash shell. It features an easy-to-use interface,allows for fast input of texts with your defaulteditor, and displays the relations between thetagged items. Its use spans from quick note takingto managing excerpts, sources, and any other typeof textual content. All data is stored in an XMLfile.License: GNU General Public License v3Changes:
Major feature enhancements includeconfigurability, user definable content types,user definable item relations, user definablefield relations, an improved interface, anextended file menu, conditional search, and searchand replace. Several minor feature enhancementsand bugfixes were made. The code was cleaned upand documented.Image

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DISPLAYS(5)							File Formats Manual						       DISPLAYS(5)

NAME
displays - Display Configuration File DESCRIPTION
The interactive graphics programs Caesar, Magic, and Gremlin use two separate terminals: a text terminal from which commands are issued, and a color graphics terminal on which graphical output is displayed. These programs use a displays file to associate their text terminal with its corresponding display device. The displays file is an ASCII text file with one line for each text terminal/graphics terminal pair. Each line contains 4 items separated by spaces: the name of the port attached to a text terminal, the name of the port attached to the associated graphics terminal, the phos- phor type of the graphics terminal's monitor, and the type of graphics terminal. An applications program may use the phosphor type to select a color map tuned to the monitor's characteristics. Only the std phosphor type is supported at UC Berkeley. The graphics terminal type specifies the device driver a program should use when communicating with its graphics terminal. Magic supports types UCB512, AED1024, and SUN120. Other programs may recognize different display types. See the manual entry for your specific applica- tion for more information. A sample displays file is: /dev/ttyi1 /dev/ttyi0 std UCB512 /dev/ttyj0 /dev/ttyj1 std UCB512 /dev/ttyjf /dev/ttyhf std UCB512 /dev/ttyhb /dev/ttyhc std UCB512 /dev/ttyhc /dev/ttyhb std UCB512 (R) In this example, /dev/ttyi1 connects to a text terminal. An associated UCB512 graphics terminal with standard phosphor is connected to /dev/ttyi0. FILES
Magic uses the displays file ~cad/lib/displays. Gremlin looks in /usr/local/displays. SEE ALSO
magic(1) 3rd Berkeley Distribution 2/19/85 DISPLAYS(5)