NAME
-
8½, label, window, wloc - window system
SYNOPSIS
-
8½
[
-i 'cmd'
]
[
-s
]
[
-f
font
]
label
name
window
'minx miny maxx maxy'
cmd
arg ...
wloc
DESCRIPTION
-
8½
manages asynchronous layers of text, or windows, on a bit-mapped display.
It also serves a variety of files for communicating with
and controlling windows; these are discussed in section
8½(4).
Commands
-
The
8½
command starts a new instance of the window system.
Its
-i
option names a startup script, which typically contains several
window
commands generated by
wloc.
The
-s
option initializes windows so that text scrolls;
the default is not to scroll.
The
font
argument names a font used to display text, both in
8½'s
menus
and as a default for any programs running in its windows; it also
establishes the
environment variable
$font.
If
-f
is not given,
8½
uses the imported value of
$font
if set; otherwise it imports the default font from the underlying graphics
server, usually the terminal's operating system.
The
label
command changes a window's identifying name.
The
window
command creates a window.
The first argument gives the minimum and maximum screen
coordinates of the window to be created (the units are pixels with the
upper left corner of the screen at (0, 0)); the rest of the arguments
are the command to be run in the window
and its arguments.
The
wloc
command prints the coordinates and label of each window in its instance of
8½
and is used to construct arguments for
window.
Window control
-
Each window behaves as a separate terminal with at least one process
associated with it.
When a window is created, a new process (usually a shell; see
rc(1))
is established and bound to the window as a new process group.
Initially, each window acts as a simple terminal that displays character text;
the standard input and output of its processes
are attached to
/dev/cons.
Other special files, accessible to the processes running in a window,
may be used to make the window a more general display.
Some of these are mentioned here; the complete set is
discussed in
8½(4).
One window is
current,
and is highlighted with a heavy border;
characters typed on the keyboard are available in the
/dev/cons
file of the process in the current window.
Characters written on
/dev/cons
appear asynchronously in the associated window whether or not the window
is current.
Windows are created, deleted and rearranged using the mouse.
Clicking (depressing and releasing) mouse button 1 in a non-current
window makes that window current and brings it in front of
any windows that happen to be overlapping it.
When the mouse cursor points to the background area or is in
a window that has not claimed the mouse for its own use,
depressing mouse button 3 activates a
menu of window operations provided by
8½.
Releasing button 3 then selects an operation.
At this point, a gunsight or cross cursor indicates that
an operation is pending.
The button 3 menu operations are:
-
New
- Create a window.
Depress button 3 where one corner of the new rectangle should
appear (cross cursor), and move the mouse, while holding down button 3, to the
diagonally opposite corner.
Releasing button 3 creates the window, and makes it current.
Very small windows may not be created.
- Reshape
- Change the size and location of a window.
First click button 3 in the window to be changed
(gunsight cursor).
Then sweep out a window as for the
New
operation.
The window is made current.
- Move
- Move a window to another location.
After pressing and holding button 3 over the window to be moved (gunsight cursor),
indicate the new position by dragging the rectangle to the new location.
The window is made current.
- Delete
- Delete a window. Click in the window to be deleted (gunsight cursor).
Deleting a window causes a
hangup
note to be sent to all processes in the window's process group
(see
notify(2)).
- Hide
- Hide a window. Click in the window to be hidden (gunsight cursor);
it will be moved off-screen.
Each hidden window is given a menu entry in the button 3 menu according to the
value of the file
/dev/label,
which
8½
maintains
(see
8½(4)).
- label
- Restore a hidden window.
Text windows
-
Characters typed on the keyboard or written to
/dev/cons
collect in the window to form
a long, continuous document.
There is always some
selected text
a contiguous string marked on the screen by reversing its color.
If the selected text is a null string, it is indicated by a hairline cursor
between two characters.
The selected text
may be edited by mousing and typing.
Text is selected by pointing and clicking button 1
to make a null-string selection, or by pointing,
then sweeping with button 1 depressed.
Text may also be selected by double-clicking:
just inside a matched delimiter-pair
with one of
{[(<«`'"
on the left and
}])>»`'"
on the right, it selects all text within
the pair; at the beginning
or end of a line, it selects the line; within or at the edge of an alphanumeric word,
it selects the word.
Characters typed on the keyboard replace the selected text;
if this text is not empty, it is placed in a
snarf buffer
common to all windows but distinct from that of
sam(1).
Programs access the text in the window at a single point
maintained automatically by
8½.
The
output point
is the location in the text where the next character written by
a program to
/dev/cons
will appear; afterwards, the output point is the null string
beyond the new character.
The output point is also the location in the text of the next character
that will be read (directly from the text in the window,
not from an intervening buffer)
by a program from
/dev/cons.
When such a read will occur is, however, under control of
8½
and the user.
In general there is text in the window after the output point,
usually placed there by typing but occasionally by the editing
operations described below.
A pending read of
/dev/cons
will block until the text after the output point contains
a newline, whereupon the read may
acquire the text, up to and including the newline.
After the read, as described above, the output point will be at
the beginning of the next line of text.
In normal circumstances, therefore, typed text is delivered
to programs a line at a time.
Changes made by typing or editing before the text is read will not
be seen by the program reading it.
If the program in the window does not read the terminal,
for example if it is a long-running computation, there may
accumulate multiple lines of text after the output point;
changes made to all this text will be seen when the text
is eventually read.
This means, for example, that one may edit out newlines in
unread text to forestall the associated text being read when
the program finishes computing.
This behavior is very different from most systems.
Even when there are newlines in the output text,
8½
will not honor reads if the window is in
hold mode
which is indicated by a white cursor and border.
The ESC character toggles hold mode.
Some programs, such as
mail(1),
automatically turn on hold mode to simplify the editing of multi-line text;
type ESC when done to allow
mail
to read the text.
An EOT character (control-D) behaves exactly like newline except
that it is not delivered to a program when read.
Thus on an empty line an EOT serves to deliver an end-of-file indication:
the read will return zero characters.
Like newlines, unread EOTs may be successfully edited out of the text.
The BS character (control-H) erases the character before the selected text.
The ETB character (control-W) erases any nonalphanumeric characters, then
the alphanumeric word just before the selected text.
`Alphanumeric' here means non-blanks and non-punctuation.
The NAK character (control-U) erases the text after the output point,
and not yet read by a program, but not more than one line.
All these characters are typed on the keyboard and hence replace
the selected text; for example, typing a BS with a word selected
places the word in the snarf buffer, removes it from the screen,
and erases the character before the word.
Text may be moved vertically within the window.
A scroll bar on the left of the window shows in its clear portion what fragment of the
total output text is visible on the screen, and in its gray part what
is above or below view;
it measures characters, not lines.
Mousing inside the scroll bar moves text:
clicking button 1 with the mouse pointing inside the scroll bar
brings the line at the top of the
window to the cursor's vertical location;
button 3 takes the line at the cursor to the top of the window;
button 2, treating the scroll bar as a ruler, jumps to the indicated portion
of the stored text.
Also, a VIEW key (possibly with a different label; see
keyboard(6))
scrolls forward
half a window.
The DEL character sends an
interrupt
note to all processes in the window's process group.
Alone among characters, the DEL and VIEW
keys do not affect the selected text.
Normally, written output to a window blocks when
the text reaches the end of the screen;
a button 2 menu item toggles scrolling.
Other editing operations are selected from a menu on button 2.
The
cut
operation deletes the selected text
from the screen and puts it in the snarf buffer;
snarf
copies the selected text to the buffer without deleting it;
paste
replaces the selected text with the contents of the buffer;
and
send
copies the snarf buffer to just after the output point, adding a final newline
if missing.
Paste
will sometimes and
send
will always place text after the output point; the text so placed
will behave exactly as described above. Therefore when pasting
text containing newlines after the output point, it may be prudent
to turn on hold mode first.
Raw text windows
-
Opening or manipulating certain files served by
8½
suppresses some of the services supplied to ordinary text windows.
While the file
/dev/mouse
is open, any mouse operations are the responsibility of another program
running in the window. Thus,
8½
refrains from maintaining
the scroll bar,
supplying text editing or menus, interpreting the
VIEW key as a request to scroll, and also turns scrolling on.
The file
/dev/consctl
controls interpretation of keyboard input.
In particular, a raw mode may be set:
in a raw-input window, no typed keyboard characters are special,
they are not echoed to the screen, and all are passed
to a program immediately upon reading, instead of being gathered into
lines.
Graphics windows
-
A program that holds
/dev/mouse
and
/dev/consctl
open after putting the console in raw mode
has complete control of the window:
it interprets all mouse events, gets all keyboard characters,
and determines what appears on the screen.
FILES
-
-
/lib/font/bit/*
- font directories
- /mnt/8½
- Files served by
8½
(also unioned in
/dev
in a window's name space, before the terminal's real
/dev
files)
- /srv/8½.user.pid
- Server end of
8½.
SOURCE
-
-
/sys/src/cmd/8½
- /rc/bin/label
- /rc/bin/window
- /rc/bin/wloc
SEE ALSO
-
8½(4),
rc(1),
cpu(1),
sam(1),
mail(1),
proof(1),
graphics(2),
frame(2),
layer(2),
notify(2),
cons(3),
bit(3),
keyboard(6)
BUGS
-
Window
works only on the machine running
8½.
Copyright © 1995 Lucent Technologies. All rights reserved.