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TERM(5)								       TERM(5)

NAME
       term - conventional names for terminals

DESCRIPTION
       Terminal	 names	are maintained as part of the shell environment in the
       environment variable TERM.   See	 sh(1),	 profile(4),  and  environ(5).
       These  names are used by certain commands (for example, tabs, tput, and
       vi) and certain functions (for example, see curses(3CURSES)).

       Files under /usr/share/lib/terminfo are	used  to  name	terminals  and
       describe their capabilities. These files are in the format described in
       terminfo(4). Entries in terminfo source files consist of	 a  number  of
       comma-separated fields. To print a description of a terminal  term, use
       the command  infocmp -I term. See infocmp(1M).  White space after  each
       comma  is  ignored.  The first line of each terminal description in the
       terminfo database gives the names by which terminfo knows the terminal,
       separated  by bar (|) characters. The first name given is the most com‐
       mon abbreviation for the terminal (this is the one to use  to  set  the
       environment  variable  TERMINFO in $HOME/.profile; see profile(4)), the
       last name given should be a long name fully identifying	the  terminal,
       and  all	 others	 are understood as synonyms for the terminal name. All
       names but the last should contain no blanks and must be unique  in  the
       first 14 characters; the last name may contain blanks for readability.

       Terminal	 names	(except	 for the last, verbose entry) should be chosen
       using the following conventions. The particular piece of hardware  mak‐
       ing  up	the  terminal should have a root name chosen, for example, for
       the AT&T 4425 terminal, att4425. This name should not contain  hyphens,
       except  that  synonyms  may  be	chosen that do not conflict with other
       names. Up to 8 characters, chosen from  the  set	 a  through  z	and  0
       through	9,  make  up  a basic terminal name. Names should generally be
       based on original vendors rather than local  distributors.  A  terminal
       acquired	 from  one vendor should not have more than one distinct basic
       name. Terminal sub-models, operational modes that the hardware  can  be
       in,  or	user preferences should be indicated by appending a hyphen and
       an indicator of the mode. Thus, an AT&T 4425  terminal  in  132	column
       mode  is	 att4425−w. The following suffixes should be used where possi‐
       ble:

       Suffix	Meaning				       Example
       −w	Wide mode (more than 80 columns)       att4425−w
       −am	With auto. margins (usually default)   vt100−am
       −nam	Without automatic margins	       vt100−nam
       −n	Number of lines on the screen	       aaa−60
       −na	No arrow keys (leave them in local)    c100−na
       −np	Number of pages of memory	       c100−4p
       −rv	Reverse video			       att4415−rv

       To avoid conflicts with the naming conventions used in  describing  the
       different modes of a terminal (for example, -w), it is recommended that
       a terminal's root name not contain hyphens. Further, it is  good	 prac‐
       tice  to	 make  all  terminal  names  used in the  terminfo(4) database
       unique. Terminal entries that are present only for inclusion  in	 other
       entries	via the use= facilities should have a '+' in their name, as in
       4415+nl.

       Here are some of the known terminal names: (For a complete list,	 enter
       the command ls -C /usr/share/lib/terminfo/? ).

       2621,hp2621	       Hewlett-Packard 2621 series
       2631		       Hewlett-Packard 2631 line printer
       2631−c		       Hewlett-Packard	2631 line printer, com‐
			       pressed mode
       2631−e		       Hewlett-Packard	 2631	line   printer,
			       expanded mode
       2640,hp2640	       Hewlett-Packard 2640 series
       2645,hp2645	       Hewlett-Packard 2645 series
       3270		       IBM Model 3270
       33,tty33		       AT&T Teletype Model 33 KSR
       35,tty35		       AT&T Teletype Model 35 KSR
       37,tty37		       AT&T Teletype Model 37 KSR
       4000a		       Trendata 4000a
       4014,tek4014	       TEKTRONIX 4014
       40,tty40		       AT&T Teletype Dataspeed 40/2
       43,tty43		       AT&T Teletype Model 43 KSR
       4410,5410	       AT&T  4410/5410	in 80-column mode, ver‐
			       sion 2
       4410−nfk,5410−nfk       AT&T 4410/5410  without	function  keys,
			       version 1
       4410−nsl,5410−nsl       AT&T 4410/5410 without pln defined
       4410−w,5410−w	       AT&T 4410/5410 in 132-column mode
       4410v1,5410v1	       AT&T  4410/5410	in 80-column mode, ver‐
			       sion 1
       4410v1−w,5410v1−w       AT&T 4410/5410 in 132-column mode,  ver‐
			       sion 1
       4415,5420	       AT&T 4415/5420 in 80-column mode
       4415−nl,5420−nl	       AT&T 4415/5420 without changing labels
       4415−rv,5420−rv	       AT&T  4415/5420	80  columns  in reverse
			       video
       4415−rv−nl,5420−rv−nl   AT&T  4415/5420	reverse	 video	without
			       changing labels
       4415−w,5420−w	       AT&T 4415/5420 in 132-column mode
       4415−w−nl,5420−w−nl     AT&T  4415/5420 in 132-column mode with‐
			       out changing labels
       4415−w−rv,5420−w−rv     AT&T 4415/5420 132  columns  in	reverse
			       video
       4418,5418	       AT&T 5418 in 80-column mode
       4418−w,5418−w	       AT&T 5418 in 132-column mode
       4420		       AT&T Teletype Model 4420
       4424		       AT&T Teletype Model 4424
       4424-2		       AT&T  Teletype  Model  4424  in	display
			       function group ii
       4425,5425		AT&T 4425/5425
       4425−fk,5425−fk	       AT&T 4425/5425 without function keys
       4425−nl,5425−nl	       AT&T 4425/5425 without  changing	 labels
			       in 80-column mode
       4425−w,5425−w	       AT&T 4425/5425 in 132-column mode
       4425−w−fk,5425−w−fk     AT&T  4425/5425 without function keys in
			       132-column mode
       4425−nl−w,5425−nl−w     AT&T 4425/5425 without  changing	 labels
			       in 132-column mode
       4426		       AT&T Teletype Model 4426S
       450		       DASI 450 (same as Diablo 1620)
       450−12		       DASI 450 in 12-pitch mode
       500,att500	       AT&T-IS 500 terminal
       510,510a		       AT&T 510/510a in 80-column mode

       513bct,att513	       AT&T 513 bct terminal
       5320		       AT&T 5320 hardcopy terminal
       5420_2		       AT&T 5420 model 2 in 80-column mode
       5420_2−w		       AT&T 5420 model 2 in 132-column mode
       5620,dmd		       AT&T 5620 terminal 88 columns
       5620−24,dmd−24	       AT&T  Teletype Model DMD 5620 in a 24x80
			       layer
       5620−34,dmd−34	       AT&T Teletype Model DMD 5620 in a  34x80
			       layer
       610,610bct	       AT&T 610 bct terminal in 80-column mode
       610−w,610bct−w	       AT&T 610 bct terminal in 132-column mode
       630,630MTG	       AT&T 630 Multi-Tasking Graphics terminal
       7300,pc7300,unix_pc     AT&T UNIX PC Model 7300
       735,ti		       Texas Instruments TI735 and TI725
       745		       Texas Instruments TI745
       dumb		       generic	name  for  terminals  that lack
			       reverse	line-feed  and	other	special
			       escape sequences
       hp		       Hewlett-Packard (same as 2645)
       lp		       generic name for a line printer
       pt505		       AT&T Personal Terminal 505 (22 lines)
       pt505−24		       AT&T   Personal	Terminal  505  (24-line
			       mode)
       sync		       generic name  for  synchronous  Teletype
			       Model 4540-compatible terminals

       Commands	 whose	behavior depends on the type of terminal should accept
       arguments of the form -Tterm where term	is  one	 of  the  names	 given
       above;  if no such argument is present, such commands should obtain the
       terminal type from the  environment  variable  TERM,  which,  in	 turn,
       should contain term.

FILES
       /usr/share/lib/terminfo/?/*

	   compiled terminal description database

SEE ALSO
       sh(1),  stty(1), tabs(1), tput(1), vi(1), infocmp(1M), curses(3CURSES),
       profile(4), terminfo(4), environ(5)

				  Jul 3, 1990			       TERM(5)
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