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NAME

       xterm - terminal emulator for X

SYNOPSIS

       xterm [-toolkitoption ...] [-option ...] [shell]

DESCRIPTION

       The xterm program is a terminal emulator for the X Window System.  It provides DEC VT102/VT220 and
       selected features from higher-level terminals such as VT320/VT420/VT520 (VTxxx).  It also provides
       Tektronix 4014 emulation for programs that cannot use the window system directly.  If the underlying
       operating system supports terminal resizing capabilities (for example, the SIGWINCH signal in systems
       derived from 4.3BSD), xterm will use the facilities to notify programs running in the window whenever it
       is resized.

       The VTxxx and Tektronix 4014 terminals each have their own window so that you can edit text in one and
       look at graphics in the other at the same time.  To maintain the correct aspect ratio (height/width),
       Tektronix graphics will be restricted to the largest box with a 4014's aspect ratio that will fit in the
       window.  This box is located in the upper left area of the window.

       Although both windows may be displayed at the same time, one of them is considered the “active” window
       for receiving keyboard input and terminal output.  This is the window that contains the text cursor.  The
       active window can be chosen through escape sequences, the VT Options menu in the VTxxx window, and the
       Tek Options menu in the 4014 window.

EMULATIONS

       Xterm provides usable emulations of related DEC terminals:

       • VT52 emulation is complete.

       • VT102  emulation  is  fairly  complete,  but does not support autorepeat (because that would affect the
         keyboard used by other X clients).

         Double-size characters are displayed properly if your font server supports scalable fonts.

       • VT220 emulation does not support soft fonts, it is otherwise complete.

       • VT420 emulation (the default) supports controls for manipulating rectangles of characters  as  well  as
         left/right margins.

         Xterm does not support some other features which are not suitable for emulation, e.g., two-sessions.

       Terminal database (terminfo (5) or termcap (5)) entries that work with xterm include

              an optional platform-specific entry (“xterm”),
              “xterm”,
              “vt102”,
              “vt100”,
              “ansi” and
              “dumb”

       Xterm  automatically  searches  the  terminal  database in this order for these entries and then sets the
       “TERM” variable (and the “TERMCAP” environment variable on a few older systems).  The alternatives  after
       “xterm” are very old, from the late 1980s.

       VT100  and  VT102  emulations  are  commonly  equated,  though  they actually differ.  The VT102 provided
       controls for inserting and deleting lines.

       Similarly, “ansi” and “vt100” are often equated.  These are not really the same.  For instance, they  use
       different  controls for scrolling (but xterm supports both).  These features differ in an “ansi” terminal
       description from xterm:

       acsc
               Pseudo-graphics (line-drawing) uses a different mapping.

       xenl
               Xterm wraps text at the right margin using the VT100 “newline glitch” behavior.

       Because of the wrapping behavior, you would occasionally have to repaint the screen  when  using  a  text
       editor with the “ansi” description.

       You  may  also  use  descriptions  corresponding  to  the various supported emulations such as “vt220” or
       “vt420”, but should set the terminal emulation level with the decTerminalID resource.

       On most systems, xterm will use the terminfo database.  Some older systems use termcap.   (The  “TERMCAP”
       environment  variable  is  not  set  if  xterm  is linked against a terminfo library, since the requisite
       information is not provided by the termcap emulation of terminfo libraries).

       Many of the special xterm features may be  modified  under  program  control  through  a  set  of  escape
       sequences different from the standard VTxxx escape sequences (see Xterm Control Sequences).

       The  Tektronix 4014 emulation is also fairly good.  It supports 12-bit graphics addressing, scaled to the
       window size.  Four different font sizes and five different lines types are supported.  There is no write-
       through or defocused mode support.  The Tektronix text and graphics commands are recorded  internally  by
       xterm  and  may  be written to a file by sending the COPY escape sequence (or through the Tektronix menu;
       see below).  The name of the file will be

         “COPYyyyy-MM-dd.hh:mm:ss”

       where yyyy, MM, dd, hh, mm and ss are the year, month, day, hour, minute and second  when  the  COPY  was
       performed  (the  file  is created in the directory xterm is started in, or the home directory for a login
       xterm).

       Not all of the features described in this manual are necessarily available  in  this  version  of  xterm.
       Some  (e.g.,  the  non-VT220  extensions)  are  available  only if they were compiled in, though the most
       commonly-used are in the default configuration.

OTHER FEATURES

       Xterm automatically highlights the text  cursor  when  the  pointer  enters  the  window  (selected)  and
       unhighlights it when the pointer leaves the window (unselected).  If the window is the focus window, then
       the text cursor is highlighted no matter where the pointer is.

       In VTxxx mode, there are escape sequences to activate and deactivate an alternate screen buffer, which is
       the  same  size  as  the  display  area  of  the window.  When activated, the current screen is saved and
       replaced with the alternate screen.  Saving of lines scrolled off the top of the window is disabled until
       the normal screen is restored.  The usual terminal description for xterm allows the visual  editor  vi(1)
       to  switch  to  the  alternate  screen for editing and to restore the screen on exit.  A popup menu entry
       makes it simple to switch between the normal and alternate screens for cut and paste.

       In either VTxxx or Tektronix mode, there are  escape  sequences  to  change  the  name  of  the  windows.
       Additionally, in VTxxx mode, xterm implements the window-manipulation control sequences from dtterm, such
       as resizing the window, setting its location on the screen.

       Xterm  allows  character-based  applications  to receive mouse events (currently button-press and release
       events, and button-motion events) as  keyboard  control  sequences.   See  Xterm  Control  Sequences  for
       details.

OPTIONS

       Because  xterm uses the X Toolkit library, it accepts the standard X Toolkit command line options.  Xterm
       also accepts many application-specific options.

       By convention, if an option begins with a “+” instead of a “-”, the option is  restored  to  its  default
       value.

       Most of the xterm options are actually parsed by the X Toolkit, which sets resource values, and overrides
       corresponding  resource-settings  in your X resource files.  Xterm provides the X Toolkit with a table of
       options.  A few of these are marked, telling the X Toolkit to ignore them (-help, -version,  -class,  -e,
       and  -into).   After  the  X  Toolkit  has  parsed the command-line parameters, it removes those which it
       handles, leaving the specially-marked parameters for xterm to handle.

       These options do not set a resource value, and are handled specially:

       -version
               This causes xterm to print a version number to the standard output, and then exit.

       -help   This causes xterm to print out a verbose message describing  its  options,  one  per  line.   The
               message  is  written  to  the  standard  output.  After printing the message, xterm exits.  Xterm
               generates this message, sorting it and noting whether  a  “-option”  or  a  “+option”  turns  the
               feature  on or off, since some features historically have been one or the other.  Xterm generates
               a concise help message (multiple options per line) when an unknown option is used, e.g.,

                 xterm -z

               If the logic for a particular option such as logging is not compiled into xterm,  the  help  text
               for that option also is not displayed by the -help option.

       The  -version and -help options are interpreted even if xterm cannot open the display, and are useful for
       testing and configuration scripts.  Along with -class, they are checked  before  other  options.   To  do
       this,  xterm  has  its own (much simpler) argument parser, along with a table of the X Toolkit's built-in
       list of options.

       Relying upon the X Toolkit to parse the options and associated values has the  advantages  of  simplicity
       and good integration with the X resource mechanism.  There are a few drawbacks

       • Xterm  cannot  tell  easily  whether  a  resource  value  was  set  by one of the external resource- or
         application-defaults files, or if it was set through the -xrm option  or  via  some  directly  relevant
         command-line option.  Xterm sees only the end-result: a value supplied when creating its widgets.

       • Xterm  does  not  know the order in which particular options and items in resource files are evaluated.
         Rather, it sees all of the values for a given widget at the same time.  In the design of these options,
         some are deemed more important, and can override other options.

         The X Toolkit uses patterns (constants and wildcards) to match resources.  Once  a  particular  pattern
         has  been  used,  it  will not modify it.  To override a given setting, a more-specific pattern must be
         used, e.g., replacing “*” with “.”.  Some poorly-designed resource files are too specific to allow  the
         command-line options to affect the relevant widget values.

       • In  a few cases, the X Toolkit combines its standard options in ways which do not work well with xterm.
         This happens with the color (-fg, -bg) and reverse (-rv) options.  Xterm makes a special case of  these
         and adjusts its sense of “reverse” to lessen user surprise.

       One parameter (after all options) may be given.  That overrides xterm's built-in choice of shell program:

       • If  the  parameter is not a relative path, i.e., beginning with “./” or “../”, xterm looks for the file
         in the user's PATH.  In either case, this check fails if xterm cannot construct an absolute path.

       • If that check fails (or if no such parameter is given), xterm next checks  the  “SHELL”  variable.   If
         that  specifies  an  executable  file,  xterm  will attempt to start that.  However, xterm additionally
         checks if it is a valid shell, and will unset “SHELL” if it is not.

       • If “SHELL” is not set to an executable file, xterm tries to use the  shell  program  specified  in  the
         user's password file entry.  As before, xterm verifies if this is a valid shell.

       • Finally, if the password file entry does not specify a valid shell, xterm uses /bin/sh.

       The -e option cannot be used with this parameter since it uses all parameters following the option.

       Xterm  validates  shell  programs  by finding their pathname in the text file /etc/shells.  It treats the
       environment variable “SHELL” specially because (like “TERM”), xterm both reads and updates the  variable,
       and because the program started by xterm is not necessarily a shell.

       The  other  options  are  used  to  control the appearance and behavior.  Not all options are necessarily
       configured into your copy of xterm:

       -132    Normally, the VT102 DECCOLM escape sequence that switches between  80  and  132  column  mode  is
               ignored.   This  option causes the DECCOLM escape sequence to be recognized, and the xterm window
               will resize appropriately.

       -ah     This option indicates that xterm should always highlight the text cursor.  By default, xterm will
               display a hollow text cursor whenever the focus is lost or the pointer leaves the window.

       +ah     This option indicates that xterm should do text cursor highlighting based on focus.

       -ai     This option disables active icon support if that  feature  was  compiled  into  xterm.   This  is
               equivalent to setting the vt100 resource activeIcon to “false”.

       +ai     This  option  enables  active  icon  support  if  that  feature was compiled into xterm.  This is
               equivalent to setting the vt100 resource activeIcon to “true”.

       -aw     This option indicates that auto-wraparound should be allowed, and is equivalent  to  setting  the
               vt100 resource autoWrap to “false”.

               Auto-wraparound allows the cursor to automatically wrap to the beginning of the next line when it
               is at the rightmost position of a line and text is output.

       +aw     This  option  indicates  that auto-wraparound should not be allowed, and is equivalent to setting
               the vt100 resource autoWrap to “false”.

       -b number
               This option specifies the size of the inner border (the distance between the outer  edge  of  the
               characters  and  the  window  border) in pixels.  That is the vt100 internalBorder resource.  The
               default is “2”.

       -baudrate number
               Set the line-speed, used to test the behavior  of  applications  that  use  the  line-speed  when
               optimizing their output to the screen.  The default is “38400”.

       +bc     turn off text cursor blinking.  This overrides the cursorBlink resource.

       -bc     turn on text cursor blinking.  This overrides the cursorBlink resource.

       -bcf milliseconds
               set the amount of time text cursor is off when blinking via the cursorOffTime resource.

       -bcn milliseconds
               set the amount of time text cursor is on when blinking via the cursorOnTime resource.

       -bdc    Set  the  vt100  resource  colorBDMode  to “false”, disabling the display of characters with bold
               attribute as color.

       +bdc    Set the vt100 resource colorBDMode to “true”,  enabling  the  display  of  characters  with  bold
               attribute as color rather than bold.

       -cb     Set the vt100 resource cutToBeginningOfLine to “false”.

       +cb     Set the vt100 resource cutToBeginningOfLine to “true”.

       -cc characterclassrange:value[,...]
               This  sets  classes  indicated by the given ranges for using in selecting by words (see CHARACTER
               CLASSES and the charClass resource).

       -cjk_width
               Set the cjkWidth resource to “true”.  When turned on, characters with East  Asian  Ambiguous  (A)
               category in UTR 11 have a column width of 2.  Otherwise, they have a column width of 1.  This may
               be  useful  for  some legacy CJK text terminal-based programs assuming box drawings and others to
               have a column width of 2.  It also should be turned on when you specify a  TrueType  CJK  double-
               width  (bi-width/monospace)  font  either with -fa at the command line or faceName resource.  The
               default is “false”

       +cjk_width
               Reset the cjkWidth resource.

       -class string
               This option allows you to override xterm's resource class.  Normally it is “XTerm”,  but  can  be
               set to another class such as “UXTerm” to override selected resources.

       -cm     This  option  disables  recognition of ANSI color-change escape sequences.  It sets the colorMode
               resource to “false”.

       +cm     This option enables recognition of ANSI color-change escape sequences.  This is the same  as  the
               vt100 resource colorMode.

       -cn     This  option  indicates  that  newlines  should  not be cut in line-mode selections.  It sets the
               cutNewline resource to “false”.

       +cn     This option indicates that  newlines  should  be  cut  in  line-mode  selections.   It  sets  the
               cutNewline resource to “true”.

       -cr color
               This  option  specifies  the  color  to  use  for  text  cursor.   The default is to use the same
               foreground color that is used for text.  It  sets  the  cursorColor  resource  according  to  the
               parameter.

       -cu     This  option  indicates that xterm should work around a bug in the more(1) program that causes it
               to incorrectly display lines that are exactly the width of the window and are followed by a  line
               beginning  with  a  tab (the leading tabs are not displayed).  This option is so named because it
               was originally thought to be a bug in the curses(3x) cursor motion package.

       +cu     This option indicates that xterm should not work around the more(1) bug mentioned above.

       -dc     This option disables the escape sequence to change  dynamic  colors:  the  vt100  foreground  and
               background  colors,  its  text cursor color, the pointer cursor foreground and background colors,
               the Tektronix emulator foreground and background colors, its  text  cursor  color  and  highlight
               color.  The option sets the dynamicColors option to “false”.

       +dc     This  option  enables  the  escape  sequence  to  change  dynamic  colors.   The  option sets the
               dynamicColors option to “true”.

       -e program [ arguments ... ]
               This option specifies the program (and its command line arguments) to be run in the xterm window.
               It also sets the window title and icon name to be the basename of the program being  executed  if
               neither -T nor -n are given on the command line.

               NOTE: This must be the last option on the command line.

       -en encoding
               This option determines the encoding on which xterm runs.  It sets the locale resource.  Encodings
               other  than  UTF-8 are supported by using luit.  The -lc option should be used instead of -en for
               systems with locale support.

       -fb font
               This option specifies a font to be  used  when  displaying  bold  text.   It  sets  the  boldFont
               resource.

               This font must be the same height and width as the normal font, otherwise it is ignored.  If only
               one  of  the  normal  or bold fonts is specified, it will be used as the normal font and the bold
               font will be produced by overstriking this font.

               See also the discussion of boldMode and alwaysBoldMode resources.

       -fa pattern
               This option sets the pattern for fonts selected from the FreeType library  if  support  for  that
               library  was compiled into xterm.  This corresponds to the faceName resource.  When a CJK double-
               width font is specified, you also need to turn on the cjkWidth resource.

               If you specify both -fa and the X Toolkit option -fn, the -fa setting overrides the latter.

               See also the renderFont resource, which combines with this to determine  whether  FreeType  fonts
               are initially active.

       -fbb    This  option  indicates  that xterm should compare normal and bold fonts bounding boxes to ensure
               they are compatible.  It sets the freeBoldBox resource to “false”.

       +fbb    This option indicates that xterm should not compare normal  and  bold  fonts  bounding  boxes  to
               ensure they are compatible.  It sets the freeBoldBox resource to “true”.

       -fbx    This  option  indicates  that  xterm  should not assume that the normal and bold fonts have VT100
               line-drawing characters.  If any are missing, xterm will draw the characters directly.   It  sets
               the forceBoxChars resource to “false”.

       +fbx    This  option  indicates  that xterm should assume that the normal and bold fonts have VT100 line-
               drawing characters.  It sets the forceBoxChars resource to “true”.

       -fd pattern
               This option sets the pattern for double-width fonts selected from the FreeType library if support
               for that library was compiled into xterm.  This corresponds to the faceNameDoublesize resource.

       -fi font
               This option sets the font for active icons if that feature was compiled into xterm.

               See also the discussion of the iconFont resource.

       -fs size
               This option sets the pointsize for fonts selected from the FreeType library if support  for  that
               library was compiled into xterm.  This corresponds to the faceSize resource.

       -fullscreen
               This  option indicates that xterm should ask the window manager to let it use the full-screen for
               display, e.g., without window decorations.  It sets the fullscreen resource to “true”.

       +fullscreen
               This option indicates that xterm should not ask the window manager to let it use the  full-screen
               for display.  It sets the fullscreen resource to “false”.

       -fw font
               This  option specifies the font to be used for displaying wide text.  By default, it will attempt
               to use a font twice as wide as the font that will be used to draw normal  text.   If  no  double-
               width  font  is found, it will improvise, by stretching the normal font.  This corresponds to the
               wideFont resource.

       -fwb font
               This option specifies the font to be used for displaying bold wide text.   By  default,  it  will
               attempt  to  use  a  font  twice  as wide as the font that will be used to draw bold text.  If no
               double-width font is found, it will improvise, by stretching the bold font.  This corresponds  to
               the wideBoldFont resource.

       -fx font
               This  option specifies the font to be used for displaying the preedit string in the “OverTheSpot”
               input method.

               See also the discussion of the ximFont resource.

       -hc color
               (see -selbg).

       -hf     This option indicates that HP function key escape codes should be generated  for  function  keys.
               It sets the hpFunctionKeys resource to “true”.

       +hf     This  option  indicates  that  HP  function key escape codes should not be generated for function
               keys.  It sets the hpFunctionKeys resource to “false”.

       -hm     Tells  xterm  to  use  highlightTextColor   and   highlightColor   to   override   the   reversed
               foreground/background colors in a selection.  It sets the highlightColorMode resource to “true”.

       +hm     Tells   xterm  not  to  use  highlightTextColor  and  highlightColor  to  override  the  reversed
               foreground/background colors in a selection.  It sets the highlightColorMode resource to “false”.

       -hold   Turn on the hold resource, i.e., xterm will not immediately destroy its  window  when  the  shell
               command  completes.  It will wait until you use the window manager to destroy/kill the window, or
               if you use the menu entries that send a signal, e.g., HUP or KILL.

       +hold   Turn off the hold resource, i.e., xterm will  immediately  destroy  its  window  when  the  shell
               command completes.

       -ie     Turn  on  the  ptyInitialErase  resource, i.e., use the pseudo-terminal's sense of the stty erase
               value.

       +ie     Turn off the ptyInitialErase resource, i.e., set the stty erase value using the  kb  string  from
               the termcap entry as a reference, if available.

       -im     Turn on the useInsertMode resource, which forces use of insert mode by adding appropriate entries
               to the TERMCAP environment variable.  (This option is ignored on most systems, because TERMCAP is
               not used).

       +im     Turn off the useInsertMode resource.

       -into windowId
               Given an X window identifier (an integer, which can be hexadecimal, octal or decimal according to
               whether  it  begins with "0x", "0" or neither), xterm will reparent its top-level shell widget to
               that window.  This is used to embed xterm within other applications.

               For instance, there are scripts for Tcl/Tk and Gtk which can be used to demonstrate the  feature.
               When using Gtk, there is a limitation of that toolkit which requires that xterm's allowSendEvents
               resource is enabled.

       -itc    Set  the  vt100  resource colorITMode to “false”, disabling the display of characters with italic
               attribute as color.

       +itc    Set the vt100 resource colorITMode to “true”, enabling the  display  of  characters  with  italic
               attribute as color rather than italic.

       -j      This  option  indicates  that  xterm  should do jump scrolling.  It corresponds to the jumpScroll
               resource.  Normally, text is scrolled one line at a  time;  this  option  allows  xterm  to  move
               multiple lines at a time so that it does not fall as far behind.  Its use is strongly recommended
               since  it  makes xterm much faster when scanning through large amounts of text.  The VT100 escape
               sequences for enabling and disabling smooth scroll as well as the VT Options menu can be used  to
               turn this feature on or off.

       +j      This option indicates that xterm should not do jump scrolling.

       -k8     This  option  sets  the allowC1Printable resource.  When allowC1Printable is set, xterm overrides
               the mapping of C1 control characters (code 128-159) to treat them as printable.

       +k8     This option resets the allowC1Printable resource.

       -kt keyboardtype
               This option sets the keyboardType  resource.   Possible  values  include:  “unknown”,  “default”,
               “legacy”, “hp”, “sco”, “sun”, “tcap” and “vt220”.

               The value “unknown”, causes the corresponding resource to be ignored.

               The value “default”, suppresses the associated resources

               hpFunctionKeys,
               scoFunctionKeys,
               sunFunctionKeys,
               tcapFunctionKeys,
               oldXtermFKeys and
               sunKeyboard,

               using the Sun/PC keyboard layout.

       -l      Turn logging on, unless disabled by the logInhibit resource.

               Some versions of xterm may have logging enabled.  However, normally logging is not supported, due
               to  security  concerns  in  the  early 1990s.  That was a problem in X11R4 xterm (1989) which was
               addressed by a patch to X11R5 late in 1993.  X11R6 included these fixes.  The older version (when
               running with root privilege) would create the log-file using  root  privilege.   The  reason  why
               xterm  ran  with  root  privileges was to open pseudo-terminals.  Those privileges are now needed
               only on very old systems: Unix98 pseudo-terminals made the BSD scheme unnecessary.

               Unless overridden by the -lf option or the logFile resource:

               • The logfile is written to the directory from which xterm is invoked.

               • The filename is generated, of the form

                   XtermLog.XXXXXX

                 or

                   Xterm.log.hostname.yyyy.mm.dd.hh.mm.ss.XXXXXX

                 depending on how xterm was built.

       +l      Turn logging off.

       -lc     Turn on support of various encodings according  to  the  users'  locale  setting,  i.e.,  LC_ALL,
               LC_CTYPE,  or  LANG  environment  variables.   This  is  achieved by turning on UTF-8 mode and by
               invoking luit for conversion between locale encodings and UTF-8.  (luit is not invoked  in  UTF-8
               locales.)  This corresponds to the locale resource.

               The  actual list of encodings which are supported is determined by luit.  Consult the luit manual
               page for further details.

               See also the discussion of the -u8 option which supports UTF-8 locales.

       +lc     Turn off support of automatic selection of locale encodings.  Conventional 8bit mode or, in UTF-8
               locales or with -u8 option, UTF-8 mode will be used.

       -lcc path
               File name for the encoding converter from/to locale encodings and UTF-8 which is  used  with  -lc
               option or locale resource.  This corresponds to the localeFilter resource.

       -leftbar
               Force  scrollbar  to the left side of VT100 screen.  This is the default, unless you have set the
               rightScrollBar resource.

       -lf filename
               Specify the log-filename.  This sets the logFile resource.  See the -l option.

       -ls     This option indicates that the shell that is started in the xterm window will be  a  login  shell
               (i.e., the first character of argv[0] will be a dash, indicating to the shell that it should read
               the user's .login or .profile).

               The  -ls flag and the loginShell resource are ignored if -e is also given, because xterm does not
               know how to make the shell start the given command after whatever it does  when  it  is  a  login
               shell  -  the  user's  shell  of  choice need not be a Bourne shell after all.  Also, xterm -e is
               supposed to provide a consistent functionality for other applications that need  to  start  text-
               mode  programs  in  a  window, and if loginShell were not ignored, the result of ~/.profile might
               interfere with that.

               If you do want the effect of -ls and -e simultaneously, you may get away with something like

                 xterm -e /bin/bash -l -c "my command here"

               Finally, -ls is not completely ignored, because xterm -ls -e does write a /var/log/wtmp entry (if
               configured to do so), whereas xterm -e does not.

       -maximized
               This option indicates that xterm should ask the window manager to maximize its layout on startup.
               This corresponds to the maximized resource.

               Maximizing is not the reverse of iconifying; it is  possible  to  do  both  with  certain  window
               managers.

       +maximized
               This  option  indicates  that  xterm  should ask the window manager to not maximize its layout on
               startup.

       +ls     This option indicates that the shell that is started should not be a login shell (i.e.,  it  will
               be a normal “subshell”).

       -mb     This option indicates that xterm should ring a margin bell when the user types near the right end
               of a line.

       +mb     This option indicates that margin bell should not be rung.

       -mc milliseconds
               This option specifies the maximum time between multi-click selections.

       -mesg   Turn off the messages resource, i.e., disallow write access to the terminal.

       +mesg   Turn on the messages resource, i.e., allow write access to the terminal.

       -mk_width
               Set  the  mkWidth  resource  to  “true”.   This  makes  xterm use a built-in version of the wide-
               character width calculation.  The default is “false”

       +mk_width
               Reset the mkWidth resource.

       -ms color
               This option specifies the color to be used for the pointer cursor.  The default  is  to  use  the
               foreground color.  This sets the pointerColor resource.

       -nb number
               This  option  specifies the number of characters from the right end of a line at which the margin
               bell, if enabled, will ring.  The default is “10”.

       -nul    This option disables the display of underlining.

       +nul    This option enables the display of underlining.

       -pc     This option enables the PC-style use of bold colors (see boldColors resource).

       +pc     This option disables the PC-style use of bold colors.

       -pob    This option indicates that the window should be raised whenever a Control-G is received.

       +pob    This option indicates that the window should not be raised whenever a Control-G is received.

       -report-charclass
               Print a report to the standard output showing information about the character-classes  which  can
               be altered using the charClass resource.

       -report-colors
               Print  a  report to the standard output showing information about colors as xterm allocates them.
               This corresponds to the reportColors resource.

       -report-fonts
               Print a report to the standard output showing information about fonts  which  are  loaded.   This
               corresponds to the reportFonts resource.

       -rightbar
               Force scrollbar to the right side of VT100 screen.

       -rvc    This option disables the display of characters with reverse attribute as color.

       +rvc    This option enables the display of characters with reverse attribute as color.

       -rw     This  option indicates that reverse-wraparound should be allowed.  This allows the cursor to back
               up from the leftmost column of one line to the rightmost column of the previous  line.   This  is
               very useful for editing long shell command lines and is encouraged.  This option can be turned on
               and off from the VT Options menu.

       +rw     This option indicates that reverse-wraparound should not be allowed.

       -s      This option indicates that xterm may scroll asynchronously, meaning that the screen does not have
               to  be  kept completely up to date while scrolling.  This allows xterm to run faster when network
               latencies are very high and is typically useful when running across a very large internet or many
               gateways.

       +s      This option indicates that xterm should scroll synchronously.

       -samename
               Does not send title and icon name change requests when the request would have no effect: the name
               is not changed.  This has the advantage of preventing flicker and the disadvantage  of  requiring
               an  extra round trip to the server to find out the previous value.  In practice this should never
               be a problem.

       +samename
               Always send title and icon name change requests.

       -sb     This option indicates that some number of lines that are scrolled  off  the  top  of  the  window
               should be saved and that a scrollbar should be displayed so that those lines can be viewed.  This
               option may be turned on and off from the VT Options menu.

       +sb     This option indicates that a scrollbar should not be displayed.

       -selbg color
               This  option  specifies  the color to use for the background of selected text.  If not specified,
               reverse video is used.  See the discussion of the highlightColor resource.

       -selfg color
               This option specifies the color to use for selected text.  If not  specified,  reverse  video  is
               used.  See the discussion of the highlightTextColor resource.

       -sf     This option indicates that Sun function key escape codes should be generated for function keys.

       +sf     This option indicates that the standard escape codes should be generated for function keys.

       -sh number
               scale line-height values by the given number.  See the discussion of the scaleHeight resource.

       -si     This  option  indicates that output to a window should not automatically reposition the screen to
               the bottom of the scrolling region.  This option can be turned on and off  from  the  VT  Options
               menu.

       +si     This option indicates that output to a window should cause it to scroll to the bottom.

       -sk     This  option  indicates that pressing a key while using the scrollbar to review previous lines of
               text should cause the window to be repositioned automatically  in  the  normal  position  at  the
               bottom of the scroll region.

       +sk     This  option  indicates that pressing a key while using the scrollbar should not cause the window
               to be repositioned.

       -sl number
               This option specifies the number of lines to save that have been scrolled  off  the  top  of  the
               screen.  This corresponds to the saveLines resource.  The default is “64”.

       -sm     This option, corresponding to the sessionMgt resource, indicates that xterm should set up session
               manager callbacks.

       +sm     This option indicates that xterm should not set up session manager callbacks.

       -sp     This option indicates that Sun/PC keyboard should be assumed, providing mapping for keypad “+” to
               “,”, and CTRL-F1 to F13, CTRL-F2 to F14, etc.

       +sp     This  option indicates that the standard escape codes should be generated for keypad and function
               keys.

       -t      This option indicates that xterm should start in Tektronix  mode,  rather  than  in  VTxxx  mode.
               Switching between the two windows is done using the “Options” menus.

               Terminal database (terminfo (5) or termcap (5)) entries that work with xterm are:

               “tek4014”,
               “tek4015”,
               “tek4012”,
               “tek4013”,
               “tek4010”, and
               “dumb”.

               xterm  automatically searches the terminal database in this order for these entries and then sets
               the “TERM” variable (and the “TERMCAP” environment variable, if relevant).

       +t      This option indicates that xterm should start in VTxxx mode.

       -tb     This option, corresponding to the toolBar resource, indicates that xterm should display a toolbar
               (or menubar) at the top of its window.  The buttons in the toolbar correspond to the popup menus,
               e.g., control/left/mouse for Main Options.

       +tb     This option indicates that xterm should not set up a toolbar.

       -ti term_id
               Specify the name used by xterm to select the correct response to terminal ID  queries.   It  also
               specifies  the  emulation level, used to determine the type of response to a DA control sequence.
               Valid values include vt52, vt100, vt101, vt102, vt220, and vt240 (the  “vt”  is  optional).   The
               default is “vt420”.  The term_id argument specifies the terminal ID to use.  (This is the same as
               the decTerminalID resource).

       -tm string
               This  option  specifies  a  series  of  terminal setting keywords followed by the characters that
               should be bound to those functions, similar to the stty program.  The keywords and  their  values
               are described in detail in the ttyModes resource.

       -tn name
               This  option  specifies the name of the terminal type to be set in the TERM environment variable.
               It corresponds to the termName resource.  This terminal type must exist in the terminal  database
               (termcap  or  terminfo, depending on how xterm is built) and should have li# and co# entries.  If
               the terminal type is not found, xterm uses the built-in list “xterm”, “vt102”, etc.

       -u8     This option sets the utf8 resource.  When utf8 is set, xterm interprets incoming data  as  UTF-8.
               This sets the wideChars resource as a side-effect, but the UTF-8 mode set by this option prevents
               it  from being turned off.  If you must turn UTF-8 encoding on and off, use the -wc option or the
               corresponding wideChars resource, rather than the -u8 option.

               This option and the utf8 resource are overridden by the -lc and -en options and locale  resource.
               That  is, if xterm has been compiled to support luit, and the locale resource is not “false” this
               option is ignored.  We recommend using the -lc option or the  “locale: true”  resource  in  UTF-8
               locales  when  your  operating system supports locale, or -en UTF-8 option or the “locale: UTF-8”
               resource when your operating system does not support locale.

       +u8     This option resets the utf8 resource.

       -uc     This option makes the cursor underlined instead of a box.

       +uc     This option makes the cursor a box instead of underlined.

       -ulc    This option disables the display of characters with underline attribute as color rather than with
               underlining.

       +ulc    This option enables the display of characters with underline attribute as color rather than  with
               underlining.

       -ulit   This  option, corresponding to the italicULMode resource, disables the display of characters with
               underline attribute as italics rather than with underlining.

       +ulit   This option, corresponding to the italicULMode resource, enables the display of  characters  with
               underline attribute as italics rather than with underlining.

       -ut     This option indicates that xterm should not write a record into the the system utmp log file.

       +ut     This option indicates that xterm should write a record into the system utmp log file.

       -vb     This  option  indicates  that a visual bell is preferred over an audible one.  Instead of ringing
               the terminal bell whenever a Control-G is received, the window will be flashed.

       +vb     This option indicates that a visual bell should not be used.

       -wc     This option sets the wideChars resource.

               When wideChars is set, xterm maintains internal structures for 16-bit characters.   If  xterm  is
               not  started  in  UTF-8  mode  (or  if  this  resource  is not set), initially it maintains those
               structures to support 8-bit characters.  Xterm can later be  switched,  using  a  menu  entry  or
               control sequence, causing it to reallocate those structures to support 16-bit characters.

               The default is “false”.

       +wc     This option resets the wideChars resource.

       -wf     This  option  indicates  that xterm should wait for the window to be mapped the first time before
               starting the subprocess so that the initial terminal size settings and environment variables  are
               correct.  It is the application's responsibility to catch subsequent terminal size changes.

       +wf     This option indicates that xterm should not wait before starting the subprocess.

       -ziconbeep percent
               Same  as  zIconBeep resource.  If percent is non-zero, xterms that produce output while iconified
               will cause an XBell sound at the given volume and have “***”  prepended  to  their  icon  titles.
               Most  window  managers  will  detect  this  change  immediately, showing you which window has the
               output.  (A similar feature was in x10 xterm.)

       -C      This option indicates that this window should receive console output.  This is not  supported  on
               all systems.  To obtain console output, you must be the owner of the console device, and you must
               have  read and write permission for it.  If you are running X under xdm on the console screen you
               may need to have the session startup and reset programs explicitly change the  ownership  of  the
               console device in order to get this option to work.

       -Sccn   This option allows xterm to be used as an input and output channel for an existing program and is
               sometimes  used  in specialized applications.  The option value specifies the last few letters of
               the name of a pseudo-terminal to use in slave  mode,  plus  the  number  of  the  inherited  file
               descriptor.   If  the  option contains a “/” character, that delimits the characters used for the
               pseudo-terminal name from the file descriptor.  Otherwise, exactly two characters are  used  from
               the  option  for  the  pseudo-terminal name, the remainder is the file descriptor.  Examples (the
               first two are equivalent since the descriptor follows the last “/”):

                 -S/dev/pts/123/45
                 -S123/45
                 -Sab34

               Note that xterm does not close any file descriptor which it did not open for its own use.  It  is
               possible  (though  probably  not  portable)  to  have  an  application  which passes an open file
               descriptor down to xterm past the initialization or the -S option to a  process  running  in  the
               xterm.

   Old Options
       The following command line arguments are provided for compatibility with older versions.  They may not be
       supported in the next release as the X Toolkit provides standard options that accomplish the same task.

       %geom   This  option  specifies the preferred size and position of the Tektronix window.  It is shorthand
               for specifying the “tekGeometry” resource.

       #geom   This option specifies the preferred position of the icon window.  It is shorthand for  specifying
               the “iconGeometry” resource.

       -T string
               This option specifies the title for xterm's windows.  It is equivalent to -title.

       -n string
               This  option  specifies  the  icon  name for xterm's windows.  It is shorthand for specifying the
               “iconName” resource.  Note that this is not the same as the toolkit option  -name.   The  default
               icon name is the application name.

               If no suitable icon is found, xterm provides a compiled-in pixmap.

       -r      This  option  indicates  that  reverse  video  should be simulated by swapping the foreground and
               background colors.  It is equivalent to -rv.

       -w number
               This option specifies the width in pixels of the border surrounding the window.  It is equivalent
               to -borderwidth or -bw.

   X Toolkit Options
       The following standard X Toolkit command line arguments are commonly used with xterm:

       -bd color
               This option specifies the color to use for the border of the window.  The corresponding  resource
               name is borderColor.  Xterm uses the X Toolkit default, which is “XtDefaultForeground”.

       -bg color
               This  option  specifies  the  color  to  use for the background of the window.  The corresponding
               resource name is background.  The default is “XtDefaultBackground”.

       -bw number
               This option specifies the width in pixels of the border surrounding the window.

               This appears to be a legacy of older X releases.  It sets the borderWidth resource of  the  shell
               widget,  and  may provide advice to your window manager to set the thickness of the window frame.
               Most window managers do not use this information.  See the -b option, which  controls  the  inner
               border of the xterm window.

       -display display
               This option specifies the X server to contact; see X(1).

       -fg color
               This  option  specifies the color to use for displaying text.  The corresponding resource name is
               foreground.  The default is “XtDefaultForeground”.

       -fn font
               This option specifies the font to be used for displaying normal text.  The corresponding resource
               name is font.  The resource value default is fixed.

       -font font
               This is the same as -fn.

       -geometry geometry
               This option specifies the preferred size and position of the VTxxx window; see X(1).

               The normal geometry  specification  can  be  suffixed  with  @  followed  by  a  Xinerama  screen
               specification;  it can be either g for the global screen (default), c for the current screen or a
               screen number.

       -iconic
               This option indicates that xterm should ask the window manager to start it as an icon rather than
               as the normal window.  The corresponding resource name is iconic.

       -name name
               This option specifies the application name under which resources are to be obtained, rather  than
               the default executable file name.  Name should not contain “.” or “*” characters.

       -rv     This  option  indicates  that  reverse  video  should be simulated by swapping the foreground and
               background colors.  The corresponding resource name is reverseVideo.

       +rv     Disable the simulation of reverse video by swapping foreground and background colors.

       -title string
               This option specifies the window title string, which may be displayed by window managers  if  the
               user  so  chooses.   The default title is the command line specified after the -e option, if any,
               otherwise the application name.

       -xrm resourcestring
               This option specifies a resource string to be  used.   This  is  especially  useful  for  setting
               resources that do not have separate command line options.

       X Toolkit accepts alternate names for a few of these options, e.g.,

       • “-background” for “-bg”

       • “-font” for “-fn”

       • “-foreground” for “-fg”

       Abbreviated options also are supported, e.g., “-v” for “-verbose.”

RESOURCES

       Xterm  understands  all of the core X Toolkit resource names and classes.  Application specific resources
       (e.g., “XTerm.NAME”) follow:

   Application Resources
       backarrowKeyIsErase (class BackarrowKeyIsErase)
               Tie the VTxxx backarrowKey and ptyInitialErase resources together by  setting  the  DECBKM  state
               according to whether the initial erase character is a backspace (8) or delete (127) character.  A
               “false” value disables this feature.  The default is “True”.

               Here are tables showing how the initial settings for

               • backarrowKeyIsErase (BKIE),

               • backarrowKey (BK), and

               • ptyInitialErase (PIE), along with the

               • stty erase character (^H for backspace, ^? for delete)

               will affect DECBKM.  First, xterm obtains the initial erase character:

               • xterm's internal value is ^H

               • xterm asks the operating system for the value which stty shows

               • the ttyModes resource may override erase

               • if ptyInitialErase is false, xterm will look in the terminal database

               Summarizing that as a table:
               PIE     stty   termcap   erase
               ───────────────────────────────
               false    ^H      ^H       ^H
               false    ^H      ^?       ^?
               false    ^?      ^H       ^H
               false    ^?      ^?       ^?
               true     ^H      ^H       ^H
               true     ^H      ^?       ^H
               true     ^?      ^H       ^?
               true     ^?      ^?       ^?

               Using that erase character, xterm allows further choices:

               • if backarrowKeyIsErase is true, xterm uses the erase character for the initial state of DECBKM

               • if  backarrowKeyIsErase  is  false,  xterm  sets  DECBKM  to  2 (internal).  This ties together
                 backarrowKey and the control sequence for DECBKM

               • applications can send a control sequence to set/reset DECBKM control set

               • the “Backarrow Key (BS/DEL)” menu entry toggles DECBKM

               Summarizing the initialization details:
               erase   BKIE    BK      DECBKM   result
               ────────────────────────────────────────
                ^?     false   false     2        ^H
                ^?     false   true      2        ^?
                ^?     true    false     0        ^?
                ^?     true    true      1        ^?
                ^H     false   false     2        ^H
                ^H     false   true      2        ^?
                ^H     true    false     0        ^H
                ^H     true    true      1        ^H

       fullscreen (class Fullscreen)
               Specifies whether or not xterm should ask the window  manager  to  use  a  fullscreen  layout  on
               startup.  Xterm accepts either a keyword (ignoring case) or the number shown in parentheses:

               false (0)
                  Fullscreen  layout  is  not  used  initially,  but  may be later via menu-selection or control
                  sequence.

               true (1)
                  Fullscreen layout is used initially, but may be disabled later via menu-selection  or  control
                  sequence.

               always (2)
                  Fullscreen  layout  is  used  initially,  and  cannot  be disabled later via menu-selection or
                  control sequence.

               never (3)
                  Fullscreen layout is not used, and cannot be  enabled  later  via  menu-selection  or  control
                  sequence.

               The default is “false”.

       hold (class Hold)
               If true, xterm will not immediately destroy its window when the shell command completes.  It will
               wait  until you use the window manager to destroy/kill the window, or if you use the menu entries
               that send a signal, e.g., HUP or KILL.  You may scroll back, select text, etc., to  perform  most
               graphical  operations.   Resizing  the  display  will  lose  data,  however,  since this involves
               interaction with the shell which is no longer running.

       hpFunctionKeys (class HpFunctionKeys)
               Specifies whether or not HP function key escape codes should be generated for function keys.  The
               default is “false”, i.e., this feature is disabled.

               The keyboardType resource is the preferred mechanism for selecting this mode.

       iconGeometry (class IconGeometry)
               Specifies the preferred size  and  position  of  the  application  when  iconified.   It  is  not
               necessarily obeyed by all window managers.

       iconHint (class IconHint)
               Specifies  an  icon  which  will be added to the window manager hints.  Xterm provides no default
               value.

               Set this resource to “none” to omit the hint entirely, using  whatever  the  window  manager  may
               decide.

               If  the iconHint resource is given (or is set via the -n option) xterm searches for a pixmap file
               with that name, in the current directory as well as in /usr/share/pixmaps.  if the resource  does
               not  specify  an  absolute  pathname.   In  each  case,  xterm adds “_48x48” and/or “.xpm” to the
               filename after trying without those suffixes.  If it is able to load the  file,  xterm  sets  the
               window  manager  hint  for  the  icon-pixmap.   These pixmaps are distributed with xterm, and can
               optionally be compiled-in:

               • mini.xterm_16x16, mini.xterm_32x32, mini.xterm_48x48

               • filled-xterm_16x16, filled-xterm_32x32, filled-xterm_48x48

               • xterm_16x16, xterm_32x32, xterm_48x48

               • xterm-color_16x16, xterm-color_32x32, xterm-color_48x48

               In either case, xterm allows for adding a “_48x48” to specify the largest of  the  pixmaps  as  a
               default.  That is, “mini.xterm” is the same as “mini.xterm_48x48”.

               If  no  explicit  iconHint resource is given (or if none of the compiled-in names matches), xterm
               uses “mini.xterm” (which is always compiled-in).

               The iconHint resource has no effect on “desktop” files, including “panel” and “menu”.  Those  are
               typically  set  via a “.desktop” file; xterm provides samples for itself (and the uxterm script).
               The more capable desktop systems allow changing the icon on a per-user basis.

       iconName (class IconName)
               Specifies a label for xterm when  iconified.   Xterm  provides  no  default  value;  some  window
               managers may assume the application name, e.g., “xterm”.

               Setting  the  iconName resource sets the icon label unless overridden by zIconBeep or the control
               sequences which change the window and icon labels.

       keyboardType (class KeyboardType)
               Enables one (or none) of the various keyboard-type  resources:  hpFunctionKeys,  scoFunctionKeys,
               sunFunctionKeys, tcapFunctionKeys, oldXtermFKeys and sunKeyboard.

               The  resource's  value  should  be  one  of the corresponding strings “hp”, “sco”, “sun”, “tcap”,
               “legacy” or “vt220”, respectively.

               The individual resources are provided for legacy support; this resource is simpler to use.  Xterm
               will use only one keyboard-type, but if multiple resources are set, it warns and  uses  the  last
               one it checks.

               The default is “unknown”, i.e., none of the associated resources are set via this resource.

       maxBufSize (class MaxBufSize)
               Specify  the maximum size of the input buffer.  The default is “32768”.  You cannot set this to a
               value less than the minBufSize resource.  It will be increased  as  needed  to  make  that  value
               evenly divide this one.

               On  some  systems  you may want to increase one or both of the maxBufSize and minBufSize resource
               values to achieve better performance if the operating system prefers larger buffer sizes.

       maximized (class Maximized)
               Specifies whether or not xterm should ask the window manager to maximize its layout  on  startup.
               The default is “false”.

       menuHeight (class MenuHeight)
               Specifies  the  height  of  the  toolbar,  which  may be increased by the X toolkit layout widget
               depending upon the fontsize used.  The default is “25”.

       messages (class Messages)
               Specifies whether write access to the terminal is allowed initially.  See mesg(1).   The  default
               is “true”.

       menuLocale (class MenuLocale)
               Specify the locale used for character-set computations when loading the popup menus.  Use this to
               improve  initialization  performance  of  the Athena popup menus, which may load unnecessary (and
               very large) fonts, e.g., in a locale having UTF-8 encoding.  The default is “C” (POSIX).

               To use the current locale (only useful if you have localized the resource settings for  the  menu
               entries), set the resource to an empty string.

       minBufSize (class MinBufSize)
               Specify  the  minimum  size  of the input buffer, i.e., the amount of data that xterm requests on
               each read.  The default is “4096”.  You cannot set this to a value less than 64.

       omitTranslation (class OmitTranslation)
               Selectively omit one or more parts of xterm's default  translations  at  startup.   The  resource
               value  is  a  comma-separated  list of keywords, which may be abbreviated: “fullscreen”, “scroll-
               lock”, “shift-fonts” or “wheel-mouse”.  Xterm also recognizes “default”, but omitting  that  will
               make the program unusable unless you provide a similar definition in your resource settings.

       ptyHandshake (class PtyHandshake)
               If  “true”,  xterm  will  perform handshaking during initialization to ensure that the parent and
               child processes update the utmp and stty state.

               See also waitForMap which waits  for  the  pseudo-terminal's  notion  of  the  screen  size,  and
               ptySttySize  which  resets  the screen size after other terminal initialization is complete.  The
               default is “true”.

       ptyInitialErase (class PtyInitialErase)
               If “true”, xterm will use the pseudo-terminal's sense of the stty erase value.  If “false”, xterm
               will set the stty erase value to match its own  configuration,  using  the  kb  string  from  the
               termcap entry as a reference, if available.

               In  either  case,  the  result is applied to the TERMCAP variable which xterm sets, if the system
               uses TERMCAP.

               See also the ttyModes resource, which may override this.  The default is “False”.

       ptySttySize (class PtySttySize)
               If “true”, xterm will reset the screen size after terminal initialization is complete.   This  is
               needed  for some systems whose pseudo-terminals cannot propagate terminal characteristics.  Where
               it is not needed, it can interfere with other methods for setting the intial screen  size,  e.g.,
               via window manager interaction.

               See  also  waitForMap  which waits for a handshake-message giving the pseudo-terminal's notion of
               the screen size.  The default is “false” on Linux and OS X systems, “true” otherwise.

       reportColors (class ReportColors)
               If true, xterm will print to the standard output a summary of colors as it allocates  them.   The
               default is “false”.

       reportFonts (class ReportFonts)
               If  true,  xterm will print to the standard output a summary of each font's metrics (size, number
               of glyphs, etc.), as it loads them.  The default is “false”.

       sameName (class SameName)
               If the value of this resource is “true”, xterm does not send title and icon name change  requests
               when  the  request  would  have  no  effect:  the name is not changed.  This has the advantage of
               preventing flicker and the disadvantage of requiring an extra round trip to the  server  to  find
               out the previous value.  In practice this should never be a problem.  The default is “true”.

       scaleHeight (class ScaleHeight)
               Scale  line-height values by the resource value, which is limited to “0.9” to “1.5”.  The default
               value is “1.0”,

               While this resource applies to either bitmap or TrueType fonts, its main purpose is to help  work
               around  incompatible changes in the Xft library's font metrics.  Xterm checks the font metrics to
               find what the library claims are the bounding boxes for each glyph (character).  However, some of
               Xft's features (such as the autohinter) can cause  the  glyphs  to  be  scaled  larger  than  the
               bounding boxes, and be partly overwritten by the next row.

               See useClipping for a related resource.

       scoFunctionKeys (class ScoFunctionKeys)
               Specifies  whether  or  not  SCO function key escape codes should be generated for function keys.
               The default is “false”, i.e., this feature is disabled.

               The keyboardType resource is the preferred mechanism for selecting this mode.

       sessionMgt (class SessionMgt)
               If the  value  of  this  resource  is  “true”,  xterm  sets  up  session  manager  callbacks  for
               XtNdieCallback and XtNsaveCallback.  The default is “true”.

       sunFunctionKeys (class SunFunctionKeys)
               Specifies  whether  or  not  Sun function key escape codes should be generated for function keys.
               The default is “false”, i.e., this feature is disabled.

               The keyboardType resource is the preferred mechanism for selecting this mode.

       sunKeyboard (class SunKeyboard)
               Xterm translates certain key symbols based on its assumptions about your keyboard.  This resource
               specifies whether or not Sun/PC keyboard layout (i.e., the PC keyboard's numeric keypad  together
               with 12 function keys) should be assumed rather than DEC VT220.  This causes the keypad “+” to be
               mapped  to  “,”.  and CTRL F1-F10 to F11-F20, depending on the setting of the ctrlFKeys resource,
               so xterm emulates a DEC VT220 more accurately.  Otherwise (the default, with sunKeyboard  set  to
               “false”), xterm uses PC-style bindings for the function keys and keypad.

               PC-style  bindings  use  the Shift, Alt, Control and Meta keys as modifiers for function-keys and
               keypad (see Xterm Control Sequences for details).  The PC-style bindings are analogous to PCTerm,
               but not the same thing.  Normally these bindings do not conflict with the use of the Meta key  as
               described  for  the  eightBitInput  resource.   If  they  do, note that the PC-style bindings are
               evaluated first.

               See also the keyboardType resource.

       tcapFunctionKeys (class TcapFunctionKeys)
               Specifies whether or  not  function  key  escape  codes  read  from  the  termcap/terminfo  entry
               corresponding  to  the TERM environment variable should be generated for function keys instead of
               those configured using sunKeyboard and keyboardType.  The default is “false”, i.e., this  feature
               is disabled.

               The keyboardType resource is the preferred mechanism for selecting this mode.

       termName (class TermName)
               Specifies the terminal type name to be set in the TERM environment variable.

       title (class Title)
               Specifies a string that may be used by the window manager when displaying this application.

       toolBar (class ToolBar)
               Specifies whether or not the toolbar should be displayed.  The default is “true”.

       ttyModes (class TtyModes)
               Specifies  a  string containing terminal setting keywords and the characters to which they may be
               bound.  Allowable keywords include: brk, dsusp, eof, eol, eol2, erase, erase2, flush, intr, kill,
               lnext, quit, rprnt, start, status, stop, susp,  swtch  and  weras.   Control  characters  may  be
               specified  as  ^char  (e.g.,  ^c  or  ^u) and ^? may be used to indicate delete (127).  Use ^- to
               denote undef.  Use \034 to represent ^\, since a literal backslash in an X resource  escapes  the
               next character.

               This  is  very  useful  for overriding the default terminal settings without having to do an stty
               every time an xterm is started.  Note, however, that the stty program on a  given  host  may  use
               different keywords; xterm's table is built-in.

               If the ttyModes resource specifies a value for erase, that overrides the ptyInitialErase resource
               setting, i.e., xterm initializes the terminal to match that value.

       useInsertMode (class UseInsertMode)
               Force use of insert mode by adding appropriate entries to the TERMCAP environment variable.  This
               is  useful  if  the system termcap is broken.  (This resource is ignored on most systems, because
               TERMCAP is not used).  The default is “false”.

       utmpDisplayId (class UtmpDisplayId)
               Specifies whether or not xterm should try to record the display identifier  (display  number  and
               screen number) as well as the hostname in the system utmp log file.  The default is “true”.

       utmpInhibit (class UtmpInhibit)
               Specifies  whether  or  not xterm should try to record the user's terminal in the system utmp log
               file.  If true, xterm will not try.  The default is “false”.

       waitForMap (class WaitForMap)
               Specifies whether or not xterm should wait  for  the  initial  window  map  before  starting  the
               subprocess.   This  is  part  of  the ptyHandshake logic.  When xterm is directed to wait in this
               fashion, it passes the terminal size from the display end of the pseudo-terminal to the  terminal
               I/O  connection,  e.g.,  using  the size according to the window manager.  Otherwise, it uses the
               size as given in resource values or command-line option -geometry.  The default is “false”.

       zIconBeep (class ZIconBeep)
               Same as -ziconbeep command line argument.  If the value of this resource is non-zero, xterms that
               produce output while iconified will cause an XBell sound at the  given  volume  and  have  “*** ”
               prepended  to  their  icon  titles.   Most  window  managers will detect this change immediately,
               showing you which window has the output.  (A similar feature was in x10 xterm.)  The  default  is
               “false”.

       zIconTitleFormat (class ZIconTitleFormat)
               Allow customization of the string used in the zIconBeep feature.  The default value is “*** %s”.

               If  the  resource  value  contains a “%s”, then xterm inserts the icon title at that point rather
               than prepending the string to the icon title.  (Only the first “%s” is used).

   VT100 Widget Resources
       The following resources are specified as part of the vt100 widget (class VT100).  They are  specified  by
       patterns such as “XTerm.vt100.NAME”.

       If  your  xterm  is  configured to support the “toolbar”, then those patterns need an extra level for the
       form-widget which holds the toolbar and vt100 widget.  A wildcard between the top-level “XTerm”  and  the
       “vt100” widget makes the resource settings work for either, e.g., “XTerm*vt100.NAME”.

       activeIcon (class ActiveIcon)
               Specifies  whether  or not active icon windows are to be used when the xterm window is iconified,
               if this feature is compiled into xterm.  The active icon is a  miniature  representation  of  the
               content  of  the  window  and  will  update  as  the  content  changes.   Not all window managers
               necessarily support application icon windows.  Some window  managers  will  allow  you  to  enter
               keystrokes into the active icon window.  The default is “default”.

               Xterm accepts either a keyword (ignoring case) or the number shown in parentheses:

               false (0)
                      No active icon is shown.

               true (1)
                      The active icon is shown.  If you are using twm, use this setting to enable active-icons.

               default (2)
                      Xterm  checks  at  startup, and shows an active icon only for window managers which it can
                      identify and which are known to support the feature.  These are fvwm (full  support),  and
                      window  maker  (limited).   A  few  other  windows managers (such as twm and ctwm) support
                      active icons, but do not support the extensions which allow xterm to identify  the  window
                      manager.

       allowBoldFonts (class AllowBoldFonts)
               When  set  to “false”, xterm will not use bold fonts.  This overrides both the alwaysBoldMode and
               the boldMode resources.

       allowC1Printable (class AllowC1Printable)
               If true, overrides the mapping of C1 controls (codes 128-159) to make them be treated as if  they
               were  printable  characters.   Although  this  corresponds  to no particular standard, some users
               insist it is a VT100.  The default is “false”.

       allowColorOps (class AllowColorOps)
               Specifies whether control sequences that set/query the dynamic colors should  be  allowed.   ANSI
               colors are unaffected by this resource setting.  The default is “true”.

       allowFontOps (class AllowFontOps)
               Specifies  whether  control  sequences that set/query the font should be allowed.  The default is
               “false”.

       allowMouseOps (class AllowMouseOps)
               Specifies whether control sequences that enable xterm to send escape sequences  to  the  host  on
               mouse-clicks and movement.  The default is “true”.

       allowPasteControls (class AllowPasteControls)
               If  true, allow control characters such as BEL and CAN to be pasted.  Formatting characters (tab,
               newline) are always allowed.  Other C0 control characters are suppressed unless this resource  is
               enabled.   The exact set of control characters (C0 and C1) depends upon whether UTF-8 encoding is
               used, as well as the allowC1Printable resource.  The default is “false”.

       allowScrollLock (class AllowScrollLock)
               Specifies whether control sequences that set/query the Scroll Lock key should be allowed, as well
               as whether the Scroll Lock key responds to user's keypress.  The default is “false”.

               When this feature is enabled, xterm will sense the state of the Scroll  Lock  key  each  time  it
               acquires focus.  Pressing the Scroll Lock key toggles xterm's internal state, as well as toggling
               the  associated  LED.   While the Scroll Lock is active, xterm attempts to keep a viewport on the
               same set of lines.  If the current viewport is scrolled past  the  limit  set  by  the  saveLines
               resource, then Scroll Lock has no further effect.

               The  reason  for setting the default to “false” is to avoid user surprise.  This key is generally
               unused in keyboard configurations, and has not acquired a standard meaning even when it  is  used
               in that manner.  Consequently, users have assigned it for ad hoc purposes.

       allowSendEvents (class AllowSendEvents)
               Specifies  whether  or  not  synthetic  key  and  button  events  (generated using the X protocol
               SendEvent request) should be interpreted or discarded.  The default is “false” meaning  they  are
               discarded.   Note  that  allowing  such events would create a very large security hole, therefore
               enabling this resource forcefully disables the allowXXXOps resources.  The default is “false”.

       allowTcapOps (class AllowTcapOps)
               Specifies whether control sequences that query the terminal's notion of its function-key strings,
               as termcap or terminfo capabilities should be allowed.  The default is “true”.

               A few programs, e.g., vim, use this feature to get an  accurate  description  of  the  terminal's
               capabilities, independent of the termcap/terminfo setting:

               • Xterm can tell the querying program how many colors it supports.  This is a constant, depending
                 on  how it is compiled, typically 16.  It does not change if you alter resource settings, e.g.,
                 the boldColors resource.

               • Xterm can tell the querying program what strings are sent by modified (shift-, control-,  alt-)
                 function-  and  keypad-keys.   Reporting control- and alt-modifiers is a feature that relies on
                 the ncurses extended naming.

       allowTitleOps (class AllowTitleOps)
               Specifies whether control sequences that modify the window title or icon name should be  allowed.
               The default is “true”.

       allowWindowOps (class AllowWindowOps)
               Specifies whether extended window control sequences (as used in dtterm) should be allowed.  These
               include  several  control  sequences  which  manipulate  the  window size or position, as well as
               reporting these values and the title or icon name.  Each of these can  be  abused  in  a  script;
               curiously  enough  most terminal emulators that implement these restrict only a small part of the
               repertoire.  For fine-tuning, see disallowedWindowOps.  The default is “false”.

       altIsNotMeta (class AltIsNotMeta)
               If “true”, treat the Alt-key as if it  were  the  Meta-key.   Your  keyboard  may  happen  to  be
               configured  so  they  are the same.  But if they are not, this allows you to use the same prefix-
               and shifting  operations  with  the  Alt-key  as  with  the  Meta-key.   See  altSendsEscape  and
               metaSendsEscape.  The default is “false”.

       altSendsEscape (class AltSendsEscape)
               This   is   an  additional  keyboard  operation  that  may  be  processed  after  the  logic  for
               metaSendsEscape.  It is only available if the altIsNotMeta resource is set.

               • If “true”, Alt characters (a character combined with the modifier  associated  with  left/right
                 Alt-keys)  are  converted  into  a two-character sequence with the character itself preceded by
                 ESC.  This applies as well to function key control sequences, unless xterm  sees  that  Alt  is
                 used in your key translations.

               • If “false”, Alt characters input from the keyboard cause a shift to 8-bit characters (just like
                 metaSendsEscape).   By  combining  the  Alt-  and  Meta-modifiers, you can create corresponding
                 combinations of ESC-prefix and 8-bit characters.

               The default is “False”.  Xterm provides a menu option for toggling this resource.

       alternateScroll (class ScrollCond)
               If “true”, the scroll-back and scroll-forw actions send cursor-up and -down keys  when  xterm  is
               displaying the alternate screen.  The default is “false”.

               The alternateScroll state can also be set using a control sequence.

       alwaysBoldMode (class AlwaysBoldMode)
               Specifies  whether  xterm  should check if the normal and bold fonts are distinct before deciding
               whether to use overstriking to simulate bold fonts.  If this resource is  true,  xterm  does  not
               make the check for distinct fonts when deciding how to handle the boldMode resource.  The default
               is “false”.
               boldMode   alwaysBoldMode   Comparison   Action
               ────────────────────────────────────────────────────
               false      false            ignored      use font
               false      true             ignored      use font
               true       false            same         overstrike
               true       false            different    use font
               true       true             ignored      overstrike

               This resource is used only for bitmap fonts:

               • When  using bitmap fonts, it is possible that the font server will approximate the bold font by
                 rescaling it from a different font size than expected.  The alwaysBoldMode resource allows  the
                 user  to override the (sometimes poor) resulting bold font with overstriking (which is at least
                 consistent).

               • The problem does not occur with TrueType fonts (though there can be  other  unnecessary  issues
                 such as different coverage of the normal and bold fonts).

               As an alternative, setting the allowBoldFonts resource to false overrides both the alwaysBoldMode
               and the boldMode resources.

       alwaysHighlight (class AlwaysHighlight)
               Specifies  whether  or not xterm should always display a highlighted text cursor.  By default (if
               this resource is false), a hollow text cursor is displayed whenever the pointer moves out of  the
               window or the window loses the input focus.  The default is “false”.

       alwaysUseMods (class AlwaysUseMods)
               Override  the  numLock  resource,  telling  xterm  to use the Alt and Meta modifiers to construct
               parameters for function key  sequences  even  if  those  modifiers  appear  in  the  translations
               resource.  Normally xterm checks if Alt or Meta is used in a translation that would conflict with
               function  key  modifiers,  and  will ignore these modifiers in that special case.  The default is
               “false”.

       answerbackString (class AnswerbackString)
               Specifies the string that xterm sends in response to an ENQ (control/E) character from the  host.
               The  default  is  a  blank string, i.e., “”.  A hardware VT100 implements this feature as a setup
               option.

       appcursorDefault (class AppcursorDefault)
               If “true”, the cursor keys are initially in application mode.  This is  the  same  as  the  VT102
               private DECCKM mode, The default is “false”.

       appkeypadDefault (class AppkeypadDefault)
               If “true”, the keypad keys are initially in application mode.  The default is “false”.

       assumeAllChars (class AssumeAllChars)
               If  “true”, this enables a special case in bitmap fonts to allow the font server to choose how to
               display missing glyphs.  The default is “true”.

               The reason for this resource is to help with certain quasi-automatically generated fonts (such as
               the ISO-10646-1 encoding of Terminus) which have incorrect font-metrics.

       autoWrap (class AutoWrap)
               Specifies whether or not auto-wraparound should be enabled.   This  is  the  same  as  the  VT102
               DECAWM.  The default is “true”.

       awaitInput (class AwaitInput)
               Specifies whether or not xterm uses a 50 millisecond timeout to await input (i.e., to support the
               Xaw3d arrow scrollbar).  The default is “false”.

       backarrowKey (class BackarrowKey)
               Specifies  whether  the  backarrow key transmits a backspace (8) or delete (127) character.  This
               corresponds to the DECBKM control sequence.  A “true” value specifies backspace.  The default  is
               “True”.  Pressing the control key toggles this behavior.

       background (class Background)
               Specifies   the   color   to   use   for   the   background   of  the  window.   The  default  is
               “XtDefaultBackground”.

       bellIsUrgent (class BellIsUrgent)
               Specifies whether to set the Urgency hint for the window manager when making a bell  sound.   The
               default is “false”.

       bellOnReset (class BellOnReset)
               Specifies whether to sound a bell when doing a hard reset.  The default is “true”.

       bellSuppressTime (class BellSuppressTime)
               Number  of  milliseconds  after  a  bell  command  is  sent during which additional bells will be
               suppressed.  Default is 200.  If set non-zero, additional bells will also be suppressed until the
               server reports that processing of the first bell has been completed; this feature is most  useful
               with the visible bell.

       boldColors (class ColorMode)
               Specifies  whether  to  combine  bold  attribute  with colors like the IBM PC, i.e., map colors 0
               through 7 to colors 8 through 15.  These normally are  the  brighter  versions  of  the  first  8
               colors, hence bold.  The default is “true”.

       boldFont (class BoldFont)
               Specifies the name of the bold font to use instead of overstriking.  There is no default for this
               resource.

               This font must be the same height and width as the normal font, otherwise it is ignored.  If only
               one  of  the  normal  or bold fonts is specified, it will be used as the normal font and the bold
               font will be produced by overstriking this font.

               See also the discussion of boldMode and alwaysBoldMode resources.

       boldMode (class BoldMode)
               This specifies whether or not text with the bold attribute should be overstruck to simulate  bold
               fonts  if  the resolved bold font is the same as the normal font.  It may be desirable to disable
               bold fonts when color is being used for the bold attribute.

               Note that xterm has one bold font which you may set explicitly.  Xterm attempts to derive a  bold
               font for the other font selections (font1 through font6).  If it cannot find a bold font, it will
               use  the  normal  font.  In each case (whether the explicit resource or the derived font), if the
               normal and bold fonts are distinct, this resource has no effect.  The default is “true”.

               See the alwaysBoldMode resource which can modify the behavior of this resource.

               Although xterm attempts to derive a bold font for other font selections, the font server may  not
               cooperate.   Since  X11R6,  bitmap fonts have been scaled.  The font server claims to provide the
               bold font that xterm requests, but the result is  not  always  readable.   XFree86  introduced  a
               feature  which  can be used to suppress the scaling.  In the X server's configuration file (e.g.,
               “/etc/X11/XFree86” or “/etc/X11/xorg.conf”), you can add “:unscaled” to the end of the  directory
               specification  for the “misc” fonts, which comprise the fixed-pitch fonts that are used by xterm.
               For example

                 FontPath  "/usr/lib/X11/fonts/misc/"

               would become

                 FontPath  "/usr/lib/X11/fonts/misc/:unscaled"

               Depending on your configuration, the font server may have its own configuration file.   The  same
               “:unscaled”  can be added to its configuration file at the end of the directory specification for
               “misc”.

               The bitmap scaling feature is also used by xterm to  implement  VT102  double-width  and  double-
               height characters.

       brokenLinuxOSC (class BrokenLinuxOSC)
               If  true,  xterm  applies  a workaround to ignore malformed control sequences that a Linux script
               might send.  Compare the palette control sequences documented in console_codes with ECMA-48.  The
               default is “true”.

       brokenSelections (class BrokenSelections)
               If true, xterm in 8-bit mode will interpret STRING selections as carrying  text  in  the  current
               locale's  encoding.   Normally  STRING  selections  carry  ISO-8859-1 encoded text.  Setting this
               resource to “true” violates the ICCCM; it may, however,  be  useful  for  interacting  with  some
               broken X clients.  The default is “false”.

       brokenStringTerm (class BrokenStringTerm)
               provides  a  work-around  for some ISDN routers which start an application control string without
               completing it.  Set this to “true” if xterm appears to freeze when connecting.   The  default  is
               “false”.

               Xterm's state parser recognizes several types of control strings which can contain text, e.g.,

               APC (Application Program Command),
               DCS (Device Control String),
               OSC (Operating System Command),
               PM (Privacy Message), and
               SOS (Start of String),

               Each  should  end  with  a  string-terminator  (a  special character which cannot appear in these
               strings).  Ordinary control characters  found  within  the  string  are  not  ignored;  they  are
               processed  without  interfering  with  the  process of accumulating the control string's content.
               Xterm recognizes these controls in all modes, although some of the functions  may  be  suppressed
               after parsing the control.

               When  enabled,  this feature allows the user to exit from an unterminated control string when any
               of these ordinary control characters are found:

               control/D (used as an end of file in many shells),
               control/H (backspace),
               control/I (tab-feed),
               control/J (line feed aka newline),
               control/K (vertical tab),
               control/L (form feed),
               control/M (carriage return),
               control/N (shift-out),
               control/O (shift-in),
               control/Q (XOFF),
               control/X (cancel)

       c132 (class C132)
               Specifies whether or not the VT102 DECCOLM escape sequence, used to switch  between  80  and  132
               columns, should be honored.  The default is “false”.

       cacheDoublesize (class CacheDoublesize)
               Tells  whether  to  cache  double-sized fonts by xterm.  Set this to zero to disable double-sized
               fonts altogether.

       cdXtraScroll (class CdXtraScroll)
               Specifies whether xterm should scroll to a  new  page  when  clearing  the  whole  screen.   Like
               tiXtraScroll,  the intent of this option is to provide a picture of the full-screen application's
               display on the scrollback before wiping out the text.  The default for this resource is “false”.

       charClass (class CharClass)
               Specifies comma-separated lists of character class bindings of the form

                 low[-high][:value].

               These are used in determining which sets of characters should be treated the same when doing  cut
               and paste.  See the CHARACTER CLASSES section.

       cjkWidth (class CjkWidth)
               Specifies  whether  xterm should follow the traditional East Asian width convention.  When turned
               on, characters with East Asian Ambiguous (A) category in UTR 11 have a column width  of  2.   You
               may  have  to  set  this option to “true” if you have some old East Asian terminal based programs
               that assume that line-drawing characters have a column width of 2.  If this  resource  is  false,
               the  mkWidth  resource  controls  the  choice  between  the system's wcwidth and xterm's built-in
               tables.  The default is “false”.

       color0 (class Color0)

       color1 (class Color1)

       color2 (class Color2)

       color3 (class Color3)

       color4 (class Color4)

       color5 (class Color5)

       color6 (class Color6)

       color7 (class Color7)
               These specify the colors for the ISO-6429 extension.   The  defaults  are,  respectively,  black,
               red3, green3, yellow3, a customizable dark blue, magenta3, cyan3, and gray90.  The default shades
               of color are chosen to allow the colors 8-15 to be used as brighter versions.

       color8 (class Color8)

       color9 (class Color9)

       color10 (class Color10)

       color11 (class Color11)

       color12 (class Color12)

       color13 (class Color13)

       color14 (class Color14)

       color15 (class Color15)
               These  specify  the colors for the ISO-6429 extension if the bold attribute is also enabled.  The
               default resource values are respectively, gray30, red, green, yellow, a customizable light  blue,
               magenta, cyan, and white.

       color16 (class Color16)

       through

       color255 (class Color255)
               These specify the colors for the 256-color extension.  The default resource values are for colors
               16 through 231 to make a 6x6x6 color cube, and colors 232 through 255 to make a grayscale ramp.

               Resources past color15 are available as a compile-time option.  Due to a hardcoded limit in the X
               libraries  on  the  total  number of resources (to 400), the resources for 256-colors are omitted
               when wide-character support and luit are enabled.  Besides inconsistent behavior if only part  of
               the  resources  were allowed, determining the exact cutoff is difficult, and the X libraries tend
               to crash if the number of resources exceeds the limit.  The color palette is still initialized to
               the same default values, and can be modified via control sequences.

               On the other hand, the resource limit does permit including the entire range for 88-colors.

       colorAttrMode (class ColorAttrMode)
               Specifies whether colorBD, colorBL, colorRV, and colorUL should override ANSI  colors.   If  not,
               these  are  displayed only when no ANSI colors have been set for the corresponding position.  The
               default is “false”.

       colorBD (class ColorBD)
               This specifies the color to use to display bold  characters  if  the  “colorBDMode”  resource  is
               enabled.  The default is “XtDefaultForeground”.

               See also the veryBoldColors resource which allows combining bold and color.

       colorBDMode (class ColorAttrMode)
               Specifies  whether  characters  with  the  bold attribute should be displayed in color or as bold
               characters.  Note that setting colorMode off disables all colors, including bold.  The default is
               “false”.

       colorBL (class ColorBL)
               This specifies the color to use to display blink characters  if  the  “colorBLMode”  resource  is
               enabled.  The default is “XtDefaultForeground”.

               See also the veryBoldColors resource which allows combining underline and color.

       colorBLMode (class ColorAttrMode)
               Specifies  whether  characters  with the blink attribute should be displayed in color.  Note that
               setting colorMode off disables all colors, including this.  The default is “false”.

       colorIT (class ColorIT)
               This specifies the color to use to display italic characters if  the  “colorITMode”  resource  is
               enabled.  The default is “XtDefaultForeground”.

               See also the veryBoldColors resource which allows combining attributes and color.

       colorITMode (class ColorAttrMode)
               Specifies  whether characters with the italic attribute should be displayed in color or as italic
               characters.  The default is “false”.

               Note that:

               • Setting colorMode off disables all colors, including italic.

               • The italicULMode resource overrides colorITMode.

       colorMode (class ColorMode)
               Specifies whether or not recognition of ANSI (ISO-6429) color change escape sequences  should  be
               enabled.  The default is “true”.

       colorRV (class ColorRV)
               This  specifies  the  color to use to display reverse characters if the “colorRVMode” resource is
               enabled.  The default is “XtDefaultForeground”.

               See also the veryBoldColors resource which allows combining reverse and color.

       colorRVMode (class ColorAttrMode)
               Specifies whether characters with the reverse attribute should be displayed in color.  Note  that
               setting colorMode off disables all colors, including this.  The default is “false”.

       colorUL (class ColorUL)
               This specifies the color to use to display underlined characters if the “colorULMode” resource is
               enabled.  The default is “XtDefaultForeground”.

               See also the veryBoldColors resource which allows combining underline and color.

       colorULMode (class ColorAttrMode)
               Specifies  whether  characters  with  the  underline attribute should be displayed in color or as
               underlined  characters.   Note  that  setting  colorMode  off  disables  all  colors,   including
               underlining.  The default is “false”.

       combiningChars (class CombiningChars)
               Specifies  the  number  of  wide-characters which can be stored in a cell to overstrike (combine)
               with the base character of the cell.  This can be set to values in the range 0 to 5.  The default
               is “2”.

       ctrlFKeys (class CtrlFKeys)
               In VT220 keyboard mode (see sunKeyboard resource), specifies the amount by which to shift  F1-F12
               given a control modifier (CTRL).  This allows you to generate key symbols for F10-F20 on a Sun/PC
               keyboard.  The default is “10”, which means that CTRL F1 generates the key symbol for F11.

       curses (class Curses)
               Specifies  whether  or  not  the last column bug in more(1) should be worked around.  See the -cu
               option for details.  The default is “false”.

       cursorBlink (class CursorBlink)
               Specifies whether to make the cursor blink.  The default is “false”.

               Xterm uses two variables to determine whether the cursor blinks.  One is set  by  this  resource.
               The other is set by control sequences (private mode 12 and DECSCUSR).  Xterm tests the XOR of the
               two variables.

       cursorColor (class CursorColor)
               Specifies  the  color  to  use  for  the  text cursor.  The default is “XtDefaultForeground”.  By
               default, xterm attempts to keep this color from being the same as the background color, since  it
               draws  the  cursor  by  filling  the  background of a text cell.  The same restriction applies to
               control sequences which may change this color.

               Setting this resource overrides most of xterm's adjustments to cursor color.  It will  still  use
               reverse-video to disallow some cases, such as a black cursor on a black background.

       cursorOffTime (class CursorOffTime)
               Specifies  the  duration  of  the “off” part of the cursor blink cycle-time in milliseconds.  The
               same timer is used for text blinking.  The default is “300”.

       cursorOnTime (class CursorOnTime)
               Specifies the duration of the “on” part of the cursor blink  cycle-time,  in  milliseconds.   The
               same timer is used for text blinking.  The default is “600”.

       cursorUnderLine (class CursorUnderLine)
               Specifies whether to make the cursor underlined or a box.  The default is “false”.

       cutNewline (class CutNewline)
               If “false”, triple clicking to select a line does not include the Newline at the end of the line.
               If “true”, the Newline is selected.  The default is “true”.

       cutToBeginningOfLine (class CutToBeginningOfLine)
               If  “false”,  triple  clicking  to  select a line selects only from the current word forward.  If
               “true”, the entire line is selected.  The default is “true”.

       decTerminalID (class DecTerminalID)
               Specifies the emulation level (100=VT100,  220=VT220,  etc.),  used  to  determine  the  type  of
               response  to  a DA control sequence.  Leading non-digit characters are ignored, e.g., “vt100” and
               “100” are the same.  The default is “420”.

       defaultString (class DefaultString)
               Specify the character (or string) which  xterm  will  substitute  when  pasted  text  includes  a
               character  which cannot be represented in the current encoding.  For instance, pasting UTF-8 text
               into a display of ISO-8859-1 characters will only be able to display  codes  0-255,  while  UTF-8
               text can include Unicode values above 255.  The default is “#” (a single pound sign).

               If  the undisplayable text would be double-width, xterm will add a space after the “#” character,
               to give roughly the same layout on the screen as the original text.

       deleteIsDEL (class DeleteIsDEL)
               Specifies whether the Delete key on the editing keypad should send DEL (127) or  the  VT220-style
               Remove escape sequence.  A “false” value enables the latter.  The default is “Maybe”.

       disallowedColorOps (class DisallowedColorOps)
               Specify  which  features  will  be disabled if allowColorOps is false.  This is a comma-separated
               list of names.  The default value is
               SetColor,GetColor,GetAnsiColor

               The names are listed below.  Xterm ignores capitalization, but they are shown in  mixed-case  for
               clarity.

               SetColor
                    Set a specific dynamic color.

               GetColor
                    Report the current setting of a given dynamic color.

               GetAnsiColor
                    Report  the  current setting of a given ANSI color (actually any of the colors set via ANSI-
                    style controls).

       disallowedFontOps (class DisallowedFontOps)
               Specify which features will be disabled if allowFontOps is false.  This is a comma-separated list
               of names.  The default value is

                 SetFont,GetFont

               The names are listed below.  Xterm ignores capitalization, but they are shown in  mixed-case  for
               clarity.

               SetFont
                    Set the specified font.

               GetFont
                    Report the specified font.

       disallowedMouseOps (class DisallowedMouseOps)
               Specify  which  features  will  be disabled if allowMouseOps is false.  This is a comma-separated
               list of names.  The default value is “*” which matches all names.  The names  are  listed  below.
               Xterm ignores capitalization, but they are shown in mixed-case for clarity.

               X10  The original X10 mouse protocol.

               Locator
                    DEC locator mode

               VT200Click
                    X11 mouse-clicks only.

               VT200Hilite
                    X11 mouse-clicks and highlighting.

               AnyButton
                    XFree86  xterm any-button mode sends button-clicks as well as motion events while the button
                    is pressed.

               AnyEvent
                    XFree86 xterm any-event mode sends button-clicks as well as motion events whether or  not  a
                    button is pressed.

               FocusEvent
                    Send FocusIn/FocusOut events.

               Extended
                    The first extension beyond X11 mouse protocol, this encodes the coordinates in UTF-8.  It is
                    deprecated in favor of SGR, but provided for compatibility.

               SGR  This is the recommended extension for mouse-coordinates

               URXVT
                    Like Extended, this is provided for compatibility.

               AlternateScroll
                    This overrides the alternateScroll resource.

       disallowedTcapOps (class DisallowedTcapOps)
               Specify which features will be disabled if allowTcapOps is false.  This is a comma-separated list
               of names.  The default value is

                 SetTcap,GetTcap

               The  names  are listed below.  Xterm ignores capitalization, but they are shown in mixed-case for
               clarity.

               SetTcap
                    (not implemented)

               GetTcap
                    Report specified function- and other special keys.

       disallowedWindowOps (class DisallowedWindowOps)
               Specify which features will be disabled if allowWindowOps is false.  This  is  a  comma-separated
               list of names, or (for the controls adapted from dtterm the operation number).  The default value
               is

                 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,11,13,14,18,19,20,21,GetSelection,SetSelection,SetWinLines,SetXprop
             (i.e. no operations are allowed).

               The  names  are listed below.  Xterm ignores capitalization, but they are shown in mixed-case for
               clarity.  Where a number can be used as an alternative, it is  given  in  parentheses  after  the
               name.

               GetIconTitle (20)
                    Report xterm window's icon label as a string.

               GetScreenSizeChars (19)
                    Report the size of the screen in characters as numbers.

               GetSelection
                    Report selection data as a base64 string.

               GetWinPosition (13)
                    Report xterm window position as numbers.

               GetWinSizeChars (18)
                    Report the size of the text area in characters as numbers.

               GetWinSizePixels (14)
                    Report xterm window in pixels as numbers.

               GetWinState (11)
                    Report xterm window state as a number.

               GetWinTitle (21)
                    Report xterm window's title as a string.

               LowerWin (6)
                    Lower the xterm window to the bottom of the stacking order.

               MaximizeWin (9)
                    Maximize window (i.e., resize to screen size).

               FullscreenWin (10)
                    Use full screen (i.e., resize to screen size, without window decorations).

               MinimizeWin (2)
                    Iconify window.

               PopTitle (23)
                    Pop title from internal stack.

               PushTitle (22)
                    Push title to internal stack.

               RaiseWin (5)
                    Raise the xterm window to the front of the stacking order.

               RefreshWin (7)
                    Refresh the xterm window.

               RestoreWin (1)
                    De-iconify window.

               SetSelection
                    Set selection data.

               SetWinLines
                    Resize to a given number of lines, at least 24.

               SetWinPosition (3)
                    Move window to given coordinates.

               SetWinSizeChars (8)
                    Resize the text area to given size in characters.

               SetWinSizePixels (4)
                    Resize the xterm window to given size in pixels.

               SetXprop
                    Set X property on top-level window.

       dynamicColors (class DynamicColors)
               Specifies  whether  or not escape sequences to change colors assigned to different attributes are
               recognized.

       eightBitControl (class EightBitControl)
               Specifies whether or not control sequences sent by the terminal should be eight-bit characters or
               escape sequences.  The default is “false”.

       eightBitInput (class EightBitInput)
               If “true”, Meta characters (a single-byte character combined with the Meta  modifier  key)  input
               from  the  keyboard  are  presented as a single character, modified according to the eightBitMeta
               resource.  If “false”, Meta characters are converted  into  a  two-character  sequence  with  the
               character itself preceded by ESC.  The default is “true”.

               The  metaSendsEscape and altSendsEscape resources may override this feature.  Generally keyboards
               do not have a key labeled “Meta”, but “Alt” keys are common, and they are conventionally used for
               “Meta”.  If  they  were  synonymous,  it  would  have  been  reasonable  to  name  this  resource
               “altSendsEscape”, reversing its sense.  For more background on this, see the meta(3x) function in
               curses.

               Note  that  the  Alt  key  is not necessarily the same as the Meta modifier.  The xmodmap utility
               lists your key modifiers.  X defines modifiers for shift, (caps) lock and control, as well  as  5
               additional  modifiers  which  are  generally used to configure key modifiers.  Xterm inspects the
               same information to find the modifier associated with either Meta key (left or right),  and  uses
               that  key  as  the  Meta  modifier.  It also looks for the NumLock key, to recognize the modifier
               which is associated with that.

               If your xmodmap configuration uses the same keycodes for Alt- and Meta-keys, xterm will only  see
               the  Alt-key  definitions, since those are tested before Meta-keys.  NumLock is tested first.  It
               is important to keep these  keys  distinct;  otherwise  some  of  xterm's  functionality  is  not
               available.

               The  eightBitInput  resource  is  tested  at startup time.  If “true”, the xterm tries to put the
               terminal into 8-bit mode.  If “false”, on startup, xterm tries to put  the  terminal  into  7-bit
               mode.   For  some  configurations this is unsuccessful; failure is ignored.  After startup, xterm
               does not change the terminal between 8-bit and 7-bit mode.

               As originally implemented in X11, the resource value  did  not  change  after  startup.   However
               (since  patch  #216 in 2006) xterm can modify eightBitInput after startup via a control sequence.
               The corresponding terminfo capabilities smm (set meta mode) and rmm (reset meta mode)  have  been
               recognized  by  bash  for  some time.  Interestingly enough, bash's notion of “meta mode” differs
               from the standard definition (in the terminfo manual), which describes the change to  the  eighth
               bit  of a character.  It happens that bash views “meta mode” as the ESC character that xterm puts
               before a character when a special meta key is pressed.  bash's early  documentation  talks  about
               the ESC character and ignores the eighth bit.

       eightBitMeta (class EightBitMeta)
               This  controls  the way xterm modifies the eighth bit of a single-byte key when the eightBitInput
               resource is set.  The default is “locale”.

               The resource value is a string, evaluated as a boolean after startup.

               false
                    The key is sent unmodified.

               locale
                    The key is modified only if the locale uses eight-bit encoding.

               true The key is sent modified.

               never
                    The key is always sent unmodified.

               Except for the never choice, xterm honors the terminfo capabilities smm (set meta mode)  and  rmm
               (reset meta mode), allowing the feature to be turned on or off dynamically.

               If  eightBitMeta  is  enabled when the locale uses UTF-8, xterm encodes the value as UTF-8 (since
               patch #183 in 2003).

       eightBitOutput (class EightBitOutput)
               Specifies whether or not eight-bit characters sent from the host should  be  accepted  as  is  or
               stripped when printed.  The default is “true”, which means that they are accepted as is.

       eightBitSelectTypes (class EightBitSelectTypes)
               Override  xterm's  default  selection  target  list  (see  SELECT/PASTE) for selections in normal
               (ISO-8859-1) mode.  The default is an empty string, i.e., “”, which does not override anything.

       eraseSavedLines (class EraseSavedLines)
               Specifies whether or not to allow xterm extended ED/DECSED control sequences to erase the  saved-
               line buffer.  The default is “true”.

       faceName (class FaceName)
               Specify  the  pattern  for  scalable fonts selected from the FreeType library if support for that
               library was compiled into xterm.  There is no default value.

               One or more fonts can be specified, separated by commas.  If prefixed with  “x:”  or  “x11:”  the
               specification  applies  to  the  XLFD font resource.  A “xft:” prefix is accepted but unnecessary
               since a missing prefix for faceName means that it will be used for TrueType.  For example,

                 XTerm*faceName: x:fixed,xft:Bitstream Vera Sans Mono

               If no faceName resource is specified, or if there is no match for both TrueType normal  and  bold
               fonts, xterm uses the XLFD (bitmap) font and related resources.

               It is possible to select suitable bitmap fonts using a script such as this:

                 #!/bin/sh
                 FONT=`xfontsel -print`
                 test -n "$FONT" && xfd -fn "$FONT"

               However  (even though xfd accepts a “-fa” option to denote FreeType fonts), xfontsel has not been
               similarly extended.  As a workaround, you may try

                 fc-list :scalable=true:spacing=mono: family

               to find a list of scalable fixed-pitch fonts which may be used for the faceName resource value.

       faceNameDoublesize (class FaceNameDoublesize)
               Specify a double-width scalable font for cases where an application requires this, e.g.,  in  CJK
               applications.  There is no default value.

               Like  the  faceName  resource,  this allows one or more comma-separated font specifications to be
               applied to the wide TrueType or XLFD fonts.

               If the application uses double-wide characters and this resource is not given, xterm will  use  a
               scaled version of the font given by faceName.

       faceSize (class FaceSize)
               Specify  the  pointsize  for fonts selected from the FreeType library if support for that library
               was compiled into xterm.  The default is “14.0” On the VT Fonts menu,  this  corresponds  to  the
               Default entry.

               Although  the default is “14.0”, this may not be the same as the pointsize for the default bitmap
               font, i.e., that assigned with the -fn option, or the font resource.  For  example,  the  “fixed”
               font usually has a pointsize of “8.0”.  If you set faceSize to match the size of the bitmap font,
               then switching between bitmap and TrueType fonts via the font menu will give comparable sizes for
               the window.

               You  can  specify  the  pointsize  for  TrueType  fonts selected with the other size-related menu
               entries such as Medium, Huge, etc., by using one of the following resource values.  If you do not
               specify a value, they default to “0.0”, which causes xterm to use the ratio of  font  sizes  from
               the corresponding bitmap font resources to obtain a TrueType pointsize.

               If  all  of the faceSize resources are set, then xterm will use this information to determine the
               next smaller/larger TrueType font for the larger-vt-font() and smaller-vt-font() actions.  If any
               are not set, xterm will use only the areas of the bitmap fonts.

       faceSize1 (class FaceSize1)
               Specifies the pointsize of the first alternative font.

       faceSize2 (class FaceSize2)
               Specifies the pointsize of the second alternative font.

       faceSize3 (class FaceSize3)
               Specifies the pointsize of the third alternative font.

       faceSize4 (class FaceSize4)
               Specifies the pointsize of the fourth alternative font.

       faceSize5 (class FaceSize5)
               Specifies the pointsize of the fifth alternative font.

       faceSize6 (class FaceSize6)
               Specifies the pointsize of the sixth alternative font.

       font (class Font)
               Specifies the name of the normal font.  The default is “fixed”.

               See the discussion of the locale resource, which describes how this font may be overridden.

               NOTE: some resource files use patterns such as

                 *font: fixed

               which are overly broad, affecting both

                 xterm.vt100.font

               and

                 xterm.vt100.utf8Fonts.font

               which is probably not what you intended.

       fastScroll (class FastScroll)
               Modifies the effect of jump scroll (jumpScroll) by suppressing screen refreshes for  the  special
               case  when  output  to  the screen has completely shifted the contents off-screen.  For instance,
               cat'ing a large file to the screen does this.

       font1 (class Font1)
               Specifies the name of the first alternative font, corresponding to “Unreadable” in  the  standard
               menu.

       font2 (class Font2)
               Specifies the name of the second alternative font, corresponding to “Tiny” in the standard menu.

       font3 (class Font3)
               Specifies the name of the third alternative font, corresponding to “Small” in the standard menu.

       font4 (class Font4)
               Specifies  the  name  of  the  fourth alternative font, corresponding to “Medium” in the standard
               menu.

       font5 (class Font5)
               Specifies the name of the fifth alternative font, corresponding to “Large” in the standard menu.

       font6 (class Font6)
               Specifies the name of the sixth alternative font, corresponding to “Huge” in the standard menu.

       fontDoublesize (class FontDoublesize)
               Specifies whether xterm should attempt to use font scaling to draw double-sized characters.  Some
               older font servers cannot do this properly, will return misleading font metrics.  The default  is
               “true”.   If  disabled,  xterm will simulate double-sized characters by drawing normal characters
               with spaces between them.

       fontWarnings (class FontWarnings)
               Specify whether xterm should report an error if it fails to load a font:

               0    Never report an error (though the X libraries may).

               1    Report an error if the font name was given as a resource setting.

               2    Always report an error on failure to load a font.

               The default is “1”.

       forceBoxChars (class ForceBoxChars)
               Specifies whether xterm  should  assume  the  normal  and  bold  fonts  have  VT100  line-drawing
               characters:

               • The  fixed-pitch  ISO-8859-*-encoded  fonts  used by xterm normally have the VT100 line-drawing
                 glyphs in cells 1-31.  Other fixed-pitch fonts may be more attractive, but lack these glyphs.

               • When using an ISO-10646-1 font and the wideChars resource  is  true,  xterm  uses  the  Unicode
                 glyphs which match the VT100 line-drawing glyphs.

               If  “false”,  xterm  checks  for  missing  glyphs  in  the font and makes line-drawing characters
               directly as needed.  If “true”,  xterm  assumes  the  font  does  not  contain  the  line-drawing
               characters, and draws them directly.  The default is “false”.

       forcePackedFont (class ForcePackedFont)
               Specifies  whether  xterm  should  use the maximum or minimum glyph width when displaying using a
               bitmap font.  Use the maximum width to help with proportional  fonts.   The  default  is  “true”,
               denoting the minimum width.

       foreground (class Foreground)
               Specifies  the color to use for displaying text in the window.  Setting the class name instead of
               the instance name is an easy way to have everything that would normally appear in the text  color
               change color.  The default is “XtDefaultForeground”.

       formatOtherKeys (class FormatOtherKeys)
               Overrides the format of the escape sequence used to report modified keys with the modifyOtherKeys
               resource.

               0  send modified keys as parameters for function-key 27 (default).

               1  send modified keys as parameters for CSI u.

       freeBoldBox (class FreeBoldBox)
               Specifies  whether  xterm  should  assume  the  bounding  boxes  for  normal  and  bold fonts are
               compatible.  If “false”, xterm compares them and will reject choices of bold fonts  that  do  not
               match  the  size  of the normal font.  The default is “false”, which means that the comparison is
               performed.

       geometry (class Geometry)
               Specifies the preferred size and position of the VTxxx window.  There  is  no  default  for  this
               resource.

       highlightColor (class HighlightColor)
               Specifies  the  color to use for the background of selected (highlighted) text.  If not specified
               (i.e.,  matching  the  default  foreground),   reverse   video   is   used.    The   default   is
               “XtDefaultForeground”.

       highlightColorMode (class HighlightColorMode)
               Specifies whether xterm should use highlightTextColor and highlightColor to override the reversed
               foreground/background  colors  in  a  selection.   The  default is unspecified: at startup, xterm
               checks if those resources are set to something other than the default foreground  and  background
               colors.  Setting this resource disables the check.

               The  following table shows the interaction of the highlighting resources, abbreviated as shown to
               fit in this page:

               HCM
                  highlightColorMode

               HR highlightReverse

               HBG
                  highlightColor

               HFG
                  highlightTextColor

               HCM       HR      HBG       HFG       Highlight
               ────────────────────────────────────────────────
               false     false   default   default   bg/fg
               false     false   default   set       bg/fg
               false     false   set       default   fg/HBG
               false     false   set       set       fg/HBG
               ────────────────────────────────────────────────
               false     true    default   default   bg/fg
               false     true    default   set       bg/fg
               false     true    set       default   fg/HBG
               false     true    set       set       fg/HBG
               ────────────────────────────────────────────────
               true      false   default   default   bg/fg
               true      false   default   set       HFG/fg
               true      false   set       default   bg/HBG
               true      false   set       set       HFG/HBG
               ────────────────────────────────────────────────
               true      true    default   default   bg/fg
               true      true    default   set       HFG/fg
               true      true    set       default   fg/HBG
               true      true    set       set       HFG/HBG
               ────────────────────────────────────────────────
               default   false   default   default   bg/fg
               default   false   default   set       bg/fg
               default   false   set       default   fg/HBG
               default   false   set       set       HFG/HBG
               ────────────────────────────────────────────────
               default   true    default   default   bg/fg
               default   true    default   set       bg/fg
               default   true    set       default   fg/HBG
               default   true    set       set       HFG/HBG
               ────────────────────────────────────────────────

       highlightReverse (class HighlightReverse)
               Specifies whether xterm should reverse  the  selection  foreground  and  background  colors  when
               selecting  text  with  reverse-video  attribute.   This  applies  only  to the highlightColor and
               highlightTextColor resources, e.g., to match the color scheme of xwsh.  If “true”, xterm reverses
               the colors, If “false”, xterm does not reverse colors, The default is “true”.

       highlightSelection (class HighlightSelection)
               If “false”, selecting with the mouse highlights all positions on the screen between the beginning
               of the selection and the current position.  If “true”, xterm highlights only the  positions  that
               contain text that can be selected.  The default is “false”.

               Depending  on  the  way  your applications write to the screen, there may be trailing blanks on a
               line.  Xterm stores data as it is shown on the screen.  Erasing the display changes the  internal
               state  of each cell so it is not considered a blank for the purpose of selection.  Blanks written
               since the last erase are selectable.  If you do not wish to have trailing blanks in a  selection,
               use the trimSelection resource.

       highlightTextColor (class HighlightTextColor)
               Specifies  the  color to use for the foreground of selected (highlighted) text.  If not specified
               (i.e.,  matching  the  default  background),   reverse   video   is   used.    The   default   is
               “XtDefaultBackground”.

       hpLowerleftBugCompat (class HpLowerleftBugCompat)
               Specifies  whether to work around a bug in HP's xdb, which ignores termcap and always sends ESC F
               to move to the lower left corner.  “true” causes xterm to interpret ESC F as a request to move to
               the lower left corner of the screen.  The default is “false”.

       i18nSelections (class I18nSelections)
               If false, xterm will not request the targets COMPOUND_TEXT or TEXT.  The default  is  “true”.  It
               may be set to false in order to work around ICCCM violations by other X clients.

       iconBorderColor (class BorderColor)
               Specifies  the  border  color  for the active icon window if this feature is compiled into xterm.
               Not all window managers will make the icon border visible.

       iconBorderWidth (class BorderWidth)
               Specifies the border width for the active icon window if this feature  is  compiled  into  xterm.
               The default is “2”.  Not all window managers will make the border visible.

       iconFont (class IconFont)
               Specifies  the font for the miniature active icon window, if this feature is compiled into xterm.
               The default is “nil2”.

       initialFont (class InitialFont)
               Specifies which of the VT100 fonts to use initially.  Values are the same as for the  set-vt-font
               action.  The default is “d”, i.e., “default”.

       inputMethod (class InputMethod)
               Tells xterm which type of input method to use.  There is no default method.

       internalBorder (class BorderWidth)
               Specifies the number of pixels between the characters and the window border.  The default is “2”.

       italicULMode (class ColorAttrMode)
               Specifies  whether  characters with the underline attribute should be displayed in an italic font
               or as underlined characters.  It is implemented only for TrueType fonts.

       jumpScroll (class JumpScroll)
               Specifies whether or not jump scroll should be used.   This  corresponds  to  the  VT102  DECSCLM
               private mode.  The default is “true”.  See fastScroll for a variation.

       keepClipboard (class KeepClipboard)
               Specifies whether xterm will reuse the selection data which it copied to the keyboard rather than
               asking the clipboard for its current contents when told to provide the selection.  The default is
               “false”.

       keepSelection (class KeepSelection)
               Specifies  whether xterm will keep the selection even after the selected area was touched by some
               output to the terminal.  The default is “true”.

       keyboardDialect (class KeyboardDialect)
               Specifies the initial keyboard dialect, as well as the default value when the terminal is  reset.
               The  value  given  is  the  same  as  the  final  character in the control sequences which change
               character sets.  The default is “B”, which corresponds to US ASCII.

       nameKeymap (class NameKeymap)
               See the discussion of the keymap() action.

       limitResize (class LimitResize)
               Limits resizing of the screen via control sequence to a given multiple of the display dimensions.
               The default is “1”.

       locale (class Locale)
               Specifies how to use luit, an  encoding  converter  between  UTF-8  and  locale  encodings.   The
               resource value (ignoring case) may be:

               true
                   Xterm  will use the encoding specified by the users' LC_CTYPE locale (i.e., LC_ALL, LC_CTYPE,
                   or LANG variables) as far as possible.  This is realized by always enabling  UTF-8  mode  and
                   invoking luit in non-UTF-8 locales.

               medium
                   Xterm  will follow users' LC_CTYPE locale only for UTF-8, east Asian, and Thai locales, where
                   the encodings were not supported by conventional 8bit mode with changing  fonts.   For  other
                   locales, xterm will use conventional 8bit mode.

               checkfont
                   If  mini-luit  is compiled-in, xterm will check if a Unicode font has been specified.  If so,
                   it checks if the character encoding for the current locale is POSIX, Latin-1 or Latin-9, uses
                   the appropriate mapping to support those with the Unicode font.  For other  encodings,  xterm
                   assumes that UTF-8 encoding is required.

               false
                   Xterm will use conventional 8bit mode or UTF-8 mode according to utf8 resource or -u8 option.

               Any  other  value,  e.g., “UTF-8” or “ISO8859-2”, is assumed to be an encoding name; luit will be
               invoked to support the encoding.  The actual list of supported encodings depends  on  luit.   The
               default is “medium”.

               Regardless of your locale and encoding, you need an ISO-10646-1 font to display the result.  Your
               configuration may not include this font, or locale-support by xterm may not be needed.

               At  startup,  xterm uses a mechanism equivalent to the load-vt-fonts(utf8Fonts, Utf8Fonts) action
               to load font name subresources  of  the  VT100  widget.   That  is,  resource  patterns  such  as
               “*vt100.utf8Fonts.font”  will  be  loaded, and (if this resource is enabled), override the normal
               fonts.  If no subresources are found, the normal fonts such as “*vt100.font”, etc., are used.

               For instance, you could have this in your resource file:

                 *VT100.font: 12x24
                 *VT100.utf8Fonts.font:9x15

               When started with a UTF-8 locale, xterm would use 9x15, but allow you to switch to the 12x24 font
               using the menu entry “UTF-8 Fonts”.

               The resource files distributed with xterm use ISO-10646-1 fonts, but do not rely on  them  unless
               you are using the locale mechanism.

       localeFilter (class LocaleFilter)
               Specifies  the  file  name for the encoding converter from/to locale encodings and UTF-8 which is
               used with the -lc option or locale resource.  The help message shown by “xterm -help”  lists  the
               default value, which depends on your system configuration.

               If  the encoding converter requires command-line parameters, you can add those after the command,
               e.g.,

                 *localeFilter: xterm-filter -p

               Alternatively, you may put those parameter within a shell script to execute  the  converter,  and
               set this resource to point to the shell script.

               When  using  a  locale-filter,  e.g., with the -e option, or the shell, xterm first tries passing
               control via that filter.  If it fails, xterm will retry without the locale-filter.   Xterm  warns
               about the failure before retrying.

       loginShell (class LoginShell)
               Specifies  whether  or  not the shell to be run in the window should be started as a login shell.
               The default is “false”.

       logFile (class Logfile)
               Specify the name for xterm's log-file.  If no name is specified, xterm will generate a name  when
               logging is enabled, as described in the -l option.

       logInhibit (class LogInhibit)
               If “true”, prevent the logging feature from being enabled, whether by the command-line option -l,
               or the menu entry Log to File.  The default is “false”.

       logging (class Logging)
               If  “true”,  (and  if  logInhibit  is  not  set)  enable  the  logging feature.  This resource is
               set/updated by the -l option and the menu entry Log to File.  The default is “false”.

       marginBell (class MarginBell)
               Specifies whether or not the bell should be rung when the user types near the right margin.   The
               default is “false”.

       maxGraphicSize (class MaxGraphicSize)
               If  xterm  is  configured  to support ReGIS or SIXEL graphics, this resource controls the maximum
               size of a graph which can be displayed.

               The default is “1000x1000” (given as width by height).

               If the resource is “auto” then xterm will use the decTerminalID resource:
               Result    decTerminalID
               ────────────────────────
               768x400             125
               800x460             240
               800x460             241
               800x480             330
               800x480             340
               860x750             382
               800x480           other

       metaSendsEscape (class MetaSendsEscape)
               If “true”, Meta characters (a character combined with the Meta modifier key) are converted into a
               two-character sequence with the character itself preceded  by  ESC.   This  applies  as  well  to
               function key control sequences, unless xterm sees that Meta is used in your key translations.  If
               “false”,  Meta  characters  input  from  the  keyboard are handled according to the eightBitInput
               resource.  The default is “False”.

       mkSamplePass (class MkSamplePass)
               If mkSampleSize is nonzero, and mkWidth (and cjkWidth) are false, on startup xterm  compares  its
               built-in  tables  to the system's wide character width data to decide if it will use the system's
               data.  It tests the first mkSampleSize character values, and allows up to mkSamplePass mismatches
               before the test fails.  The default (for the allowed number of mismatches) is 655 (one percent of
               the default value for mkSampleSize).

       mkSampleSize (class MkSampleSize)
               With mkSamplePass, this specifies a startup test  used  for  initializing  wide  character  width
               calculations.  The default (number of characters to check) is 65536.

       mkWidth (class MkWidth)
               Specifies  whether  xterm  should use a built-in version of the wide character width calculation.
               See also the cjkWidth resource which can override this.  The default is “false”.

               Here is a summary of the resources which control the choice of wide character width calculation:
               cjkWidth   mkWidth   Action
               ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
               false      false     use system tables subject to mkSamplePass
               false      true      use built-in tables
               true       false     use built-in CJK tables
               true       true      use built-in CJK tables

       modifyCursorKeys (class ModifyCursorKeys)
               Tells how to handle the special case where Control-, Shift-, Alt- or Meta-modifiers are  used  to
               add a parameter to the escape sequence returned by a cursor-key.  The default is “2”:

               -1   disables the feature.

               0    uses the old/obsolete behavior, i.e., the modifier is the first parameter.

               1    prefixes modified sequences with CSI.

               2    forces the modifier to be the second parameter if it would otherwise be the first.

               3    marks the sequence with a “>” to hint that it is private.

       modifyFunctionKeys (class ModifyFunctionKeys)
               Tells  how  to handle the special case where Control-, Shift-, Alt- or Meta-modifiers are used to
               add a parameter to the escape sequence returned by a (numbered)  function-key.   The  default  is
               “2”.  The resource values are similar to modifyCursorKeys:

               -1   permits the user to use shift- and control-modifiers to construct function-key strings using
                    the normal encoding scheme.

               0    uses the old/obsolete behavior, i.e., the modifier is the first parameter.

               1    prefixes modified sequences with CSI.

               2    forces the modifier to be the second parameter if it would otherwise be the first.

               3    marks the sequence with a “>” to hint that it is private.

               If  modifyFunctionKeys  is  zero,  xterm  uses  Control- and Shift-modifiers to allow the user to
               construct numbered function-keys beyond the set provided by the keyboard:

               Control
                    adds the value given by the ctrlFKeys resource.

               Shift
                    adds twice the value given by the ctrlFKeys resource.

               Control/Shift
                    adds three times the value given by the ctrlFKeys resource.

       modifyKeyboard (class ModifyKeyboard)
               Normally xterm makes a special case regarding modifiers (shift, control, etc.)  to handle special
               keyboard layouts (legacy and vt220).  This is done to provide compatible keyboards for DEC  VT220
               and related terminals that implement user-defined keys (UDK).

               The  bits  of the resource value selectively enable modification of the given category when these
               keyboards are selected.  The default is “0”:

               0    The legacy/vt220 keyboards interpret only the Control-modifier  when  constructing  numbered
                    function-keys.  Other special keys are not modified.

               1    allows modification of the numeric keypad

               2    allows modification of the editing keypad

               4    allows modification of function-keys, overrides use of Shift-modifier for UDK.

               8    allows modification of other special keys

       modifyOtherKeys (class ModifyOtherKeys)
               Like  modifyCursorKeys,  tells xterm to construct an escape sequence for other keys (such as “2”)
               when modified by Control-, Alt- or Meta-modifiers.  This feature does not apply to function  keys
               and well-defined keys such as ESC or the control keys.  The default is “0”:

               0    disables this feature.

               1    enables  this  feature  for  keys  except  for  those  with  well-known behavior, e.g., Tab,
                    Backarrow and some special control character cases, e.g., Control-Space to make a NUL.

               2    enables this feature for keys including the exceptions listed.

       multiClickTime (class MultiClickTime)
               Specifies the maximum time in milliseconds between multi-click select  events.   The  default  is
               “250” milliseconds.

       multiScroll (class MultiScroll)
               Specifies whether or not scrolling should be done asynchronously.  The default is “false”.

       nMarginBell (class Column)
               Specifies the number of characters from the right margin at which the margin bell should be rung,
               when enabled by the marginBell resource.  The default is “10”.

       numColorRegisters (class NumColorRegisters)
               If  xterm  is  configured to support ReGIS or SIXEL graphics, this specifies the number of color-
               registers which are available.

               If this resource is not specified, xterm uses a value determined by the decTerminalID resource:
               Result   decTerminalID
               ───────────────────────
                    4             125
                    4             240
                    4             241
                    4             330
                   16             340
                    2             382
                 1024           other

       numLock (class NumLock)
               If “true”, xterm checks if NumLock is used as a modifier (see xmodmap(1)).  If so, this  modifier
               is  used  to  simplify  the logic when implementing special NumLock for the sunKeyboard resource.
               Also (when sunKeyboard is false), similar logic is used to find the modifier associated with  the
               left and right Alt keys.  The default is “true”.

       oldXtermFKeys (class OldXtermFKeys)
               If  “true”,  xterm  will  use  old-style (X11R5) escape sequences for function keys F1 to F4, for
               compatibility with X Consortium xterm.  Otherwise, it uses the VT100 codes for PF1 to  PF4.   The
               default is “false”.

               Setting  this  resource  has  the  same  effect  as  setting  the  keyboardType  to  legacy.  The
               keyboardType resource is the preferred mechanism for selecting this mode.

               The old-style escape sequences resemble VT220 keys, but appear to have been invented for xterm in
               X11R4.

       on2Clicks (class On2Clicks)

       on3Clicks (class On3Clicks)

       on4Clicks (class On4Clicks)

       on5Clicks (class On5Clicks)
               Specify selection behavior in response to multiple mouse clicks.  A single mouse click is  always
               interpreted  as described in the Selection Functions section (see POINTER USAGE).  Multiple mouse
               clicks (using the button which activates the select-start action) are  interpreted  according  to
               the resource values of on2Clicks, etc.  The resource value can be one of these:

               word
                  Select a “word” as determined by the charClass resource.  See the CHARACTER CLASSES section.

               line
                  Select a line (counting wrapping).

               group
                  Select  a  group  of adjacent lines (counting wrapping).  The selection stops on a blank line,
                  and does not extend outside the current page.

               page
                  Select all visible lines, i.e., the page.

               all
                  Select all lines, i.e., including the saved lines.

               regex
                  Select a “word” as determined by the regular expression which follows in the resource value.

               none
                  No selection action is associated with this resource.  Xterm interprets it as the end  of  the
                  list.   For  example,  you  may  use  it  to  disable  triple (and higher) clicking by setting
                  on3Clicks to “none”.

               The default values for on2Clicks and on3Clicks are “word” and “line”, respectively.  There is  no
               default  value  for  on4Clicks or on5Clicks, making those inactive.  On startup, xterm determines
               the maximum number of clicks by the onXClicks resource values which are set.

       openIm (class OpenIm)
               Tells xterm whether to open the input method at startup.  The default is “true”.

       pointerColor (class PointerColor)
               Specifies the foreground color of the pointer.  The default is “XtDefaultForeground”.

       pointerColorBackground (class PointerColorBackground)
               Specifies the background color of the pointer.  The default is “XtDefaultBackground”.

       pointerMode (class PointerMode)
               Specifies when the pointer may be hidden as the user types.  It will be redisplayed if  the  user
               moves the mouse, or clicks one of its buttons.

               0  never

               1  the application running in xterm has not activated mouse mode.  This is the default.

               2  always.

       pointerShape (class Cursor)
               Specifies the name of the shape of the pointer.  The default is “xterm”.

       popOnBell (class PopOnBell)
               Specifies whether the window would be raised when Control-G is received.  The default is “false”.

               If  the  window  is  iconified, this has no effect.  However, the zIconBeep resource provides you
               with the ability to see which iconified windows have sounded a bell.

       precompose (class Precompose)
               Tells xterm whether to precompose UTF-8 data into Normalization Form C, which combines  commonly-
               used  accents  onto  base  characters.   If  it  does not do this, accents are left as separatate
               characters.  The default is “true”.

       preeditType (class PreeditType)
               Tells  xterm  which  types  of  preedit  (preconversion)  string  to  display.   The  default  is
               “OverTheSpot,Root”.

       printAttributes (class PrintAttributes)
               Specifies  whether  to  print  graphic attributes along with the text.  A real DEC VTxxx terminal
               will print the underline, highlighting codes but your printer may not handle these.

               • “0” disables the attributes.

               • “1” prints the normal set of attributes (bold, underline, inverse  and  blink)  as  VT100-style
                 control sequences.

               • “2” prints ANSI color attributes as well.

               The default is “1”.

       printFileImmediate (class PrintFileImmediate)
               When  the print-immediate action is invoked, xterm prints the screen contents directly to a file.
               Set this resource to the prefix of the filename (a timestamp  will  be  appended  to  the  actual
               name).

               The default is an empty string, i.e., “”, However, when the print-immediate action is invoked, if
               the string is empty, then “XTerm” is used.

       printFileOnXError (class PrintFileOnXError)
               If  xterm  exits with an X error, e.g., your connection is broken when the server crashes, it can
               be told to write the contents of the screen to a file.  To enable the feature, set this  resource
               to the prefix of the filename (a timestamp will be appended to the actual name).

               The  default is an empty string, i.e., “”, which disables this feature.  However, when the print-
               on-error action is invoked, if the string is empty, then “XTermError” is used.

               These error codes are handled: ERROR_XERROR, ERROR_XIOERROR and ERROR_ICEERROR.

       printModeImmediate (class PrintModeImmediate)
               When the print-immediate action is invoked, xterm prints the screen contents directly to a  file.
               You can use the printModeImmediate resource to tell it to use escape sequences to reconstruct the
               video  attributes  and  colors.   This uses the same values as the printAttributes resource.  The
               default is “0”.

       printModeOnXError (class PrintModeOnXError)
               Xterm implements the printFileOnXError feature using the printer feature, although the output  is
               written  directly to a file.  You can use the printModeOnXError resource to tell it to use escape
               sequences to reconstruct the video attributes and colors.  This  uses  the  same  values  as  the
               printAttributes resource.  The default is “0”.

       printOptsImmediate (class PrintOptsImmediate)
               Specify the range of text which is printed to a file when the print-immediate action is invoked.

               • If zero (0), then this selects the current (visible screen) plus the saved lines, except if the
                 alternate screen is being used.  In that case, only the alternate screen is selectd.

               • If nonzero, the bits of this resource value (checked in descending order) select the range:

                 8  selects the saved lines.

                 4  selects the alternate screen.

                 2  selects the normal screen.

                 1  selects the current screen, which can be either the normal or alternate screen.

               The  default  is  “9”, which selects the current visible screen plus saved lines, with no special
               case for the alternated screen.

       printOptsOnXError (class PrintOptsOnXError)
               Specify the range of text which is printed to a file when the print-on-error action  is  invoked.
               The resource value is interpreted the same as in printOptsImmediate.

               The  default  is  “9”, which selects the current visible screen plus saved lines, with no special
               case for the alternated screen.

       printerAutoClose (class PrinterAutoClose)
               If “true”, xterm will close the printer (a  pipe)  when  the  application  switches  the  printer
               offline with a Media Copy command.  The default is “false”.

       printerCommand (class PrinterCommand)
               Specifies  a shell command to which xterm will open a pipe when the first MC (Media Copy) command
               is initiated.  The default is an empty string, i.e., “”.  If the resource value is  given  as  an
               empty string, the printer is disabled.

       printerControlMode (class PrinterControlMode)
               Specifies  the printer control mode.  A “1” selects autoprint mode, which causes xterm to print a
               line from the screen when you move the cursor off that line  with  a  line  feed,  form  feed  or
               vertical  tab  character,  or  an  autowrap  occurs.   Autoprint  mode  is  overridden by printer
               controller mode (a “2”), which causes all of the output to  be  directed  to  the  printer.   The
               default is “0”.

       printerExtent (class PrinterExtent)
               Controls  whether  a  print  page function will print the entire page (true), or only the portion
               within the scrolling margins (false).  The default is “false”.

       printerFormFeed (class PrinterFormFeed)
               Controls whether a form feed is sent to the printer at the end of a  print  page  function.   The
               default is “false”.

       printerNewLine (class PrinterNewLine)
               Controls  whether  a  newline  is  sent  to the printer at the end of a print page function.  The
               default is “true”.

       privateColorRegisters (class PrivateColorRegisters)
               If xterm is configured to support ReGIS or SIXEL graphics, this controls whether xterm  allocates
               separate  color  registers  for each sixel device control string, e.g., for DECGCI.  If not true,
               color registers are allocated only once, when the terminal is reset, and color changes   in   any
               graphic  affect all graphics.  The default is “true”.

       quietGrab (class QuietGrab)
               Controls  whether  the  cursor  is  repainted  when  NotifyGrab  and NotifyUngrab event types are
               received during change of focus.  The default is “false”.

       regisDefaultFont (class RegisDefaultFont)
               If xterm is configured to support ReGIS graphics, this resource tells xterm which font to use  if
               the  ReGIS  data  does  not specify one.  No default value is specified; xterm accepts a TrueType
               font specification as in the faceName resource.

               If no value is specified, xterm draws a bitmap indicating a missing character.

       regisScreenSize (class RegisScreenSize)
               If xterm is configured to support ReGIS graphics, this resource tells xterm the default size  (in
               pixels)  for  these  graphics, which also sets the default coordinate space to [0,0] (upper-left)
               and [width,height] (lower-right).

               The application using ReGIS may use the “A” option of the “S” command to  adjust  the  coordinate
               space or change the addressable portion of the screen.

               The default is “1000x1000” (given as width by height).

               Xterm  accepts  a  special  resource  value  “auto”,  which  tells xterm to use the decTerminalID
               resource to set the default size based on the hardware terminal's limits.  Those limits  are  the
               same as for the maxGraphicSize resource.

       renderFont (class RenderFont)
               If xterm is built with the Xft library, this controls whether the faceName resource is used.  The
               default is “default”.

               The resource values are strings, evaluated as booleans after startup.

               false
                    disable the feature and use the normal (bitmap) font.

               true
                    startup  using  the  TrueType font specified by the faceName and faceSize resource settings.
                    If there is no value for faceName, disable the feature and use the normal (bitmap) font.

                    After startup, you can still switch to/from the bitmap font using the “TrueType Fonts”  menu
                    entry.

               default
                    startup  using the normal (bitmap) font, but enable the “TrueType Fonts” menu entry to allow
                    runtime switching to/from TrueType fonts.

                    If there is no faceName resource set, then runtime switching to TrueType fonts is  disabled.
                    Xterm  has  a separate  compiled-in value for faceName for the special case where renderFont
                    is “default”.  That is normally “mono”.

       resizeGravity (class ResizeGravity)
               Affects the behavior when the window is resized to be taller  or  shorter.   NorthWest  specifies
               that  the  top  line  of text on the screen stay fixed.  If the window is made shorter, lines are
               dropped from the bottom; if the window is made taller, blank lines are added at the bottom.  This
               is compatible with the behavior in R4.  SouthWest (the default) specifies that the bottom line of
               text on the screen stay fixed.  If the window is made taller,  additional  saved  lines  will  be
               scrolled  down onto the screen; if the window is made shorter, lines will be scrolled off the top
               of the screen, and the top saved lines will be dropped.

       retryInputMethod (class RetryInputMethod)
               Tells xterm how many times to retry, in case the input-method server is not responding.  This  is
               a  different  issue  than  unsupported  preedit  type,  etc.  You may encounter retries if your X
               configuration (and its libraries) are missing pieces.  Setting this resource to zero  ``0''  will
               cancel the retrying.  The default is ``3''.

       reverseVideo (class ReverseVideo)
               Specifies whether or not reverse video should be simulated.  The default is “false”.

               There are several aspects to reverse video in xterm:

               • The  command-line  -rv  option  tells  the X libraries to reverse the foreground and background
                 colors.  Xterm's command-line options set resource values.  In particular, the X  Toolkit  sets
                 the reverseVideo resource when the -rv option is used.

               • If  the user has also used command-line options -fg or -bg to set the foreground and background
                 colors, xterm does not see these options directly.  Instead, it examines the resource values to
                 reconstruct the command-line options, and determine which of the colors is the user's  intended
                 foreground,  etc.  Their actual values are irrelevant to the reverse video function; some users
                 prefer the X defaults (black text on a white background), others prefer white text on  a  black
                 background.

               • After  startup,  the user can toggle the “Enable Reverse Video” menu entry.  This exchanges the
                 current foreground and background colors of the VT100 widget, and repaints the screen.  Because
                 of the X resource hierarchy, the reverseVideo resource applies to more than the VT100 widget.

               Programs running in an xterm can also use control sequences to enable  the  VT100  reverse  video
               mode.   These  are  independent of the reverseVideo resource and the menu entry.  Xterm exchanges
               the current foreground and  background  colors  when  drawing  text  affected  by  these  control
               sequences.

               Other control sequences can alter the foreground and background colors which are used:

               • Programs  can  also  use  the ANSI color control sequences to set the foreground and background
                 colors.

               • Extensions to the ANSI color controls (such as 16-, 88- or 256-colors) are treated similarly to
                 the ANSI control.

               • Using other control sequences  (the  “dynamic  colors”  feature),  a  program  can  change  the
                 foreground and background colors.

       reverseWrap (class ReverseWrap)
               Specifies  whether  or  not  reverse-wraparound  should  be enabled.  This corresponds to xterm's
               private mode 45.  The default is “false”.

       rightScrollBar (class RightScrollBar)
               Specifies whether or not the scrollbar should be displayed on the right  rather  than  the  left.
               The default is “false”.

       saveLines (class SaveLines)
               Specifies the number of lines to save beyond the top of the screen when a scrollbar is turned on.
               The default is “64”.

       scrollBar (class ScrollBar)
               Specifies whether or not the scrollbar should be displayed.  The default is “false”.

       scrollBarBorder (class ScrollBarBorder)
               Specifies  the  width  of the scrollbar border.  Note that this is drawn to overlap the border of
               the xterm window.  Modifying the scrollbar's border affects  only  the  line  between  the  VT100
               widget and the scrollbar.  The default value is 1.

       scrollKey (class ScrollCond)
               Specifies  whether  or  not  pressing a key should automatically cause the scrollbar to go to the
               bottom of the scrolling region.  This corresponds to xterm's private mode 1011.  The  default  is
               “false”.

       scrollLines (class ScrollLines)
               Specifies  the  number  of  lines  that  the  scroll-back and scroll-forw actions should use as a
               default.  The default value is 1.

       scrollTtyOutput (class ScrollCond)
               Specifies whether or not output to the terminal should automatically cause the scrollbar to go to
               the bottom of the scrolling region.  The default is “true”.

       selectToClipboard (class SelectToClipboard)
               Tells xterm whether to use the PRIMARY or CLIPBOARD for SELECT tokens in the selection mechanism.
               The set-select action can change this at runtime, allowing the user to work  with  programs  that
               handle only one of these mechanisms.  The default is “false”, which tells it to use PRIMARY.

       shiftFonts (class ShiftFonts)
               Specifies  whether  to  enable  the  actions  larger-vt-font()  and  smaller-vt-font(), which are
               normally bound to the shifted KP_Add and KP_Subtract.  The default is “true”.

       showBlinkAsBold (class ShowBlinkAsBold)
               Tells xterm whether to display text with blink-attribute the same as bold.  If xterm has not been
               configured to support blinking text, the default is “true”, which corresponds to  older  versions
               of xterm, otherwise the default is “false”.

       showMissingGlyphs (class ShowMissingGlyphs)
               Tells  xterm  whether  to display a box outlining places where a character has been used that the
               font does not represent.  The default is “false”.

       showWrapMarks (class ShowWrapMarks)
               For debugging xterm and applications that may manipulate the wrapped-line flag by writing text at
               the right margin, show a mark on the right inner-border of the  window.   The  mark  shows  which
               lines have the flag set.

       signalInhibit (class SignalInhibit)
               Specifies whether or not the entries in the Main Options menu for sending signals to xterm should
               be disallowed.  The default is “false”.

       sixelScrolling (class SixelScrolling)
               If xterm is configured to support SIXEL graphics, this resource tells it whether to scroll up one
               line  at  a time when sixels would be written past the bottom line on the window.  The default is
               “false”.

       sixelScrollsRight (class SixelScrollsRight)
               If xterm is configured to support SIXEL graphics, this resource tells it whether to scroll to the
               right as needed to keep the current position visible rather than truncate the plot on the on  the
               right.  The default is “false”.

       tekGeometry (class Geometry)
               Specifies  the preferred size and position of the Tektronix window.  There is no default for this
               resource.

       tekInhibit (class TekInhibit)
               Specifies whether or not the escape sequence to enter Tektronix  mode  should  be  ignored.   The
               default is “false”.

       tekSmall (class TekSmall)
               Specifies  whether  or  not  the  Tektronix  mode  window should start in its smallest size if no
               explicit geometry is given.  This is useful when running xterm on displays  with  small  screens.
               The default is “false”.

       tekStartup (class TekStartup)
               Specifies whether or not xterm should start up in Tektronix mode.  The default is “false”.

       tiXtraScroll (class TiXtraScroll)
               Specifies  whether  xterm should scroll to a new page when processing the ti termcap entry, i.e.,
               the private modes 47, 1047 or 1049.  This is only in effect if titeInhibit is “true”, because the
               intent of this option is to provide a picture of the full-screen  application's  display  on  the
               scrollback  without  wiping  out  the  text  that  would  be  shown  before  the  application was
               initialized.  The default for this resource is “false”.

       titeInhibit (class TiteInhibit)
               Originally specified whether or not xterm should remove ti and te termcap entries (used to switch
               between alternate screens on startup of many screen-oriented programs) from the TERMCAP string.

               TERMCAP is used rarely now, but xterm supports the feature on modern systems:

               • If set, xterm also ignores the escape sequence to switch to the alternate screen.

               • Xterm supports terminfo in a different way, supporting composite control sequences (also  known
                 as  private  modes)  1047,  1048 and 1049 which have the same effect as the original 47 control
                 sequence.

               The default for this resource is “false”.

       titleModes (class TitleModes)
               Tells xterm whether to accept or return window- and icon-labels in ISO-8859-1  (the  default)  or
               UTF-8.  Either can be encoded in hexadecimal.  The default for this resource is “0”.

               Each  bit  (bit  “0”  is  1, bit “1” is 2, etc.)  corresponds to one of the parameters set by the
               title modes control sequence:

               0    Set window/icon labels using hexadecimal

               1    Query window/icon labels using hexadecimal

               2    Set window/icon labels using UTF-8 (overrides utf8Title resource).

               3    Query window/icon labels using UTF-8

       translations (class Translations)
               Specifies the key and button bindings for menus,  selections,  “programmed  strings”,  etc.   The
               translations  resource,  which  provides  much  of xterm's configurability, is a feature of the X
               Toolkit Intrinsics library (Xt).  See the Actions section.

       trimSelection (class TrimSelection)
               If you set highlightSelection, you can see the text which is  selected,  including  any  trailing
               spaces.   Clearing  the screen (or a line) resets it to a state containing no spaces.  Some lines
               may contain trailing spaces when an application writes them to the screen.  However, you may  not
               wish  to  paste  lines  with trailing spaces.  If this resource is true, xterm will trim trailing
               spaces from text which is selected.  It does not affect spaces which result in  a  wrapped  line,
               nor will it trim the trailing newline from your selection.  The default is “false”.

       underLine (class UnderLine)
               This  specifies whether or not text with the underline attribute should be underlined.  It may be
               desirable to disable underlining when color is being  used  for  the  underline  attribute.   The
               default is “true”.

       useClipping (class UseClipping)
               Tell  xterm  whether  to  use clipping to keep from producing dots outside the text drawing area.
               Originally used to work around for overstriking effects, this is also needed to  work  with  some
               incorrectly-sized fonts.  The default is “true”.

       utf8 (class Utf8)
               This  specifies  whether xterm will run in UTF-8 mode.  If you set this resource, xterm also sets
               the wideChars resource as a side-effect.  The resource can be  set  via  the  menu  entry  “UTF-8
               Encoding”.  The default is “default”.

               Xterm accepts either a keyword (ignoring case) or the number shown in parentheses:

               false (0)
                  UTF-8  mode  is  initially  off.  The command-line option +u8 sets the resource to this value.
                  Escape sequences for turning UTF-8 mode on/off are allowed.

               true (1)
                  UTF-8 mode is initially on.  Escape sequences for turning UTF-8 mode on/off are allowed.

               always (2)
                  The command-line option -u8 sets the resource to this value.   Escape  sequences  for  turning
                  UTF-8 mode on/off are ignored.

               default (3)
                  This  is  the default value of the resource.  It is changed during initialization depending on
                  whether the locale resource was set, to false (0) or always (2).  See the locale resource  for
                  additional discussion of non-UTF-8 locales.

               If  you  want  to  set  the  value of utf8, it should be in this range.  Other nonzero values are
               treated the same as “1”, i.e., UTF-8 mode is initially on, and escape sequences for turning UTF-8
               mode on/off are allowed.

       utf8Fonts (class Utf8Fonts)
               See the discussion of the locale resource.  This specifies whether xterm  will  use  UTF-8  fonts
               specified  via resource patterns such as “*vt100.utf8Fonts.font” or normal (ISO-8859-1) fonts via
               patterns such as “*vt100.font”.  The resource can be set via the menu entry “UTF-8  Fonts”.   The
               default is “default”.

               Xterm accepts either a keyword (ignoring case) or the number shown in parentheses:

               false (0)
                      Use  the  ISO-8859-1 fonts.  The menu entry is enabled, allowing the choice of fonts to be
                      changed at runtime.

               true (1)
                      Use the UTF-8 fonts.  The menu entry is enabled,  allowing  the  choice  of  fonts  to  be
                      changed at runtime.

               always (2)
                      Always use the UTF-8 fonts.  This also disables the menu entry.

               default (3)
                      At  startup, the resource is set to true or false, according to the effective value of the
                      utf8 resource.

       utf8Latin1 (class Utf8Latin1)
               If true, allow an ISO-8859-1 normal font to be combined with an ISO-10646-1 font if the latter is
               given via the -fw option or its corresponding resource value.  The default is “false”.

       utf8SelectTypes (class Utf8SelectTypes)
               Override xterm's default selection  target  list  (see  SELECT/PASTE)  for  selections  in  wide-
               character  (UTF-8)  mode.   The  default  is  an  empty string, i.e., “”, which does not override
               anything.

       utf8Title (class Utf8Title)
               Applications can set xterm's title by writing a control sequence.  Normally this control sequence
               follows the VT220 convention, which encodes the string in ISO-8859-1  and  allows  for  an  8-bit
               string terminator.  If xterm is started in a UTF-8 locale, it translates the ISO-8859-1 string to
               UTF-8 to work with the X libraries which assume the string is UTF-8.

               However,  some  users  may  wish to write a title string encoded in UTF-8.  The window manager is
               responsible for drawing window titles.  Some window managers (not all) support UTF-8 encoding  of
               window  titles.   Set this resource to “true” to allow UTF-8 encoded title strings.  That cancels
               the translation to UTF-8, allowing UTF-8 strings to be displayed as is.

               This feature is available as a menu entry, since it is related to the particular applications you
               are running within xterm.  You can also use a control sequence  (see  the  discussion  of  “Title
               Modes”  in Xterm Control Sequences), to set an equivalent flag.  The titleModes resource sets the
               same value, which overrides this resource.

               The default is “false”.

       veryBoldColors (class VeryBoldColors)
               Specifies whether to combine video attributes with colors specified by colorBD, colorBL, colorIT,
               colorRV, and colorUL.  The resource value is the sum of values for each attribute:
                 1 for reverse,
                 2 for underline,
                 4 for bold,
                 8 for blink, and
                 512 for italic

               The default is “0”.

       visualBell (class VisualBell)
               Specifies whether or not a visible bell (i.e., flashing) should be used  instead  of  an  audible
               bell  when  Control-G  is  received.  The default is “false”, which tells xterm to use an audible
               bell.

       visualBellDelay (class VisualBellDelay)
               Number of milliseconds to delay when displaying a visual bell.  Default is 100.  If set to  zero,
               no  visual  bell  is displayed.  This is useful for very slow displays, e.g., an LCD display on a
               laptop.

       visualBellLine (class VisualBellLine)
               Specifies whether to flash only the current line  when  displaying  a  visual  bell  rather  than
               flashing the entire screen: The default is “false”, which tells xterm to flash the entire screen.

       vt100Graphics (class VT100Graphics)
               This  specifies  whether  xterm  will interpret VT100 graphic character escape sequences while in
               UTF-8 mode.  The default is “true”, to provide support for various legacy applications.

       wideBoldFont (class WideBoldFont)
               This option specifies the font to be used for displaying bold wide text.   By  default,  it  will
               attempt  to  use  a  font  twice  as wide as the font that will be used to draw bold text.  If no
               double-width font is found, it will improvise, by stretching the bold font.

       wideChars (class WideChars)
               Specifies if xterm should respond to control  sequences  that  process  16-bit  characters.   The
               default is “false”.

       wideFont (class WideFont)
               This  option specifies the font to be used for displaying wide text.  By default, it will attempt
               to use a font twice as wide as the font that will be used to draw normal  text.   If  no  double-
               width font is found, it will improvise, by stretching the normal font.

       ximFont (class XimFont)
               This  option specifies the font to be used for displaying the preedit string in the “OverTheSpot”
               input method.

               In “OverTheSpot” preedit type, the preedit (preconversion) string is displayed at the position of
               the cursor.  It is the XIM server's responsibility to display the preedit string.  The XIM client
               must inform the XIM server of the cursor position.  For best results, the preedit string must  be
               displayed  with  a proper font.  Therefore, xterm informs the XIM server of the proper font.  The
               font is be supplied by a "fontset", whose default value is “*”.  This matches every font,  the  X
               library  automatically  chooses  fonts with proper charsets.  The ximFont resource is provided to
               override this default font setting.

   Tek4014 Widget Resources
       The following resources are specified as part of the tek4014 widget (class Tek4014).  These are specified
       by patterns such as “XTerm.tek4014.NAME”:

       font2 (class Font)
               Specifies font number 2 to use in the Tektronix window.

       font3 (class Font)
               Specifies font number 3 to use in the Tektronix window.

       fontLarge (class Font)
               Specifies the large font to use in the Tektronix window.

       fontSmall (class Font)
               Specifies the small font to use in the Tektronix window.

       ginTerminator (class GinTerminator)
               Specifies what character(s) should follow a GIN report or status report.  The  possibilities  are
               “none”,  which  sends  no  terminating  characters, “CRonly”, which sends CR, and “CR&EOT”, which
               sends both CR and EOT.  The default is “none”.

       height (class Height)
               Specifies the height of the Tektronix window in pixels.

       initialFont (class InitialFont)
               Specifies which of the four Tektronix fonts to use initially.  Values are the  same  as  for  the
               set-tek-text action.  The default is “large”.

       width (class Width)
               Specifies the width of the Tektronix window in pixels.

   Menu Resources
       The  resources  that  may  be  specified for the various menus are described in the documentation for the
       Athena SimpleMenu widget.  The name and classes of the entries in each of the  menus  are  listed  below.
       Resources named “lineN” where N is a number are separators with class SmeLine.

       As with all X resource-based widgets, the labels mentioned are customary defaults for the application.

       The Main Options menu (widget name mainMenu) has the following entries:

       toolbar (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the set-toolbar(toggle) action.

       securekbd (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the secure() action.

       allowsends (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the allow-send-events(toggle) action.

       redraw (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the redraw() action.

       logging (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the logging(toggle) action.

       print-immediate (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the print-immediate() action.

       print-on-error (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the print-on-error() action.

       print (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the print() action.

       print-redir (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the print-redir() action.

       dump-html (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the dump-html() action.

       dump-svg (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the dump-svg() action.

       8-bit-control (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the set-8-bit-control(toggle) action.

       backarrow key (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the set-backarrow(toggle) action.

       num-lock (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the set-num-lock(toggle) action.

       alt-esc (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the alt-sends-escape(toggle) action.

       meta-esc (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the meta-sends-escape(toggle) action.

       delete-is-del (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the delete-is-del(toggle) action.

       oldFunctionKeys (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the set-old-function-keys(toggle) action.

       hpFunctionKeys (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the set-hp-function-keys(toggle) action.

       scoFunctionKeys (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the set-sco-function-keys(toggle) action.

       sunFunctionKeys (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the set-sun-function-keys(toggle) action.

       sunKeyboard (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the sunKeyboard(toggle) action.

       suspend (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the send-signal(tstp) action on systems that support job control.

       continue (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the send-signal(cont) action on systems that support job control.

       interrupt (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the send-signal(int) action.

       hangup (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the send-signal(hup) action.

       terminate (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the send-signal(term) action.

       kill (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the send-signal(kill) action.

       quit (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the quit() action.

       The VT Options menu (widget name vtMenu) has the following entries:

       scrollbar (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the set-scrollbar(toggle) action.

       jumpscroll (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the set-jumpscroll(toggle) action.

       reversevideo (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the set-reverse-video(toggle) action.

       autowrap (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the set-autowrap(toggle) action.

       reversewrap (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the set-reversewrap(toggle) action.

       autolinefeed (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the set-autolinefeed(toggle) action.

       appcursor (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the set-appcursor(toggle) action.

       appkeypad (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the set-appkeypad(toggle) action.

       scrollkey (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the set-scroll-on-key(toggle) action.

       scrollttyoutput (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the set-scroll-on-tty-output(toggle) action.

       allow132 (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the set-allow132(toggle) action.

       cursesemul (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the set-cursesemul(toggle) action.

       keepSelection (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the set-keep-selection(toggle) action.

       selectToClipboard (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the set-keep-clipboard(toggle) action.

       visualbell (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the set-visual-bell(toggle) action.

       bellIsUrgent (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the set-bellIsUrgent(toggle) action.

       poponbell (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the set-pop-on-bell(toggle) action.

       cursorblink (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the set-cursorblink(toggle) action.

       titeInhibit (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the set-titeInhibit(toggle) action.

       activeicon (class SmeBSB)
               This  entry  toggles  active  icons  on  and  off if this feature was compiled into xterm.  It is
               enabled only if xterm was started with the command line option +ai or the activeIcon resource  is
               set to “true”.

       softreset (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the soft-reset() action.

       hardreset (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the hard-reset() action.

       clearsavedlines (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the clear-saved-lines() action.

       tekshow (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the set-visibility(tek,toggle) action.

       tekmode (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the set-terminal-type(tek) action.

       vthide (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the set-visibility(vt,off) action.

       altscreen (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the set-altscreen(toggle) action.

       sixelScrolling (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the set-sixel-scrolling(toggle) action.

       privateColorRegisters (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the set-private-colors(toggle) action.

       The VT Fonts menu (widget name fontMenu) has the following entries:

       fontdefault (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the set-vt-font(d) action, setting the font using the font (default) resource,
               e.g., “Default” in the menu.

       font1 (class SmeBSB)
               This  entry  invokes  the set-vt-font(1) action, setting the font using the font1 resource, e.g.,
               “Unreadable” in the menu.

       font2 (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the set-vt-font(2) action, setting the font using the  font2  resource,  e.g.,
               “Tiny” in the menu.

       font3 (class SmeBSB)
               This  entry  invokes  the set-vt-font(3) action, setting the font using the font3 resource, e.g.,
               “Small” in the menu.

       font4 (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the set-vt-font(4) action, letting the font using the  font4  resource,  e.g.,
               “Medium” in the menu.

       font5 (class SmeBSB)
               This  entry  invokes  the set-vt-font(5) action, letting the font using the font5 resource, e.g.,
               “Large” in the menu.

       font6 (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the set-vt-font(6) action, letting the font using the  font6  resource,  e.g.,
               “Huge” in the menu.

       fontescape (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the set-vt-font(e) action.

       fontsel (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the set-vt-font(s) action.

       allow-bold-fonts (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the allow-bold-fonts(toggle) action.

       font-linedrawing (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the set-font-linedrawing(s) action.

       font-packed (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the set-font-packed(s) action.

       font-doublesize (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the set-font-doublesize(s) action.

       render-font (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the set-render-font(s) action.

       utf8-fonts (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the set-utf8-fonts(s) action.

       utf8-mode (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the set-utf8-mode(s) action.

       utf8-title (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the set-utf8-title(s) action.

       allow-color-ops (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the allow-color-ops(toggle) action.

       allow-font-ops (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the allow-fonts-ops(toggle) action.

       allow-tcap-ops (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the allow-tcap-ops(toggle) action.

       allow-title-ops (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the allow-title-ops(toggle) action.

       allow-window-ops (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the allow-window-ops(toggle) action.

       The Tek Options menu (widget name tekMenu) has the following entries:

       tektextlarge (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the set-tek-text(large) action.

       tektext2 (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the set-tek-text(2) action.

       tektext3 (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the set-tek-text(3) action.

       tektextsmall (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the set-tek-text(small) action.

       tekpage (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the tek-page() action.

       tekreset (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the tek-reset() action.

       tekcopy (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the tek-copy() action.

       vtshow (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the set-visibility(vt,toggle) action.

       vtmode (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the set-terminal-type(vt) action.

       tekhide (class SmeBSB)
               This entry invokes the set-visibility(tek,toggle) action.

   Scrollbar Resources
       The following resources are useful when specified for the Athena Scrollbar widget:

       thickness (class Thickness)
               Specifies the width in pixels of the scrollbar.

       background (class Background)
               Specifies the color to use for the background of the scrollbar.

       foreground (class Foreground)
               Specifies  the color to use for the foreground of the scrollbar.  The “thumb” of the scrollbar is
               a simple checkerboard pattern alternating pixels for foreground and background color.

POINTER USAGE

       Once the VTxxx window is created, xterm allows you to select text and copy it within the  same  or  other
       windows using the pointer or the keyboard.

       A  “pointer”  could  be a mouse, touchpad or similar device.  X applications generally do not care, since
       they see only button events which have

       • position and

       • button up/down state

       Xterm can see these events as long as it has focus.

       The keyboard also supplies events, but it is less flexible than the pointer for selecting/copying text.

       Events are applied to actions using the translations resource.  See Actions  for  a  complete  list,  and
       Default Key Bindings for the built-in set of translations resources.

   Selection Functions
       The  selection  functions  are invoked when the pointer buttons are used with no modifiers, and when they
       are used with the “shift” key.  The assignment of the functions described below to keys and  buttons  may
       be changed through the resource database; see Actions below.

       Pointer button one (usually left)
            is used to save text into the cut buffer:

              ~Meta <Btn1Down>:select-start()

            Move  the  cursor to beginning of the text, and then hold the button down while moving the cursor to
            the end of the region and releasing the button.  The selected text is highlighted and  is  saved  in
            the global cut buffer and made the selection when the button is released:

              <BtnUp>:select-end(SELECT, CUT_BUFFER0) 0NE

            Normally (but see the discussion of on2Clicks, etc):

            • Double-clicking selects by words.

            • Triple-clicking
              selects by lines.

            • Quadruple-clicking goes back to characters, etc.

            Multiple-click is determined by the time from button up to
            button down, so you can change the selection unit in the middle of a selection.
            Logical words and lines selected by double- or triple-clicking may wrap
            across more than one screen line if lines were wrapped by xterm
            itself rather than by the application running in the window.
            If the key/button bindings specify that an X selection is to be made,
            xterm will leave the selected text highlighted for as long as it
            is the selection owner.

       Pointer button two (usually middle)
            “types” (pastes) the text from
            the given selection, if any,
            otherwise from the cut buffer, inserting it as keyboard input:

              ~Ctrl ~Meta <Btn2Up>:insert-selection(SELECT, CUT_BUFFER0)

       Pointer button three (usually right)
            extends the current selection.

              ~Ctrl ~Meta <Btn3Down>:start-extend()

            (Without  loss  of  generality,  you  can  swap  “right”  and  “left” everywhere in the rest of this
            paragraph.)  If pressed while closer  to  the  right  edge  of  the  selection  than  the  left,  it
            extends/contracts the right edge of the selection.  If you contract the selection past the left edge
            of  the  selection,  xterm  assumes you really meant the left edge, restores the original selection,
            then extends/contracts the left edge of the selection.  Extension starts in the selection unit  mode
            that the last selection or extension was performed in; you can multiple-click to cycle through them.

       By  cutting  and pasting pieces of text without trailing new lines, you can take text from several places
       in different windows and form a command to the shell, for example, or take  output  from  a  program  and
       insert it into your favorite editor.  Since cut buffers are globally shared among different applications,
       you  may  regard each as a “file” whose contents you know.  The terminal emulator and other text programs
       should be treating it as if it were a text file, i.e., the text is delimited by new lines.

   Scrolling
       The scroll region displays the position and amount of text currently showing in the window  (highlighted)
       relative  to  the  amount of text actually saved.  As more text is saved (up to the maximum), the size of
       the highlighted area decreases.

       Clicking button one with the pointer in the scroll region moves the adjacent  line  to  the  top  of  the
       display window.

       Clicking button three moves the top line of the display window down to the pointer position.

       Clicking  button  two moves the display to a position in the saved text that corresponds to the pointer's
       position in the scrollbar.

   Tektronix Pointer
       Unlike the VTxxx window, the Tektronix window does  not  allow  the  copying  of  text.   It  does  allow
       Tektronix  GIN  mode, and in this mode the cursor will change from an arrow to a cross.  Pressing any key
       will send that key and the current coordinate of the cross cursor.  Pressing button one,  two,  or  three
       will  return  the  letters “l”, “m”, and “r”, respectively.  If the “shift” key is pressed when a pointer
       button is pressed, the corresponding upper case letter is sent.  To distinguish a pointer button  from  a
       key,  the high bit of the character is set (but this is bit is normally stripped unless the terminal mode
       is RAW; see tty(4) for details).

SELECT/PASTE

       X clients provide select and paste support by responding to requests conveyed by the server.

   PRIMARY
       When configured to use the primary selection, (the default) xterm can provide the selection data in  ways
       which help to retain character encoding information as it is pasted.

       A  user  “selects”  text  on  xterm, which highlights the selected text.  A subsequent “paste” to another
       client forwards a request to the client owning the selection.  If xterm owns the  primary  selection,  it
       makes  the data available in the form of one or more “selection targets”.  If it does not own the primary
       selection, e.g., if it has released it or another client has asserted ownership, it relies on cut-buffers
       to pass the data.  But cut-buffers handle only ISO-8859-1 data (officially  -  some  clients  ignore  the
       rules).

   CLIPBOARD
       When configured to use the clipboard (using the selectToClipboard resource), the problem with persistence
       of  ownership  is bypassed.  Otherwise, there is no difference regarding the data which can be passed via
       selection.

       The PRIMARY token  is  a  standard  X  feature,  documented  in  the  ICCCM  (Inter-Client  Communication
       Conventions Manual), which states

              The  selection named by the atom PRIMARY is used for all commands that take only a single argument
              and is the principal means of communication between clients that use the selection mechanism.

   SELECT
       However, many applications use CLIPBOARD in imitation of other windowing systems.  The  selectToClipboard
       resource  (and  corresponding  menu  entry Select to Clipboard) introduce the SELECT token (known only to
       xterm) which chooses between the PRIMARY and CLIPBOARD tokens.

       Without using this feature, one can use workarounds such as the xclip program to show the contents of the
       X clipboard within an xterm window.

   Selection Targets
       The different types of data which are passed depend on what the receiving client  asks  for.   These  are
       termed selection targets.

       When asking for the selection data, xterm tries the following types in this order:

            UTF8_STRING
                 This  is  an XFree86 extension, which denotes that the data is encoded in UTF-8.  When xterm is
                 built with wide-character support, it both accepts and provides this type.

            TEXT the text is in the encoding which corresponds to your current locale.

            COMPOUND_TEXT
                 this is a format for multiple character set data, such as multi-lingual  text.   It  can  store
                 UTF-8 data as a special case.

            STRING
                 This is Latin 1 (ISO-8859-1) data.

       The middle two (TEXT and COMPOUND_TEXT) are added if xterm is configured with the i18nSelections resource
       set to “true”.

       UTF8_STRING  is  preferred  (therefore  first  in  the list) since xterm stores text as Unicode data when
       running in wide-character mode, and no translation is needed.  On the other hand, TEXT and  COMPOUND_TEXT
       may  require  translation.   If the translation is incomplete, they will insert X's “defaultString” whose
       value cannot be set, and may simply be empty.  Xterm's defaultString resource specifies the string to use
       for incomplete translations of the UTF8_STRING.

       You can alter the types which xterm tries using the  eightBitSelectTypes  or  utf8SelectTypes  resources.
       For  instance,  you  might  have  some  specific  locale  setting which does not use UTF-8 encoding.  The
       resource value is a comma-separated list of the selection targets, which consist of the names shown.  You
       can use the special name I18N to denote the optional inclusion of TEXT and COMPOUND_TEXT.  The names  are
       matched ignoring case, and can be abbreviated.  The default list can be expressed in several ways, e.g.,

              UTF8_STRING,I18N,STRING
              utf8,i18n,string
              u,i,s

   Mouse Protocol
       Applications can send escape sequences to xterm to cause it to send escape sequences back to the computer
       when  you press a pointer button, or even (depending on which escape sequence) send escape sequences back
       to the computer as you move the pointer.

       These escape sequences and the responses, called the mouse protocol,  are  documented  in  XTerm  Control
       Sequences.   They  do not appear in the actions invoked by the translations resource because the resource
       does not change while you run xterm, whereas applications can change the mouse  prototol  (i.e.,  enable,
       disable, use different modes).

       However,  the  mouse  protocol  is  interpreted  within  the actions that are usually associated with the
       pointer buttons.  Xterm ignores the mouse protocol in the insert-selection action  if  the  shift-key  is
       pressed  at  the  same  time.   It  also  modifies a few other actions if the shift-key is pressed, e.g.,
       suppressing the response with the pointer position, though not eliminating changes to the selected text.

MENUS

       Xterm has four menus, named mainMenu, vtMenu, fontMenu, and tekMenu.  Each menu pops up under the correct
       combinations of key and button presses.  Each menu is divided into sections, separated  by  a  horizontal
       line.   Some  menu  entries correspond to modes that can be altered.  A check mark appears next to a mode
       that is currently active.  Selecting one of these modes  toggles  its  state.   Other  menu  entries  are
       commands; selecting one of these performs the indicated function.

       All  of the menu entries correspond to X actions.  In the list below, the menu label is shown followed by
       the action's name in parenthesis.

   Main Options
       The xterm mainMenu pops up when the “control” key and pointer button one are pressed in a  window.   This
       menu contains items that apply to both the VTxxx and Tektronix windows.  There are several sections:

       Commands for managing X events:

              Toolbar (resource toolbar)
                     Clicking on the “Toolbar” menu entry hides the toolbar if it is visible, and shows it if it
                     is not.

              Secure Keyboard (resource securekbd)
                     The  Secure Keyboard mode is helpful when typing in passwords or other sensitive data in an
                     unsecure environment (see SECURITY below, but read the limitations carefully).

              Allow SendEvents (resource allowsends)
                     Specifies whether or not synthetic key and button events generated  using  the  X  protocol
                     SendEvent   request   should   be  interpreted  or  discarded.   This  corresponds  to  the
                     allowSendEvents resource.

              Redraw Window (resource redraw)
                     Forces the X display to repaint; useful in some environments.

       Commands for capturing output:

              Log to File (resource logging)
                     Captures text sent to the screen in a logfile, as in the -l logging option.

              Print-All Immediately (resource print-immediate)
                     Invokes the print-immediate action, sending the text of the current window  directly  to  a
                     file,  as  specified  by  the printFileImmediate, printModeImmediate and printOptsImmediate
                     resources.

              Print-All on Error (resource print-on-error)
                     Invokes the print-on-error action, which toggles a flag telling xterm that if it exits with
                     an X error, to send the text of the current window directly to a file, as specified by  the
                     printFileOnXError, printModeOnXError and printOptsOnXError resources.

              Print Window (resource print)
                     Sends the text of the current window to the program given in the printerCommand resource.

              Redirect to Printer (resource print-redir)
                     This  sets the printerControlMode to 0 or 2.  You can use this to turn the printer on as if
                     an application had sent the appropriate control sequence.  It is also useful for  switching
                     the printer off if an application turns it on without resetting the print control mode.

              XHTML Screen Dump (resource dump-html)
                     Available only when compiled with screen dump support.  Invokes the dump-html action.  This
                     creates  an  XHTML  file matching the contents of the current screen, including the border,
                     internal border, colors and most attributes: bold,  italic,  underline,  faint,  strikeout,
                     reverse;  blink  is  rendered  as  white-on-red;  double  underline is rendered the same as
                     underline since there is no portable equivalent in CSS 2.2.

                     The font is whatever your browser uses for preformatted (<pre>) elements.  The  XHTML  file
                     references  a cascading style sheet (CSS) named “xterm.css” that you can create to select a
                     font or override properties.

                     The following CSS selectors are used with the expected default behavior in the XHTML file:

                     .ul for underline,
                     .bd for bold,
                     .it for italic,
                     .st for strikeout,
                     .lu for strikeout combined with underline.

                     In addition you may use

                     .ev to affect even numbered lines and
                     .od to affect odd numbered lines.

                     Attributes faint, reverse and blink are  implemented  as  style  attributes  setting  color
                     properties.  All  colors are specified as RGB percentages in order to support displays with
                     10 bits per RGB.

                     The name of the file will be

                       xterm.yyyy.MM.dd.hh.mm.ss.xhtml

                     where yyyy, MM, dd, hh, mm and ss are the year, month, day, hour, minute  and  second  when
                     the screen dump was performed (the file is created in the directory xterm is started in, or
                     the home directory for a login xterm).

                     The dump-html action can also be triggered using the Media Copy control sequence CSI 1 0 i,
                     for example from a shell script with

                       printf '\033[10i'

                   Only the UTF-8 encoding is supported.

              SVG Screen Dump (resource dump-svg)
                     Available  only when compiled with screen dump support.  Invokes the dump-svg action.  This
                     creates a Scalable Vector Graphics (SVG) file matching the contents of the current  screen,
                     including the border, internal border, colors and most attributes: bold, italic, underline,
                     double  underline,  faint, strikeout, reverse; blink is rendered as white-on-red.  The font
                     is whatever your renderer uses for the monospace font-family.  All colors are specified  as
                     RGB percentages in order to support displays with 10 bits per RGB.

                     The name of the file will be

                       xterm.yyyy.MM.dd.hh.mm.ss.svg

                     where  yyyy,  MM,  dd, hh, mm and ss are the year, month, day, hour, minute and second when
                     the screen dump was performed (the file is created in the directory xterm is started in, or
                     the home directory for a login xterm).

                     The dump-svg action can also be triggered using the Media Copy control sequence CSI 1 1  i,
                     for example from a shell script with

                       printf '\033[11i'

                   Only the UTF-8 encoding is supported.

       Modes for setting keyboard style:

              8-Bit Controls (resource 8-bit-control)
                     Enabled  for VT220 emulation, this controls whether xterm will send 8-bit control sequences
                     rather than using 7-bit (ASCII) controls, e.g., sending a byte in the range 128-159  rather
                     than  the  escape  character followed by a second byte.  Xterm always interprets both 8-bit
                     and 7-bit control sequences  (see  Xterm  Control  Sequences).   This  corresponds  to  the
                     eightBitControl resource.

              Backarrow Key (BS/DEL) (resource backarrow key)
                     Modifies  the  behavior  of the backarrow key, making it transmit either a backspace (8) or
                     delete (127) character.  This corresponds to the backarrowKey resource.

              Alt/NumLock Modifiers (resource num-lock)
                     Controls the treatment of Alt- and NumLock-key modifiers.  This corresponds to the  numLock
                     resource.

              Meta Sends Escape (resource meta-esc)
                     Controls  whether  Meta keys are converted into a two-character sequence with the character
                     itself preceded by ESC.  This corresponds to the metaSendsEscape resource.

              Delete is DEL (resource delete-is-del)
                     Controls whether the Delete key on  the  editing  keypad  should  send  DEL  (127)  or  the
                     VT220-style Remove escape sequence.  This corresponds to the deleteIsDEL resource.

              Old Function-Keys (resource oldFunctionKeys)

              HP Function-Keys (resource hpFunctionKeys)

              SCO Function-Keys (resource scoFunctionKeys)

              Sun Function-Keys (resource sunFunctionKeys)

              VT220 Keyboard (resource sunKeyboard)
                     These  act  as  a  radio-button,  selecting  one style for the keyboard layout.  The layout
                     corresponds  to   more   than   one   resource   setting:   sunKeyboard,   sunFunctionKeys,
                     scoFunctionKeys and hpFunctionKeys.

       Commands for process signalling:

              Send STOP Signal (resource suspend)

              Send CONT Signal (resource continue)

              Send INT Signal (resource interrupt)

              Send HUP Signal (resource hangup)

              Send TERM Signal (resource terminate)

              Send KILL Signal (resource kill)
                     These  send the SIGTSTP, SIGCONT, SIGINT, SIGHUP, SIGTERM and SIGKILL signals respectively,
                     to the process group of the process running under xterm (usually the shell).   The  SIGCONT
                     function  is  especially  useful  if the user has accidentally typed CTRL-Z, suspending the
                     process.

              Quit (resource quit)
                     Stop processing X events except to support the -hold option, and then send a SIGHUP  signal
                     to the process group of the process running under xterm (usually the shell).

   VT Options
       The  xterm  vtMenu sets various modes in the VTxxx emulation, and is popped up when the “control” key and
       pointer button two are pressed in the VTxxx window.

       VTxxx Modes:

              Enable Scrollbar (resource scrollbar)
                     Enable (or disable) the scrollbar.  This corresponds to the -sb option  and  the  scrollBar
                     resource.

              Enable Jump Scroll (resource jumpscroll)
                     Enable  (or  disable) jump scrolling.  This corresponds to the -j option and the jumpScroll
                     resource.

              Enable Reverse Video (resource reversevideo)
                     Enable (or disable) reverse-video.  This corresponds to the -rv option and the reverseVideo
                     resource.

              Enable Auto Wraparound (resource autowrap)
                     Enable (or disable) auto-wraparound.  This corresponds to the -aw option and  the  autoWrap
                     resource.

              Enable Reverse Wraparound (resource reversewrap)
                     Enable  (or  disable)  reverse  wraparound.   This  corresponds  to  the -rw option and the
                     reverseWrap resource.

              Enable Auto Linefeed (resource autolinefeed)
                     Enable (or disable) auto-linefeed.  This is  the  VT102  NEL  function,  which  causes  the
                     emulator to emit a linefeed after each carriage return.  There is no corresponding command-
                     line option or resource setting.

              Enable Application Cursor Keys (resource appcursor)
                     Enable  (or  disable)  application  cursor  keys.  This corresponds to the appcursorDefault
                     resource.  There is no corresponding command-line option.

              Enable Application Keypad (resource appkeypad)
                     Enable (or disable) application keypad keys.   This  corresponds  to  the  appkeypadDefault
                     resource.  There is no corresponding command-line option.

              Scroll to Bottom on Key Press (resource scrollkey)
                     Enable  (or  disable)  scrolling to the bottom of the scrolling region on a keypress.  This
                     corresponds to the -sk option and the scrollKey resource.

                     As a special case, the XON / XOFF keys (control/S and control/Q) are ignored.

              Scroll to Bottom on Tty Output (resource scrollttyoutput)
                     Enable (or disable) scrolling to the bottom of  the  scrolling  region  on  output  to  the
                     terminal.  This corresponds to the -si option and the scrollTtyOutput resource.

              Allow 80/132 Column Switching (resource allow132)
                     Enable  (or  disable)  switching  between 80 and 132 columns.  This corresponds to the -132
                     option and the c132 resource.

              Keep Selection (resource keepSelection)
                     Tell xterm whether to disown the selection when it stops highlighting  it,  e.g.,  when  an
                     application  modifies  the  display  so  that  it no longer matches the text which has been
                     highlighted.  As long as  xterm  continues  to  own  the  selection,  it  can  provide  the
                     corresponding  text  to other clients via cut/paste.  This corresponds to the keepSelection
                     resource.  There is no corresponding command-line option.

              Select to Clipboard (resource selectToClipboard)
                     Tell xterm whether to use the PRIMARY or CLIPBOARD for SELECT tokens  in  the  translations
                     resource  which  maps keyboard and mouse actions to select/paste actions.  This corresponds
                     to the selectToClipboard resource.  There is no corresponding command-line option.

              Enable Visual Bell (resource visualbell)
                     Enable (or disable) visible bell  (i.e.,  flashing)  instead  of  an  audible  bell.   This
                     corresponds to the -vb option and the visualBell resource.

              Enable Bell Urgency (resource bellIsUrgent)
                     Enable  (or  disable)  Urgency  window  manager  hint  when  Control-G  is  received.  This
                     corresponds to the bellIsUrgent resource.

              Enable Pop on Bell (resource poponbell)
                     Enable (or disable) raising of the window when Control-G is received.  This corresponds  to
                     the -pop option and the popOnBell resource.

              Enable Blinking Cursor (resource cursorblink)
                     Enable  (or  disable)  the blinking-cursor feature.  This corresponds to the -bc option and
                     the cursorBlink resource.  There is also an escape sequence (see Xterm Control  Sequences).
                     The  menu  entry  and the escape sequence states are XOR'd: if both are enabled, the cursor
                     will not blink, if only one is enabled, the cursor will blink.

              Enable Alternate Screen Switching (resource titeInhibit)
                     Enable (or disable) switching between the normal and alternate screens.   This  corresponds
                     to the titeInhibit resource.  There is no corresponding command-line option.

              Enable Active Icon (resource activeicon)
                     Enable  (or  disable)  the active-icon feature.  This corresponds to the -ai option and the
                     activeIcon resource.

              Sixel Scrolling (resource sixelScrolling)
                     When enabled, sixel graphics are positioned at the current text cursor location, scroll the
                     image vertically if larger than the screen, and leave the text cursor at the start  of  the
                     next complete line after the image when returning to text mode (this is the default).  When
                     disabled, sixel graphics are positioned at the upper left of the screen, are cropped to fit
                     the  screen,  and  do  not  affect  the  text  cursor  location.   This  corresponds to the
                     sixelScrolling resource.  There is no corresponding command-line option.

              Private Color Registers (resource privateColorRegisters)
                     If xterm is configured to support ReGIS graphics, this controls  whether  a  private  color
                     palette can be used.

                     When  enabled,  each  graphic  image  uses  a  separate  set of color registers, so that it
                     essentially has a private palette (this is the default).  If it is not  set,  all  graphics
                     images  share  a  common  set  of registers which is how sixel and ReGIS graphics worked on
                     actual hardware.  The default is likely a more useful mode on modern TrueColor hardware.

                     This corresponds to the privateColorRegisters resource.  There is no corresponding command-
                     line option.

       VTxxx Commands:

              Do Soft Reset (resource softreset)
                     Reset scroll regions.  This can be convenient when some program has left the scroll regions
                     set incorrectly (often a problem when using VMS or TOPS-20).  This corresponds to the VT220
                     DECSTR control sequence.

              Do Full Reset (resource hardreset)
                     The full reset entry will clear the screen, reset tabs to every eight  columns,  and  reset
                     the  terminal  modes  (such  as  wrap and smooth scroll) to their initial states just after
                     xterm has finished processing the command line options.  This corresponds to the VT102  RIS
                     control  sequence,  with  a  few  obvious  differences.   For  example, your session is not
                     disconnected as a real VT102 would do.

              Reset and Clear Saved Lines (resource clearsavedlines)
                     Perform a full reset, and also clear the saved lines.

       Commands for setting the current screen:

              Show Tek Window (resource tekshow)
                     When enabled, pops the Tektronix 4014 window up (makes it visible).  When  disabled,  hides
                     the Tektronix 4014 window.

              Switch to Tek Mode (resource tekmode)
                     When  enabled, pops the Tektronix 4014 window up if it is not already visible, and switches
                     the input stream to that window.  When  disabled,  hides  the  Tektronix  4014  window  and
                     switches input back to the VTxxx window.

              Hide VT Window (resource vthide)
                     When enabled, hides the VTxxx window, shows the Tektronix 4014 window if it was not already
                     visible  and  switches  the  input  stream  to that window.  When disabled, shows the VTxxx
                     window, and switches the input stream to that window.

              Show Alternate Screen (resource altscreen)
                     When enabled, shows the alternate screen.  When disabled, shows the  normal  screen.   Note
                     that the normal screen may have saved lines; the alternate screen does not.

   VT Fonts
       The  xterm fontMenu pops up when when the “control” key and pointer button three are pressed in a window.
       It sets the font used in the VTxxx window, or modifies the way the font is specified or displayed.  There
       are several sections.

       The first section allows you to select the font from a set of alternatives:

              Default (resource fontdefault)
                     Set the font to the default, i.e., that given by the *VT100.font resource.

              Unreadable (resource font1)
                     Set the font to that given by the *VT100.font1 resource.

              Tiny (resource font2)
                     Set the font to that given by the *VT100.font2 resource.

              Small (resource font3)
                     Set the font to that given by the *VT100.font3 resource.

              Medium (resource font4)
                     Set the font to that given by the *VT100.font4 resource.

              Large (resource font5)
                     Set the font to that given by the *VT100.font5 resource.

              Huge (resource font6)
                     Set the font to that given by the *VT100.font6 resource.

              Escape Sequence (resource fontescape)
                     This allows you to set the font last specified by the Set Font escape sequence  (see  Xterm
                     Control Sequences).

              Selection (resource fontsel)
                     This  allows  you  to  set  the font specified the current selection as a font name (if the
                     PRIMARY selection is owned).

       The second section allows you to modify the way it is displayed:

              Bold Fonts (resource allow-bold-fonts)
                     This is normally checked (enabled).  When unchecked, xterm will not use  bold  fonts.   The
                     setting corresponds to the allowBoldFonts resource.

              Line-Drawing Characters (resource font-linedrawing)
                     When  set, tells xterm to draw its own line-drawing characters.  Otherwise it relies on the
                     font containing these.  Compare to the forceBoxChars resource.

              Packed Font (resource font-packed)
                     When set, tells  xterm  to  use  the  minimum  glyph-width  from  a  font  when  displaying
                     characters.  Use the maximum width (unchecked) to help display proportional fonts.  Compare
                     to the forcePackedFont resource.

              Doublesized Characters (resource font-doublesize)
                     When  set, xterm may ask the font server to produce scaled versions of the normal font, for
                     VT102 double-size characters.

       The third section allows you to modify the way it is specified:

              TrueType Fonts (resource render-font)
                     If the renderFont and corresponding resources were set, this is a further  control  whether
                     xterm will actually use the Xft library calls to obtain a font.

              UTF-8 Encoding (resource utf8-mode)
                     This  controls  whether  xterm  uses  UTF-8  encoding  of  input/output.   It is useful for
                     temporarily switching xterm to display text from an application which does not  follow  the
                     locale settings.  It corresponds to the utf8 resource.

              UTF-8 Fonts (resource utf8-fonts)
                     This  controls  whether  xterm  uses UTF-8 fonts for display.  It is useful for temporarily
                     switching xterm to display text from an  application  which  does  not  follow  the  locale
                     settings.  It combines the utf8 and utf8Fonts resources, subject to the locale resource.

              UTF-8 Titles (resource utf8-title)
                     This  controls  whether  xterm  accepts  UTF-8  encoding  for  title control sequences.  It
                     corresponds to the utf8Fonts resource.

                     Initially the checkmark is set according to both the utf8 and  utf8Fonts  resource  values.
                     If  the  latter  is  set to “always”, the checkmark is disabled.  Likewise, if there are no
                     fonts given in the utf8Fonts subresources, then the checkmark also is disabled.

                     The standard XTerm app-defaults file defines both sets of  fonts,  while  the  UXTerm  app-
                     defaults file defines only one set.  Assuming the standard app-defaults files, this command
                     will launch xterm able to switch between UTF-8 and ISO-8859-1 encoded fonts:

                       uxterm -class XTerm

       The  fourth section allows you to enable or disable special operations which can be controlled by writing
       escape sequences to the terminal.  These are disabled if the SendEvents feature is enabled:

              Allow Color Ops (resource allow-font-ops)
                     This corresponds to the allowColorOps resource.  Enable or disable control  sequences  that
                     set/query the colors.

              Allow Font Ops (resource allow-font-ops)
                     This  corresponds  to  the allowFontOps resource.  Enable or disable control sequences that
                     set/query the font.

              Allow Mouse Ops (resource allow-mouse-ops)
                     Enable or disable control sequences that cause the terminal to  send  escape  sequences  on
                     pointer-clicks and movement.  This corresponds to the allowMouseOps resource.

              Allow Tcap Ops (resource allow-tcap-ops)
                     Enable  or  disable  control sequences that query the terminal's notion of its function-key
                     strings, as termcap  or  terminfo  capabilities.   This  corresponds  to  the  allowTcapOps
                     resource.

              Allow Title Ops (resource allow-title-ops)
                     Enable  or  disable  control  sequences  that  modify  the window title or icon name.  This
                     corresponds to the allowTitleOps resource.

              Allow Window Ops (resource allow-window-ops)
                     Enable or disable extended window control sequences (as used in dtterm).  This  corresponds
                     to the allowWindowOps resource.

   Tek Options
       The  xterm tekMenu sets various modes in the Tektronix emulation, and is popped up when the “control” key
       and pointer button two are pressed in the Tektronix window.  The current font  size  is  checked  in  the
       modes section of the menu.

              Large Characters (resource tektextlarge)

              #2 Size Characters (resource tektext2)

              #3 Size Characters (resource tektext3)

              Small Characters (resource tektextsmall)

       Commands:

              PAGE (resource tekpage)
                     Clear the Tektronix window.

              RESET (resource tekreset)

              COPY (resource tekcopy)

       Windows:

              Show VT Window (resource vtshow)

              Switch to VT Mode (resource vtmode)

              Hide Tek Window (resource tekhide)

SECURITY

       X environments differ in their security consciousness.

       • Most  servers,  run  under  xdm,  are  capable  of using a “magic cookie” authorization scheme that can
         provide a reasonable level of security for many people.  If your server  is  only  using  a  host-based
         mechanism  to  control  access  to  the server (see xhost(1)), then if you enable access for a host and
         other users are also permitted to run clients on that same host, it is possible that someone can run an
         application which uses the basic services of the X protocol to snoop on  your  activities,  potentially
         capturing a transcript of everything you type at the keyboard.

       • Any process which has access to your X display can manipulate it in ways that you might not anticipate,
         even  redirecting  your  keyboard  to itself and sending events to your application's windows.  This is
         true even with the “magic cookie”  authorization  scheme.   While  the  allowSendEvents  provides  some
         protection  against  rogue  applications  tampering  with  your programs, guarding against a snooper is
         harder.

       • The X input extension for instance  allows  an  application  to  bypass  all  of  the  other  (limited)
         authorization and security features, including the GrabKeyboard protocol.

       • The  possibility  of an application spying on your keystrokes is of particular concern when you want to
         type in a password or other sensitive data.  The best solution to this  problem  is  to  use  a  better
         authorization mechanism than is provided by X.

       Subject to all of these caveats, a simple mechanism exists for protecting keyboard input in xterm.

       The xterm menu (see MENUS above) contains a Secure Keyboard entry which, when enabled, attempts to ensure
       that  all  keyboard  input  is directed only to xterm (using the GrabKeyboard protocol request).  When an
       application prompts you for a password (or other sensitive data), you can enable  Secure  Keyboard  using
       the menu, type in the data, and then disable Secure Keyboard using the menu again.

       • This ensures that you know which window is accepting your keystrokes.

       • It  cannot  ensure  that  there  are  no  processes  which  have access to your X display that might be
         observing the keystrokes as well.

       Only one X client at a time can grab the keyboard, so when you attempt to enable Secure Keyboard  it  may
       fail.  In this case, the bell will sound.  If the Secure Keyboard succeeds, the foreground and background
       colors will be exchanged (as if you selected the Enable Reverse Video entry in the Modes menu); they will
       be  exchanged  again  when  you  exit  secure mode.  If the colors do not switch, then you should be very
       suspicious that you are being spoofed.  If the application you  are  running  displays  a  prompt  before
       asking  for the password, it is safest to enter secure mode before the prompt gets displayed, and to make
       sure that the prompt gets displayed correctly (in  the  new  colors),  to  minimize  the  probability  of
       spoofing.   You  can  also  bring  up  the menu again and make sure that a check mark appears next to the
       entry.

       Secure Keyboard mode will be disabled automatically if your xterm window becomes iconified (or  otherwise
       unmapped),  or  if you start up a reparenting window manager (that places a title bar or other decoration
       around the window) while in Secure Keyboard mode.  (This is a  feature  of  the  X  protocol  not  easily
       overcome.)   When  this  happens, the foreground and background colors will be switched back and the bell
       will sound in warning.

CHARACTER CLASSES

       Clicking the left pointer button twice in rapid succession (double-clicking) causes all characters of the
       same class (e.g., letters, white space, punctuation) to be selected as a “word”.  Since different  people
       have  different  preferences  for what should be selected (for example, should filenames be selected as a
       whole or only the separate subnames), the default mapping can  be  overridden  through  the  use  of  the
       charClass (class CharClass) resource.

       This resource is a series of comma-separated range:value pairs.

       • The  range  is either a single number or low-high in the range of 0 to 65535, corresponding to the code
         for the character or characters to be set.

       • The value is arbitrary.  For example, the  default  table  uses  the  character  number  of  the  first
         character  occurring in the set.  When not in UTF-8 mode, only the first 256 entries of this table will
         be used.

       The default table starts as follows -

         static int charClass[256] = {
         /* NUL  SOH  STX  ETX  EOT  ENQ  ACK  BEL */
             32,   1,   1,   1,   1,   1,   1,   1,
         /*  BS   HT   NL   VT   NP   CR   SO   SI */
              1,  32,   1,   1,   1,   1,   1,   1,
         /* DLE  DC1  DC2  DC3  DC4  NAK  SYN  ETB */
              1,   1,   1,   1,   1,   1,   1,   1,
         /* CAN   EM  SUB  ESC   FS   GS   RS   US */
              1,   1,   1,   1,   1,   1,   1,   1,
         /*  SP    !    "    #    $    %    &    ' */
             32,  33,  34,  35,  36,  37,  38,  39,
         /*   (    )    *    +    ,    -    .    / */
             40,  41,  42,  43,  44,  45,  46,  47,
         /*   0    1    2    3    4    5    6    7 */
             48,  48,  48,  48,  48,  48,  48,  48,
         /*   8    9    :    ;    <    =    >    ? */
             48,  48,  58,  59,  60,  61,  62,  63,
         /*   @    A    B    C    D    E    F    G */
             64,  48,  48,  48,  48,  48,  48,  48,
         /*   H    I    J    K    L    M    N    O */
             48,  48,  48,  48,  48,  48,  48,  48,
         /*   P    Q    R    S    T    U    V    W */
             48,  48,  48,  48,  48,  48,  48,  48,
         /*   X    Y    Z    [    \    ]    ^    _ */
             48,  48,  48,  91,  92,  93,  94,  48,
         /*   `    a    b    c    d    e    f    g */
             96,  48,  48,  48,  48,  48,  48,  48,
         /*   h    i    j    k    l    m    n    o */
             48,  48,  48,  48,  48,  48,  48,  48,
         /*   p    q    r    s    t    u    v    w */
             48,  48,  48,  48,  48,  48,  48,  48,
         /*   x    y    z    {    |    }    ~  DEL */
             48,  48,  48, 123, 124, 125, 126,   1,
         /* x80  x81  x82  x83  IND  NEL  SSA  ESA */
              1,   1,   1,   1,   1,   1,   1,   1,
         /* HTS  HTJ  VTS  PLD  PLU   RI  SS2  SS3 */
              1,   1,   1,   1,   1,   1,   1,   1,
         /* DCS  PU1  PU2  STS  CCH   MW  SPA  EPA */
              1,   1,   1,   1,   1,   1,   1,   1,
         /* x98  x99  x9A  CSI   ST  OSC   PM  APC */
              1,   1,   1,   1,   1,   1,   1,   1,
         /*   -    i   c/    L   ox   Y-    |   So */
            160, 161, 162, 163, 164, 165, 166, 167,
         /*  ..   c0   ip   <<    _        R0    - */
            168, 169, 170, 171, 172, 173, 174, 175,
         /*   o   +-    2    3    '    u   q|    . */
            176, 177, 178, 179, 180, 181, 182, 183,
         /*   ,    1    2   >>  1/4  1/2  3/4    ? */
            184, 185, 186, 187, 188, 189, 190, 191,
         /*  A`   A'   A^   A~   A:   Ao   AE   C, */
             48,  48,  48,  48,  48,  48,  48,  48,
         /*  E`   E'   E^   E:   I`   I'   I^   I: */
             48,  48,  48,  48,  48,  48,  48,  48,
         /*  D-   N~   O`   O'   O^   O~   O:    X */
             48,  48,  48,  48,  48,  48,  48, 215,
         /*  O/   U`   U'   U^   U:   Y'    P    B */
             48,  48,  48,  48,  48,  48,  48,  48,
         /*  a`   a'   a^   a~   a:   ao   ae   c, */
             48,  48,  48,  48,  48,  48,  48,  48,
         /*  e`   e'   e^   e:   i`   i'   i^   i: */
             48,  48,  48,  48,  48,  48,  48,  48,
         /*   d   n~   o`   o'   o^   o~   o:   -: */
             48,  48,  48,  48,  48,  48,  48, 247,
         /*  o/   u`   u'   u^   u:   y'    P   y: */
             48,  48,  48,  48,  48,  48,  48,  48};

              For example, the string “33:48,37:48,45-47:48,38:48” indicates that the exclamation mark,  percent
              sign,  dash,  period, slash, and ampersand characters should be treated the same way as characters
              and numbers.  This is useful for cutting and pasting electronic mailing addresses and filenames.

KEY BINDINGS

       It is possible to rebind keys (or sequences of keys) to arbitrary strings  for  input,  by  changing  the
       translations  resources  for the vt100 or tek4014 widgets.  Changing the translations resource for events
       other than key and button events is not expected, and will cause unpredictable behavior.

   Actions
       The following actions are provided for use within the vt100 or tek4014 translations resources:

       allow-bold-fonts(on/off/toggle)
               This action sets, unsets or toggles the allowBoldFonts resource and is also invoked by the allow-
               bold-fonts entry in fontMenu.

       allow-color-ops(on/off/toggle)
               This action sets, unsets or toggles the allowColorOps resource and is also invoked by the  allow-
               color-ops entry in fontMenu.

       allow-font-ops(on/off/toggle)
               This  action  sets, unsets or toggles the allowFontOps resource and is also invoked by the allow-
               font-ops entry in fontMenu.

       allow-mouse-ops(on/off/toggle)
               This action sets, unsets or toggles the allowMousepOps resource and is also invoked by the allow-
               mouse-ops entry in fontMenu.

       allow-send-events(on/off/toggle)
               This action sets, unsets or toggles the allowSendEvents resource  and  is  also  invoked  by  the
               allowsends entry in mainMenu.

       allow-tcap-ops(on/off/toggle)
               This  action  sets, unsets or toggles the allowTcapOps resource and is also invoked by the allow-
               tcap-ops entry in fontMenu.

       allow-title-ops(on/off/toggle)
               This action sets, unsets or toggles the allowTitleOps resource and is also invoked by the  allow-
               title-ops entry in fontMenu.

       allow-window-ops(on/off/toggle)
               This action sets, unsets or toggles the allowWindowOps resource and is also invoked by the allow-
               window-ops entry in fontMenu.

       alt-sends-escape()
               This action toggles the state of the altSendsEscape resource.

       bell([percent])
               This action rings the keyboard bell at the specified percentage above or below the base volume.

       clear-saved-lines()
               This  action  does  hard-reset()  and  also  clears the history of lines saved off the top of the
               screen.  It is also invoked from the clearsavedlines entry in vtMenu.  The effect is identical to
               a hardware reset (RIS) control sequence.

       copy-selection(destname [, ...])
               This action puts the currently selected text into all of the selections or  cutbuffers  specified
               by  destname.   Unlike  select-end,  it  does  not  send a mouse position or otherwise modify the
               internal selection state.

       create-menu(m/v/f/t)
               This action creates one of the menus used by xterm, if it has not been previously  created.   The
               parameter values are the menu names: mainMenu, vtMenu, fontMenu, tekMenu, respectively.

       dabbrev-expand()
               Expands  the  word  before  cursor  by  searching  in the preceding text on the screen and in the
               scrollback buffer for words starting with that abbreviation.  Repeating dabbrev-expand()  several
               times  in  sequence  searches for an alternative expansion by looking farther back.  Lack of more
               matches is signaled by a bell.  Attempts to expand an empty word (i.e., when cursor  is  preceded
               by a space) yield successively all previous words.  Consecutive identical expansions are ignored.
               The  word  here  is  defined  as a sequence of non-whitespace characters.  This feature partially
               emulates the behavior of “dynamic abbreviation” expansion in Emacs (bound there to M-/).  Here is
               a resource setting for xterm which will do the same thing:

                 *VT100*translations:    #override \n\
                         Meta <KeyPress> /:dabbrev-expand()

       deiconify()
               Changes the window state back to normal, if it was iconified.

       delete-is-del()
               This action toggles the state of the deleteIsDEL resource.

       dired-button()
               Handles a button event (other than press and release) by  echoing  the  event's  position  (i.e.,
               character line and column) in the following format:

                       ^X ESC G <line+“ ”> <col+“ ”>

       exec-formatted(format, sourcename [, ...])
               Execute  an  external  command, using the current selection for part of the command's parameters.
               The first parameter, format gives the basic command.  Succeeding parameters specify the selection
               source as in insert-selection.

               The format parameter allows these substitutions:

               %%   inserts a "%".

               %P   the screen-position at the beginning of the highlighted  region,  as  a  semicolon-separated
                    pair of integers using the values that the CUP control sequence would use.

               %p   the screen-position after the beginning of the highlighted region, using the same convention
                    as “%P”.

               %S   the length of the string that “%s” would insert.

               %s   the content of the selection, unmodified.

               %T   the length of the string that “%t” would insert.

               %t   the  selection,  trimmed of leading/trailing whitespace.  Embedded spaces (and newlines) are
                    copied as is.

               %R   the length of the string that “%r” would insert.

               %r   the selection, trimmed of trailing whitespace.

               %V   the video attributes at the beginning of the highlighted region,  as  a  semicolon-separated
                    list of integers using the values that the SGR control sequence would use.

               %v   the  video  attributes after the end of the highlighted region, using the same convention as
                    “%V”.

               After constructing the command-string, xterm forks a subprocess and executes the  command,  which
               completes independently of xterm.

               For  example,  this  translation  would  invoke  a new xterm process to view a file whose name is
               selected while holding the shift key down.  The new process is started when the mouse  button  is
               released:

                 *VT100*translations: #override Shift \
                     <Btn1Up>:exec-formatted("xterm -e view '%t'", SELECT)

       exec-selectable(format, onClicks)
               Execute  an  external  command,  using  data  copied  from  the  screen for part of the command's
               parameters.  The first parameter, format gives the  basic  command  as  in  exec-formatted.   The
               second parameter specifies the method for copying the data as in the on2Clicks resource.

       fullscreen(on/off/toggle)
               This action sets, unsets or toggles the fullscreen resource.

       iconify()
               Iconifies the window.

       hard-reset()
               This  action  resets  the  scrolling  region,  tabs,  window size, and cursor keys and clears the
               screen.  It is also invoked from the hardreset entry in vtMenu.

       ignore()
               This action ignores the event but checks for special pointer position escape sequences.

       insert()
               This action inserts the character or string associated with the key that was pressed.

       insert-eight-bit()
               This action inserts an eight-bit (Meta) version of the character or string  associated  with  the
               key  that  was pressed.  Only single-byte values are treated specially.  The exact action depends
               on the value of the altSendsEscape and the metaSendsEscape and the eightBitInput resources.   The
               metaSendsEscape resource is tested first.  See the eightBitInput resource for a full discussion.

               The  term  “eight-bit”  is  misleading:  xterm  checks if the key is in the range 128 to 255 (the
               eighth bit is set).  If the value is in that range, depending on the resource values,  xterm  may
               then do one of the following:

               • add 128 to the value, setting its eighth bit,

               • send an ESC byte before the key, or

               • send the key unaltered.

       insert-formatted(format, sourcename [, ...])
               Insert the current selection or data related to it, formatted.  The first parameter, format gives
               the  template  for  the  data  as in exec-formatted.  Succeeding parameters specify the selection
               source as in insert-selection.

       insert-selectable(format, onClicks)
               Insert data copied from the screen, formatted.  The first parameter, format  gives  the  template
               for  the  data  as  in exec-formatted.  The second parameter specifies the method for copying the
               data as in the on2Clicks resource.

       insert-selection(sourcename [, ...])
               This action inserts the string found in the  selection  or  cutbuffer  indicated  by  sourcename.
               Sources  are  checked in the order given (case is significant) until one is found.  Commonly-used
               selections  include:  PRIMARY,  SECONDARY,  and  CLIPBOARD.   Cut  buffers  are  typically  named
               CUT_BUFFER0 through CUT_BUFFER7.

       insert-seven-bit()
               This  action is a synonym for insert().  The term “seven-bit” is misleading: it only implies that
               xterm does not try to add 128 to the key's value as in insert-eight-bit().

       interpret(control-sequence)
               Interpret the given control sequence locally, i.e., without passing it to the host.   This  works
               by  inserting  the  control  sequence  at the front of the input buffer.  Use “\” to escape octal
               digits in the string.  Xt does not allow you to put  a  null  character  (i.e.,  “\000”)  in  the
               string.

       keymap(name)
               This  action  dynamically  defines  a  new translation table whose resource name is name with the
               suffix “Keymap” (i.e., nameKeymap, where case  is  significant).   The  name  None  restores  the
               original translation table.

       larger-vt-font()
               Set the font to the next larger one, based on the font dimensions.  See also set-vt-font().

       load-vt-fonts(name[,class])
               Load  fontnames from the given subresource name and class.  That is, load the “*VT100.name.font”,
               resource as “*VT100.font” etc.  If no name is given, the original set of fontnames is restored.

               Unlike set-vt-font(), this does not affect the escape- and  select-fonts,  since  those  are  not
               based  on  resource  values.  It does affect the fonts loosely organized under the “Default” menu
               entry, including font, boldFont, wideFont and wideBoldFont.

       maximize()
               Resizes the window to fill the screen.

       meta-sends-escape()
               This action toggles the state of the metaSendsEscape resource.

       popup-menu(menuname)
               This action displays the specified popup  menu.   Valid  names  (case  is  significant)  include:
               mainMenu, vtMenu, fontMenu, and tekMenu.

       print(printer-flags)
               This action prints the window.  It is also invoked by the print entry in mainMenu.

               The  action  accepts  optional  parameters,  which  temporarily  override resource settings.  The
               parameter values are matched ignoring case:

               noFormFeed
                    no form feed will be sent at the end of the last  line  printed  (i.e.,  printerFormFeed  is
                    ``false'').

               FormFeed
                    a  form  feed  will  be  sent  at the end of the last line printed (i.e., printerFormFeed is
                    ``true'').

               noNewLine
                    no newline will be sent at the end of the last line  printed,  and  wrapped  lines  will  be
                    combined into long lines (i.e., printerNewLine is ``false'').

               NewLine
                    a  newline  will  be sent at the end of the last line printed, and each line will be limited
                    (by adding a newline) to the screen width (i.e., printerNewLine is ``true'').

               noAttrs
                    the page is printed without attributes (i.e., printAttributes is ``0'').

               monoAttrs
                    the page is printed with monochrome (vt220) attributes (i.e., printAttributes is ``1'').

               colorAttrs
                    the page is printed with ANSI color attributes (i.e., printAttributes is ``2'').

       print-everything(printer-flags)
               This action sends the entire text history, in addition to the  text  currently  visible,  to  the
               program  given  in  the  printerCommand  resource.  It allows the same optional parameters as the
               print action.  With a suitable printer command, the action can be used to load the  text  history
               in an editor.

       print-immediate()
               Sends  the text of the current window directly to a file, as specified by the printFileImmediate,
               printModeImmediate and printOptsImmediate resources.

       print-on-error()
               Toggles a flag telling xterm that if it exits with an X error, to send the text  of  the  current
               window  directly  to  a  file,  as  specified  by  the  printFileOnXError,  printModeOnXError and
               printOptsOnXError resources.

       print-redir()
               This action toggles the printerControlMode between 0 and 2.  The corresponding popup  menu  entry
               is useful for switching the printer off if you happen to change your mind after deciding to print
               random binary files on the terminal.

       quit()
               This  action sends a SIGHUP to the subprogram and exits.  It is also invoked by the quit entry in
               mainMenu.

       readline-button()
               Supports the optional readline feature by echoing repeated cursor  forward  or  backward  control
               sequences  on button release event, to request that the host application update its notion of the
               cursor's position to match the button event.

       redraw()
               This action redraws the window.  It is also invoked by the redraw entry in mainMenu.

       restore()
               Restores the window to the size before it was last maximized.

       scroll-back(count [,units [,mouse] ])
               This action scrolls the text window backward so that text that had previously  scrolled  off  the
               top of the screen is now visible.

               The count argument indicates the number of units (which may be page, halfpage, pixel, or line) by
               which to scroll.

               An  adjustment  can  be  specified  for these values by appending a “+” or “-” sign followed by a
               number, e.g., page-2 to specify 2 lines less than a page.

               If the third parameter mouse is given, the action is ignored when mouse reporting is enabled.

       scroll-forw(count [,units [,mouse] ])
               This action is similar to scroll-back except that it scrolls in the other direction.

       secure()
               This action toggles the Secure Keyboard mode (see SECURITY), and is invoked  from  the  securekbd
               entry in mainMenu.

       scroll-lock(on/off/toggle)
               This  action  sets,  unsets  or  toggles  internal state which tells xterm whether Scroll Lock is
               active, subject to the allowScrollLock resource.

       select-cursor-end(destname [, ...])
               This action is similar to select-end except that it should be used with select-cursor-start.

       select-cursor-extend()
               This action is similar to select-extend except that it should be used with select-cursor-start.

       select-cursor-start()
               This action is similar to select-start except that it begins the selection at  the  current  text
               cursor position.

       select-end(destname [, ...])
               This  action  puts the currently selected text into all of the selections or cutbuffers specified
               by destname.  It also sends a mouse position and updates the internal selection state to  reflect
               the end of the selection process.

       select-extend()
               This  action  tracks  the  pointer  and extends the selection.  It should only be bound to Motion
               events.

       select-set()
               This action stores text  that  corresponds  to  the  current  selection,  without  affecting  the
               selection mode.

       select-start()
               This  action  begins  text selection at the current pointer location.  See the section on POINTER
               USAGE for information on making selections.

       send-signal(signame)
               This action sends the signal named by signame to the  xterm  subprocess  (the  shell  or  program
               specified  with  the  -e  command  line  option).   It  is also invoked by the suspend, continue,
               interrupt, hangup, terminate, and kill entries in mainMenu.  Allowable signal names are (case  is
               not  significant):  tstp (if supported by the operating system), suspend (same as tstp), cont (if
               supported by the operating system), int, hup, term, quit, alrm, alarm (same as alrm) and kill.

       set-8-bit-control(on/off/toggle)
               This action sets, unsets or toggles the eightBitControl resource.  It is also  invoked  from  the
               8-bit-control entry in vtMenu.

       set-allow132(on/off/toggle)
               This  action  sets,  unsets  or  toggles the c132 resource.  It is also invoked from the allow132
               entry in vtMenu.

       set-altscreen(on/off/toggle)
               This action sets, unsets or toggles between the alternate and current screens.

       set-appcursor(on/off/toggle)
               This action sets, unsets or toggles the handling Application Cursor Key mode and is also  invoked
               by the appcursor entry in vtMenu.

       set-appkeypad(on/off/toggle)
               This  action  sets, unsets or toggles the handling of Application Keypad mode and is also invoked
               by the appkeypad entry in vtMenu.

       set-autolinefeed(on/off/toggle)
               This action sets, unsets or toggles automatic insertion of linefeeds.  It is also invoked by  the
               autolinefeed entry in vtMenu.

       set-autowrap(on/off/toggle)
               This  action sets, unsets or toggles automatic wrapping of long lines.  It is also invoked by the
               autowrap entry in vtMenu.

       set-backarrow(on/off/toggle)
               This action sets, unsets or toggles the backarrowKey resource.   It  is  also  invoked  from  the
               backarrow key entry in vtMenu.

       set-bellIsUrgent(on/off/toggle)
               This  action  sets,  unsets  or  toggles  the  bellIsUrgent  resource.  It is also invoked by the
               bellIsUrgent entry in vtMenu.

       set-cursorblink(on/off/toggle)
               This action sets, unsets or toggles the cursorBlink  resource.   It  is  also  invoked  from  the
               cursorblink entry in vtMenu.

       set-cursesemul(on/off/toggle)
               This  action sets, unsets or toggles the curses resource.  It is also invoked from the cursesemul
               entry in vtMenu.

       set-font-doublesize(on/off/toggle)
               This action sets, unsets or toggles the fontDoublesize resource.  It is also invoked by the font-
               doublesize entry in fontMenu.

       set-hp-function-keys(on/off/toggle)
               This action sets, unsets or toggles the hpFunctionKeys resource.   It  is  also  invoked  by  the
               hpFunctionKeys entry in mainMenu.

       set-jumpscroll(on/off/toggle)
               This  action  sets,  unsets  or  toggles  the  jumpscroll  resource.   It  is also invoked by the
               jumpscroll entry in vtMenu.

       set-font-linedrawing(on/off/toggle)
               This action sets, unsets or toggles the xterm's state regarding  whether  the  current  font  has
               line-drawing  characters  and  whether  it  should draw them directly.  It is also invoked by the
               font-linedrawing entry in fontMenu.

       set-font-packed(on/off/toggle)
               This action sets, unsets or toggles the forcePackedFont resource which controls use of the font's
               minimum or maximum glyph width.  It is also invoked by the font-packed entry in fontMenu.

       set-keep-clipboard(on/off/toggle)
               This action sets, unsets or toggles the keepClipboard resource.

       set-keep-selection(on/off/toggle)
               This action sets, unsets or toggles the keepSelection  resource.   It  is  also  invoked  by  the
               keepSelection entry in vtMenu.

       set-logging(on/off/toggle)
               This action sets, unsets or toggles the state of the logging option.

       set-old-function-keys(on/off/toggle)
               This action sets, unsets or toggles the state of legacy function keys.  It is also invoked by the
               oldFunctionKeys entry in mainMenu.

       set-marginbell(on/off/toggle)
               This action sets, unsets or toggles the marginBell resource.

       set-num-lock(on/off/toggle)
               This action toggles the state of the numLock resource.

       set-pop-on-bell(on/off/toggle)
               This  action sets, unsets or toggles the popOnBell resource.  It is also invoked by the poponbell
               entry in vtMenu.

       set-private-colors(on/off/toggle)
               This action sets, unsets or toggles the privateColorRegisters resource.

       set-render-font(on/off/toggle)
               This action sets, unsets or toggles the renderFont resource.  It is also invoked by  the  render-
               font entry in fontMenu.

       set-reverse-video(on/off/toggle)
               This  action  sets,  unsets  or  toggles  the  reverseVideo  resource.  It is also invoked by the
               reversevideo entry in vtMenu.

       set-reversewrap(on/off/toggle)
               This action sets, unsets or toggles  the  reverseWrap  resource.   It  is  also  invoked  by  the
               reversewrap entry in vtMenu.

       set-scroll-on-key(on/off/toggle)
               This  action  sets,  unsets  or  toggles  the  scrollKey  resource.   It is also invoked from the
               scrollkey entry in vtMenu.

       set-scroll-on-tty-output(on/off/toggle)
               This action sets, unsets or toggles the scrollTtyOutput resource.  It is also  invoked  from  the
               scrollttyoutput entry in vtMenu.

       set-scrollbar(on/off/toggle)
               This  action sets, unsets or toggles the scrollbar resource.  It is also invoked by the scrollbar
               entry in vtMenu.

       set-sco-function-keys(on/off/toggle)
               This action sets, unsets or toggles the scoFunctionKeys resource.  It  is  also  invoked  by  the
               scoFunctionKeys entry in mainMenu.

       set-select(on/off/toggle)
               This  action  sets,  unsets or toggles the selectToClipboard resource.  It is also invoked by the
               selectToClipboard entry in vtMenu.

       set-sixel-scrolling(on/off/toggle)
               This action toggles between inline (sixel scrolling) and absolute positioning.  It  can  also  be
               controlled via DEC private mode 80 (DECSDM) or from the sixelScrolling entry in the btMenu.

       set-sun-function-keys(on/off/toggle)
               This  action  sets,  unsets  or  toggles the sunFunctionKeys resource.  It is also invoked by the
               sunFunctionKeys entry in mainMenu.

       set-sun-keyboard(on/off/toggle)
               This action sets, unsets or toggles  the  sunKeyboard  resource.   It  is  also  invoked  by  the
               sunKeyboard entry in mainMenu.

       set-tek-text(large/2/3/small)
               This  action  sets  the  font  used in the Tektronix window to the value of the selected resource
               according to the argument.  The argument can be either a keyword or single-letter alias, as shown
               in parentheses:

               large (l)
                    Use resource fontLarge, same as menu entry tektextlarge.

               two (2)
                    Use resource font2, same as menu entry tektext2.

               three (3)
                    Use resource font3, same as menu entry tektext3.

               small (s)
                    Use resource fontSmall, same as menu entry tektextsmall.

       set-terminal-type(type)
               This action directs output to either the vt or tek windows, according to the type string.  It  is
               also invoked by the tekmode entry in vtMenu and the vtmode entry in tekMenu.

       set-titeInhibit(on/off/toggle)
               This  action  sets,  unsets or toggles the titeInhibit resource, which controls switching between
               the alternate and current screens.

       set-toolbar(on/off/toggle)
               This action sets, unsets or toggles the toolbar feature.  It is also invoked by the toolbar entry
               in mainMenu.

       set-utf8-fonts(on/off/toggle)
               This action sets, unsets or toggles the utf8Fonts resource.  It is also invoked by the utf8-fonts
               entry in fontMenu.

       set-utf8-mode(on/off/toggle)
               This action sets, unsets or toggles the utf8 resource.  It is also invoked by the utf8-mode entry
               in fontMenu.

       set-utf8-title(on/off/toggle)
               This action sets, unsets or toggles the utf8Title resource.  It is also invoked by the utf8-title
               entry in fontMenu.

       set-visibility(vt/tek,on/off/toggle)
               This action sets, unsets or toggles whether or not the vt or tek windows are visible.  It is also
               invoked from the tekshow and vthide entries in vtMenu and  the  vtshow  and  tekhide  entries  in
               tekMenu.

       set-visual-bell(on/off/toggle)
               This  action  sets,  unsets  or  toggles  the  visualBell  resource.   It  is also invoked by the
               visualbell entry in vtMenu.

       set-vt-font(d/1/2/3/4/5/6/e/s [,normalfont [, boldfont]])
               This action sets the font or fonts currently being used in the VTxxx window.  The first  argument
               is a single character that specifies the font to be used:

               d or D indicate the default font (the font initially used when xterm was started),

               1 through 6 indicate the fonts specified by the font1 through font6 resources,

               e  or  E indicate the normal and bold fonts that have been set through escape codes (or specified
                      as the second and third action arguments, respectively), and

               s or S indicate the font selection (as made by programs such as  xfontsel(1))  indicated  by  the
                      second action argument.

               If  xterm  is  configured  to  support wide characters, an additional two optional parameters are
               recognized for the e argument: wide font and wide bold font.

       smaller-vt-font()
               Set the font to the next smaller one, based on the font dimensions.  See also set-vt-font().

       soft-reset()
               This action resets the scrolling region.  It is also invoked from the softreset entry in  vtMenu.
               The effect is identical to a soft reset (DECSTR) control sequence.

       spawn-new-terminal(params)
               Spawn  a  new  xterm  process.   This  is available on systems which have a modern version of the
               process filesystem, e.g., “/proc”, which xterm can read.

               Use the “cwd” process entry, e.g., /proc/12345/cwd to obtain the working directory of the process
               which is running in the current xterm.

               On systems which have the “exe” process entry, e.g., /proc/12345/exe,  use  this  to  obtain  the
               actual executable.  Otherwise, use the $PATH variable to find xterm.

               If parameters are given in the action, pass them to the new xterm process.

       start-extend()
               This  action  is  similar  to  select-start  except that the selection is extended to the current
               pointer location.

       start-cursor-extend()
               This action is similar to select-extend except that the selection is extended to the current text
               cursor position.

       string(string)
               This action inserts the specified text string as if it had been typed.  Quotation is necessary if
               the string contains whitespace or non-alphanumeric characters.  If  the  string  argument  begins
               with the characters “0x”, it is interpreted as a hex character constant.

       tek-copy()
               This action copies the escape codes used to generate the current window contents to a file in the
               current  directory  beginning  with  the name COPY.  It is also invoked from the tekcopy entry in
               tekMenu.

       tek-page()
               This action clears the Tektronix window.  It is also invoked by the tekpage entry in tekMenu.

       tek-reset()
               This action resets the Tektronix window.  It is also invoked by the tekreset entry in tekMenu.

       vi-button()
               Handles a button event (other than press and release) by echoing a control sequence computed from
               the event's line number in the screen relative to the current line:

                       ESC ^P
               or
                       ESC ^N

               according to whether the event is before, or after the current line, respectively.   The  ^N  (or
               ^P)  is  repeated  once  for each line that the event differs from the current line.  The control
               sequence is omitted altogether if the button event is on the current line.

       visual-bell()
               This action flashes the window quickly.

       The Tektronix window also has the following action:

       gin-press(l/L/m/M/r/R)
               This action sends the indicated graphics input code.

   Default Key Bindings
       The default bindings in the VTxxx window use the SELECT token, which  is  set  by  the  selectToClipboard
       resource.  These are for the vt100 widget:

                   Shift <KeyPress> Prior:scroll-back(1,halfpage) \n\
                    Shift <KeyPress> Next:scroll-forw(1,halfpage) \n\
                  Shift <KeyPress> Select:select-cursor-start() \
                                          select-cursor-end(SELECT, CUT_BUFFER0) \n\
                  Shift <KeyPress> Insert:insert-selection(SELECT, CUT_BUFFER0) \n\
                          Alt <Key>Return:fullscreen() \n\
                 <KeyRelease> Scroll_Lock:scroll-lock() \n\
             Shift~Ctrl <KeyPress> KP_Add:larger-vt-font() \n\
             Shift Ctrl <KeyPress> KP_Add:smaller-vt-font() \n\
             Shift <KeyPress> KP_Subtract:smaller-vt-font() \n\
                         ~Meta <KeyPress>:insert-seven-bit() \n\
                          Meta <KeyPress>:insert-eight-bit() \n\
                         !Ctrl <Btn1Down>:popup-menu(mainMenu) \n\
                    !Lock Ctrl <Btn1Down>:popup-menu(mainMenu) \n\
          !Lock Ctrl @Num_Lock <Btn1Down>:popup-menu(mainMenu) \n\
              ! @Num_Lock Ctrl <Btn1Down>:popup-menu(mainMenu) \n\
                         ~Meta <Btn1Down>:select-start() \n\
                       ~Meta <Btn1Motion>:select-extend() \n\
                         !Ctrl <Btn2Down>:popup-menu(vtMenu) \n\
                    !Lock Ctrl <Btn2Down>:popup-menu(vtMenu) \n\
          !Lock Ctrl @Num_Lock <Btn2Down>:popup-menu(vtMenu) \n\
              ! @Num_Lock Ctrl <Btn2Down>:popup-menu(vtMenu) \n\
                   ~Ctrl ~Meta <Btn2Down>:ignore() \n\
                          Meta <Btn2Down>:clear-saved-lines() \n\
                     ~Ctrl ~Meta <Btn2Up>:insert-selection(SELECT, CUT_BUFFER0) \n\
                         !Ctrl <Btn3Down>:popup-menu(fontMenu) \n\
                    !Lock Ctrl <Btn3Down>:popup-menu(fontMenu) \n\
          !Lock Ctrl @Num_Lock <Btn3Down>:popup-menu(fontMenu) \n\
              ! @Num_Lock Ctrl <Btn3Down>:popup-menu(fontMenu) \n\
                   ~Ctrl ~Meta <Btn3Down>:start-extend() \n\
                       ~Meta <Btn3Motion>:select-extend() \n\
                          Ctrl <Btn4Down>:scroll-back(1,halfpage,m) \n\
                     Lock Ctrl <Btn4Down>:scroll-back(1,halfpage,m) \n\
           Lock @Num_Lock Ctrl <Btn4Down>:scroll-back(1,halfpage,m) \n\
                @Num_Lock Ctrl <Btn4Down>:scroll-back(1,halfpage,m) \n\
                               <Btn4Down>:scroll-back(5,line,m)     \n\
                          Ctrl <Btn5Down>:scroll-forw(1,halfpage,m) \n\
                     Lock Ctrl <Btn5Down>:scroll-forw(1,halfpage,m) \n\
           Lock @Num_Lock Ctrl <Btn5Down>:scroll-forw(1,halfpage,m) \n\
                @Num_Lock Ctrl <Btn5Down>:scroll-forw(1,halfpage,m) \n\
                               <Btn5Down>:scroll-forw(5,line,m)     \n\
                                  <BtnUp>:select-end(SELECT, CUT_BUFFER0) \n\
                                <BtnDown>:ignore()

       The default bindings in the Tektronix window are analogous but less extensive.  These are for the tek4014
       widget:

                          ~Meta<KeyPress>: insert-seven-bit() \n\
                           Meta<KeyPress>: insert-eight-bit() \n\
                         !Ctrl <Btn1Down>: popup-menu(mainMenu) \n\
                    !Lock Ctrl <Btn1Down>: popup-menu(mainMenu) \n\
          !Lock Ctrl @Num_Lock <Btn1Down>: popup-menu(mainMenu) \n\
               !Ctrl @Num_Lock <Btn1Down>: popup-menu(mainMenu) \n\
                         !Ctrl <Btn2Down>: popup-menu(tekMenu) \n\
                    !Lock Ctrl <Btn2Down>: popup-menu(tekMenu) \n\
          !Lock Ctrl @Num_Lock <Btn2Down>: popup-menu(tekMenu) \n\
               !Ctrl @Num_Lock <Btn2Down>: popup-menu(tekMenu) \n\
                    Shift ~Meta<Btn1Down>: gin-press(L) \n\
                          ~Meta<Btn1Down>: gin-press(l) \n\
                    Shift ~Meta<Btn2Down>: gin-press(M) \n\
                          ~Meta<Btn2Down>: gin-press(m) \n\
                    Shift ~Meta<Btn3Down>: gin-press(R) \n\
                          ~Meta<Btn3Down>: gin-press(r)

   Custom Key Bindings
       You can modify the translations resource by overriding parts of it, or merging your resources with it.

       Here  is  an example which uses shifted select/paste to copy to the clipboard, and unshifted select/paste
       for the primary selection.  In each case, a (different) cut buffer is also a  target  or  source  of  the
       select/paste  operation.   It is important to remember however, that cut buffers store data in ISO-8859-1
       encoding, while selections can store data in a variety of formats and encodings.  While  xterm  owns  the
       selection,  it  highlights it.  When it loses the selection, it removes the corresponding highlight.  But
       you can still paste from the corresponding cut buffer.

         *VT100*translations:    #override \n\
            ~Shift~Ctrl<Btn2Up>: insert-selection(PRIMARY, CUT_BUFFER0) \n\
             Shift~Ctrl<Btn2Up>: insert-selection(CLIPBOARD, CUT_BUFFER1) \n\
            ~Shift     <BtnUp> : select-end(PRIMARY, CUT_BUFFER0) \n\
             Shift     <BtnUp> : select-end(CLIPBOARD, CUT_BUFFER1)

       In the example, the class name VT100 is used rather than the widget name.  These are different;  a  class
       name  could  apply to more than one widget.  A leading “*” is used because the widget hierarchy above the
       vt100 widget depends on whether the toolbar support is compiled into xterm.

       Not everyone finds the three-button mouse bindings easy to use.  In a  wheel  mouse,  the  middle  button
       might be the wheel.  As an alternative, you could add a binding shifted keys:

         *VT100*translations:      #override \n\
             Shift <Key>Home:    copy-selection(SELECT) \n\
             Shift <Key>Insert:  copy-selection(SELECT) \n\
             Ctrl Shift <Key>C:  copy-selection(SELECT) \n\
             Ctrl Shift <Key>V:  insert-selection(SELECT)

       You  would  still  use  the left- and right-mouse buttons (typically 1 and 3) for beginning and extending
       selections.

       Besides mouse problems, there are also keyboards with inconvenient layouts.  Some lack a numeric  keypad,
       making  it  hard to use the shifted keypad plus and minus bindings for switching between font sizes.  You
       can work around that by assigning the actions to more readily accessed keys:

         *VT100*translations:      #override \n\
             Ctrl <Key> +:       larger-vt-font() \n\
             Ctrl <Key> -:       smaller-vt-font()

       The keymap feature allows you to switch between sets of translations.  The sample  below  shows  how  the
       keymap() action may be used to add special keys for entering commonly-typed words:

         *VT100.Translations: #override <Key>F13: keymap(dbx)
         *VT100.dbxKeymap.translations: \
                 <Key>F14:       keymap(None) \n\
                 <Key>F17:       string("next") \n\
                                 string(0x0d) \n\
                 <Key>F18:       string("step") \n\
                                 string(0x0d) \n\
                 <Key>F19:       string("continue") \n\
                                 string(0x0d) \n\
                 <Key>F20:       string("print ") \n\
                                 insert-selection(PRIMARY, CUT_BUFFER0)

   Default Scrollbar Bindings
       Key  bindings  are normally associated with the vt100 or tek4014 widgets which act as terminal emulators.
       Xterm's scrollbar (and toolbar if it is configured) are separate widgets.  Because all of these use the X
       Toolkit, they have corresponding  translations  resources.   Those  resources  are  distinct,  and  match
       different  patterns,  e.g., the differences in widget-name and number of levels of widgets which they may
       contain.

       The scrollbar widget is a child of the vt100 widget.  It is  positioned  on  top  of  the  vt100  widget.
       Toggling the scrollbar on and off causes the vt100 widget to resize.

       The default bindings for the scrollbar widget use only mouse-button events:

            <Btn5Down>: StartScroll(Forward) \n\
            <Btn1Down>: StartScroll(Forward) \n\
            <Btn2Down>: StartScroll(Continuous) MoveThumb() NotifyThumb() \n\
            <Btn3Down>: StartScroll(Backward) \n\
            <Btn4Down>: StartScroll(Backward) \n\
            <Btn2Motion>: MoveThumb() NotifyThumb() \n\
            <BtnUp>:    NotifyScroll(Proportional) EndScroll()

       Events which the scrollbar widget does not recognize at all are lost.

       However,  at  startup, xterm augments these translations with the default translations used for the vt100
       widget, together with the resource “actions” which those translations use.   Because  the  scrollbar  (or
       menubar)  widgets  do  not recognize these actions (but because it has a corresponding translation), they
       are passed on to the vt100 widget.

       This augmenting of the scrollbar's translations has a few limitations:

       • Xterm knows what the default  translations  are,  but  there  is  no  suitable  library  interface  for
         determining  what  customizations  a user may have added to the vt100 widget.  All that xterm can do is
         augment the scrollbar widget to give it the same starting point for further customization by the user.

       • Events in the gap between the widgets may be lost.

       • Compose sequences begun in one widget cannot be completed in the other, because the input  methods  for
         each widget do not share context information.

       Most  customizations  of  the  scrollbar  translations  do  not  concern key bindings.  Rather, users are
       generally more interested in changing the bindings of the mouse buttons.  For example, some people prefer
       using the left pointer button for dragging the scrollbar thumb.  That can  be  set  up  by  altering  the
       translations resource, e.g.,

         *VT100.scrollbar.translations:  #override \n\
            <Btn5Down>:     StartScroll(Forward) \n\
            <Btn1Down>:     StartScroll(Continuous) MoveThumb() NotifyThumb() \n\
            <Btn4Down>:     StartScroll(Backward) \n\
            <Btn1Motion>:   MoveThumb() NotifyThumb() \n\
            <BtnUp>:        NotifyScroll(Proportional) EndScroll()

CONTROL SEQUENCES AND KEYBOARD

       Applications  can  send  sequences  of characters to the terminal to change its behavior.  Often they are
       referred to as “ANSI escape sequences” or just plain “escape sequences” but both terms are misleading:

       • ANSI x3.64 (obsolete) which was replaced by ISO 6429 (ECMA-48) gave  rules  for  the  format  of  these
         sequences of characters.

       • While  the  original  VT100  was  claimed  to  be  ANSI-compatible  (against x3.64), there is no freely
         available version of the ANSI standard to show where the VT100 differs.  Most of  the  documents  which
         mention  the  ANSI standard have additions not found in the original (such as those based on ansi.sys).
         So this discussion focuses on the ISO standards.

       • The standard describes only sequences sent from the host to the terminal.  There  is  no  standard  for
         sequences sent by special keys from the terminal to the host.  By convention (and referring to existing
         terminals), the format of those sequences usually conforms to the host-to-terminal standard.

       • Some  of  xterm's  sequences do not fit into the standard scheme.  Technically those are “unspecified”.
         As an example, DEC Screen Alignment Test (DECALN) is this three-character sequence:

           ESC # 8

       • Some sequences fit into the standard format, but are not listed in the  standard.   These  include  the
         sequences used for setting up scrolling margins and doing forward/reverse scrolling.

       • Some  of the sequences (in particular, the single-character functions such as tab and backspace) do not
         include the escape character.

       With all of that in mind, the standard refers to these sequences of characters as “control sequences”.

       Xterm Control Sequences lists the control sequences which an  application  can  send  xterm  to  make  it
       perform  various operations.  Most of these operations are standardized, from either the DEC or Tektronix
       terminals, or from more widely used standards such as ISO-6429.

       A few examples of usage are given in this section.

   Window and Icon Titles
       Some scripts use echo with options -e and -n to tell the shell to interpret the string “\e” as the escape
       character and to suppress a trailing newline  on  output.   Those  are  not  portable,  not  recommended.
       Instead, use printf (POSIX).

       For example, to set the window title to “Hello world!”, you could use one of these commands in a script:

         printf '\033]2;Hello world!\033\'
         printf '\033]2;Hello world!\007'
         printf '\033]2;%s\033\' "Hello world!"
         printf '\033]2;%s\007' "Hello world!"

       The  printf  command  interprets  the  octal  value “\033” for escape, and (since it was not given in the
       format) omits a trailing newline from the output.

       Some programs (such as screen(1)) set both window- and icon-titles at the same  time,  using  a  slightly
       different control sequence:

         printf '\033]0;Hello world!\033\'
         printf '\033]0;Hello world!\007'
         printf '\033]0;%s\033\' "Hello world!"
         printf '\033]0;%s\007' "Hello world!"

       The difference is the parameter “0” in each command.  Most window managers will honor either window title
       or  icon  title.   Some  will  make a distinction and allow you to set just the icon title.  You can tell
       xterm to ask for this with a different parameter in the control sequence:

         printf '\033]1;Hello world!\033\'
         printf '\033]1;Hello world!\007'
         printf '\033]1;%s\033\' "Hello world!"
         printf '\033]1;%s\007' "Hello world!"

   Special Keys
       Xterm, like any VT100-compatible terminal emulator, has two modes  for  the  special  keys  (cursor-keys,
       numeric keypad, and certain function-keys):

       • normal  mode, which makes the special keys transmit “useful” sequences such as the control sequence for
         cursor-up when pressing the up-arrow, and

       • application mode, which uses a different control sequence that cannot  be  mistaken  for  the  “useful”
         sequences.

       The  main  difference  between  the two modes is that normal mode sequences start with CSI (escape [) and
       application mode sequences start with SS3 (escape O).

       The terminal is initialized into one of these two modes (usually the normal mode), based on the  terminal
       description  (termcap or terminfo).  The terminal description also has capabilities (strings) defined for
       the keypad mode used in curses applications.

       There is a problem in using the terminal description for applications that are not intended to  be  full-
       screen  curses  applications: the definitions of special keys are only correct for this keypad mode.  For
       example, some shells (unlike ksh(1), which appears to be hard-coded, not even using termcap) allow  their
       users to customize key-bindings, assigning shell actions to special keys.

       • bash(1)  allows  constant strings to be assigned to functions.  This is only successful if the terminal
         is initialized to application mode by default, because bash lacks flexibility in this area.  It uses  a
         (less  expressive  than  bash's)  readline scripting language for setting up key bindings, which relies
         upon the user to statically enumerate the possible bindings for given values of $TERM.

       • zsh(1) provides an analogous feature, but it accepts  runtime  expressions,  as  well  as  providing  a
         $terminfo  array  for  scripts.   In  particular,  one can use the terminal database, transforming when
         defining a key-binding.  By transforming the output so that CSI and SS3 are equated, zsh  can  use  the
         terminal  database  to  obtain  useful  definitions  for its command-line use regardless of whether the
         terminal uses normal or application mode initially.  Here is an example:

           [[ "$terminfo[kcuu1]" == "^[O"* ]] && \
           bindkey -M viins "${terminfo[kcuu1]/O/[}" \
           vi-up-line-or-history

   Changing Colors
       A few shell programs provide the ability for users to add color and other video attributes to  the  shell
       prompt strings.  Users can do this by setting $PS1 (the primary prompt string).  Again, bash and zsh have
       provided  features  not found in ksh.  There is a problem, however: the prompt's width on the screen will
       not necessarily be the same as the number of characters.  Because there  is  no  guidance  in  the  POSIX
       standard, each shell addresses the problem in a different way:

       • bash treats characters within “\[” and “\]” as nonprinting (using no width on the screen).

       • zsh treats characters within “%{” and “%}” as nonprinting.

       In addition to the difference in syntax, the shells provide different methods for obtaining useful escape
       sequences:

       • As noted in Special Keys, zsh initializes the $terminfo array with the terminal capabilities.

         It  also  provides a function echoti which works like tput(1) to convert a terminal capability with its
         parameters into a string that can be written to the terminal.

       • Shells lacking a comparable feature (such as  bash)  can  always  use  the  program  tput  to  do  this
         transformation.

       Hard-coded  escape sequences are supported by each shell, but are not recommended because those rely upon
       particular configurations and cannot be easily moved between different user environments.

ENVIRONMENT

       Xterm sets several environment variables.

   System Independent
       Some variables are used on every system:

       DISPLAY
            is the display name, pointing to the X server (see DISPLAY NAMES in X(1)).

       TERM
            is set according to the terminfo (or termcap) entry which it is using as a reference.

            On some systems, you may encounter situations where the shell which you  use  and  xterm  are  built
            using  libraries  with different terminal databases.  In that situation, xterm may choose a terminal
            description not known to the shell.

       WINDOWID
            is set to the X window id number of the xterm window.

       XTERM_FILTER
            is set if a locale-filter is used.  The value is the pathname of the filter.

       XTERM_LOCALE
            shows the locale which was used by xterm on startup.  Some shell initialization scripts  may  set  a
            different locale.

       XTERM_SHELL
            is  set  to  the  pathname  of the program which is invoked.  Usually that is a shell program, e.g.,
            /bin/sh.  Since it is not necessarily a shell program however, it is distinct from “SHELL”.

       XTERM_VERSION
            is set to the string displayed by the -version option.  That is normally an  identifier  for  the  X
            Window  libraries  used  to build xterm, followed by xterm's patch number in parenthesis.  The patch
            number is also part of the response to a Secondary Device  Attributes  (DA)  control  sequence  (see
            Xterm Control Sequences).

   System Dependent
       Depending on your system configuration, xterm may also set the following:

       COLUMNS
            the width of the xterm in characters (cf: “stty columns”).

            When  this  variable  is  set, curses applications (and most terminal programs) will assume that the
            terminal has this many columns.

            Xterm would do this for systems which have no ability to tell the size of the terminal.   Those  are
            very rare, none newer than the mid 1990s when SVR4 became prevalent.

       HOME
            when xterm is configured (at build-time) to update utmp.

       LINES
            the height of the xterm in characters (cf: “stty rows”).

            When  this  variable  is  set, curses applications (and most terminal programs) will assume that the
            terminal has this many lines (rows).

            Xterm would do this for systems which have no ability to tell the size of the terminal.   Those  are
            very rare, none newer than the mid 1990s when SVR4 became prevalent.

       LOGNAME
            when xterm is configured (at build-time) to update utmp.

            Your configuration may have set LOGNAME; xterm does not modify that.  If it is unset, xterm will use
            USER if it is set.  Finally, if neither is set, xterm will use the getlogin(2) function.

       SHELL
            when  xterm  is  configured  (at  build-time) to update utmp.  It is also set if you provide a valid
            shell name as the optional parameter.

            Xterm sets this to an absolute pathname.  If you have set the variable to a relative pathname, xterm
            may set it to a different shell pathname.

            If you have set this to an pathname which does not correspond to a valid shell, xterm may unset  it,
            to avoid confusion.

       TERMCAP
            the  contents of the termcap entry corresponding to $TERM, with lines and columns values substituted
            for the actual size window you have created.

            This feature is, like LINES and COLUMNS, used rarely.  It addresses the same  limitation  of  a  few
            older systems by providing a way for termcap-based applications to get the initial screensize.

       TERMINFO
            may be defined to a nonstandard location using the configure script.

FILES

       The actual pathnames given may differ on your system.

       /etc/shells
            contains a list of valid shell programs, used by xterm to decide if the “SHELL” environment variable
            should be set for the process started by xterm.

       /var/run/utmp
            the system logfile, which records user logins.

       /var/log/wtmp
            the system logfile, which records user logins and logouts.

       /etc/X11/app-defaults/XTerm
            the xterm default application resources.

       /etc/X11/app-defaults/XTerm-color
            the xterm color application resources.  If your display supports color, use this
                      *customization: -color
            in  your  .Xdefaults  file  to  automatically  use  this  resource  file  rather  than /etc/X11/app-
            defaults/XTerm.  If you do not do this, xterm uses its compiled-in  default  resource  settings  for
            colors.

       /usr/share/pixmaps
            the directory in which xterm's pixmap icon files are installed.

ERROR MESSAGES

       Most of the fatal error messages from xterm use the following format:

         xterm: Error XXX, errno YYY: ZZZ

       The XXX codes (which are used by xterm as its exit-code) are listed below, with a brief explanation.

       1    is used for miscellaneous errors, usually accompanied by a specific message,

       11   ERROR_FIONBIO
            main: ioctl() failed on FIONBIO

       12   ERROR_F_GETFL
            main: ioctl() failed on F_GETFL

       13   ERROR_F_SETFL
            main: ioctl() failed on F_SETFL

       14   ERROR_OPDEVTTY
            spawn: open() failed on /dev/tty

       15   ERROR_TIOCGETP
            spawn: ioctl() failed on TIOCGETP

       17   ERROR_PTSNAME
            spawn: ptsname() failed

       18   ERROR_OPPTSNAME
            spawn: open() failed on ptsname

       19   ERROR_PTEM
            spawn: ioctl() failed on I_PUSH/"ptem"

       20   ERROR_CONSEM
            spawn: ioctl() failed on I_PUSH/"consem"

       21   ERROR_LDTERM
            spawn: ioctl() failed on I_PUSH/"ldterm"

       22   ERROR_TTCOMPAT
            spawn: ioctl() failed on I_PUSH/"ttcompat"

       23   ERROR_TIOCSETP
            spawn: ioctl() failed on TIOCSETP

       24   ERROR_TIOCSETC
            spawn: ioctl() failed on TIOCSETC

       25   ERROR_TIOCSETD
            spawn: ioctl() failed on TIOCSETD

       26   ERROR_TIOCSLTC
            spawn: ioctl() failed on TIOCSLTC

       27   ERROR_TIOCLSET
            spawn: ioctl() failed on TIOCLSET

       28   ERROR_INIGROUPS
            spawn: initgroups() failed

       29   ERROR_FORK
            spawn: fork() failed

       30   ERROR_EXEC
            spawn: exec() failed

       32   ERROR_PTYS
            get_pty: not enough ptys

       34   ERROR_PTY_EXEC
            waiting for initial map

       35   ERROR_SETUID
            spawn: setuid() failed

       36   ERROR_INIT
            spawn: can't initialize window

       46   ERROR_TIOCKSET
            spawn: ioctl() failed on TIOCKSET

       47   ERROR_TIOCKSETC
            spawn: ioctl() failed on TIOCKSETC

       49   ERROR_LUMALLOC
            luit: command-line malloc failed

       50   ERROR_SELECT
            in_put: select() failed

       54   ERROR_VINIT
            VTInit: can't initialize window

       57   ERROR_KMMALLOC1
            HandleKeymapChange: malloc failed

       60   ERROR_TSELECT
            Tinput: select() failed

       64   ERROR_TINIT
            TekInit: can't initialize window

       71   ERROR_BMALLOC2
            SaltTextAway: malloc() failed

       80   ERROR_LOGEXEC
            StartLog: exec() failed

       83   ERROR_XERROR
            xerror: XError event

       84   ERROR_XIOERROR
            xioerror: X I/O error

       85   ERROR_ICEERROR
            ICE I/O error

       90   ERROR_SCALLOC
            Alloc: calloc() failed on base

       91   ERROR_SCALLOC2
            Alloc: calloc() failed on rows

       102  ERROR_SAVE_PTR
            ScrnPointers: malloc/realloc() failed

BUGS

       Large pastes do not work on some systems.  This is not a bug in xterm; it is a bug in the pseudo terminal
       driver  of  those systems.  Xterm feeds large pastes to the pty only as fast as the pty will accept data,
       but some pty drivers do not return enough information to know if the write has succeeded.

       When connected to an input method, it is possible for xterm to hang if the XIM  server  is  suspended  or
       killed.

       Many of the options are not resettable after xterm starts.

       This  program  still  needs  to  be  rewritten.   It should be split into very modular sections, with the
       various emulators being completely separate widgets that do not know about each  other.   Ideally,  you'd
       like to be able to pick and choose emulator widgets and stick them into a single control widget.

       There needs to be a dialog box to allow entry of the Tek COPY file name.

SEE ALSO

       resize(1), luit(1), uxterm(1), X(1), pty(4), tty(4)

       Xterm Control Sequences (this is the file ctlseqs.ms).

       http://invisible-island.net/xterm/xterm.html
       http://invisible-island.net/xterm/ctlseqs/ctlseqs.html
       http://invisible-island.net/xterm/xterm.faq.html

AUTHORS

       Far too many people, including:

       Loretta  Guarino  Reid  (DEC-UEG-WSL), Joel McCormack (DEC-UEG-WSL), Terry Weissman (DEC-UEG-WSL), Edward
       Moy (Berkeley), Ralph R. Swick (MIT-Athena), Mark Vandevoorde (MIT-Athena), Bob McNamara  (DEC-MAD),  Jim
       Gettys  (MIT-Athena),  Bob  Scheifler  (MIT X Consortium), Doug Mink (SAO), Steve Pitschke (Stellar), Ron
       Newman (MIT-Athena), Jim Fulton (MIT X Consortium), Dave  Serisky  (HP),  Jonathan  Kamens  (MIT-Athena),
       Jason  Bacon,  Jens  Schweikhardt,  Ross  Combs,  Stephen  P.  Wall,  David  Wexelblat, and Thomas Dickey
       (invisible-island.net).

Patch #330                                         2017-06-20                                           XTERM(1)