Although this is not very important if you use a separate launcher with required options for each switch.Īnd the only good implementation of alternate screen switching is in the pterm terminal emulator found in PuTTY - when switching to the alternate screen, it shifts the normal screen contents into the scrollback buffer (so that it is available for copying while working in the fullscreen program), and on returning to the normal screen it just scrolls those lines back to the visible screen (not leaving any garbage in scrollback). There is also rxvt-unicode, but its TERM=rxvt-unicode-256color is often a problem when connecting to older systems.Īnother useful xterm feature when working with switches and other devices is that the “Backarrow Key (BS/DEL)” and “Delete is DEL” options are IMHO easier to change for a running window than in gnome-terminal (no need to open a settings window), and this is often needed because some switches want ^H for backspace. Yes, xterm works just fine with Unicode when started with the uxterm wrapper (and in some distros xterm is patched to switch its X resource class from XTerm to UXTerm when an UTF-8 locale is detected).
![xterm versus uxterm xterm versus uxterm](http://zenway.ru/uploads/xmms/xterm-011.png)
In theory I should like the purityĪnd vision of 9term in practice, well, xterm again.) It feelsĪ little sleazy and lazy to use xterm instead of 9term, but I do itĪnyways because it's so convenient. (9term versus xterm is thus sort of like the BSDs versus Linux. This sort of makes me unhappy, because intellectually I like Has not infrequently made xterm my lazy choice even when I could useĩterm. So xterm is the easyįinally, if I'm being honest I have to admit that there have alwaysīeen a number of little irritations and bits of extra work with usingĩterm instead of xterm, even in situations where 9term is usable. With it, including how it is different from xterm. Gnome-terminal, I have to go to extra work and then I have to put up Run vi or something else that needs cursor addressing. (If I start 9term I have to be certain that I'm not going to want to
![xterm versus uxterm xterm versus uxterm](http://zenway.ru/uploads/xmms/xterm-009.png)
Xterm for decades so I am completely acclimatized to how it behaves.
![xterm versus uxterm xterm versus uxterm](http://zenway.ru/uploads/xmms/xterm-006.png)
Too many seductive little attractions to it, and besides I've been using Xterm is my true default terminal emulator, the one that I start if Iĭon't want to think about which terminal emulator I want. Unfortunately I haven't been using it as much One common need for modern character graphics is apt-get's periodicĭialog boxes for questions, and another is various menu-based serialĬonsole management interfaces for things like switches.ĩterm is normally my first choice for many things, basically any time Iĭon't need either actual terminal emulation (for, eg, vi or su) or easyĬopy and paste support. User interface choices), but sometimes it's what I need, warts and all. Other two alternatives (and the Gnome people keep making questionable Gnome-terminal gets used when I need something that is completely set upįor UTF-8 or modern character graphics. Non-terminal emulator), and gnome-terminal. Routinely use three different terminal emulators xterm, 9term (which is more of a
#Xterm versus uxterm windows
The LXTerminal (or GNOME-Terminal, Xfce4-Terminal or Konsole) is more user friendly and generally preferred.Recently I mentioned in passing that I use severalĭifferent X Windows terminal emulators, depending on the circumstances.Ī commentator sensibly asked what the circumstances were. At least on Linux Mint 13 Xfce, XTerm and UXTerm aren't installed by default so you can safely remove them if you so desire (nice to have a backup terminal application though, should your installed one break for some reason).
#Xterm versus uxterm professional
I'm not sure as to their value for average users, and I think they are useful more to professional users with specialist needs. You pretty much want Unicode support these days. UXTerm is a wrapper around XTerm, giving it Unicode support.
![xterm versus uxterm xterm versus uxterm](http://zenway.ru/uploads/xmms/xterm-003.png)
Why do you have three terminal applications installed (you actually have more, also getty which provides the virtual terminals you can access with Ctrl+Alt+F1 through F6) is a good question. Not sure if there historically is a difference I think both meant the physical device with which to operate a computer. AFAIK, colloquially we use the terms console and terminal interchangeable.