outsource from india chennai india programmers freelance php coder freelance outsource scripts programming complicated perl patterns php module installation
outsource from india perl installation and configuration php installation linux system administration US$15,US$19,US$11,US$10 cheap programmer
india outsource outsource india chennai india programmers php perl mysql freelance freelance programmer
SHOWCASE of php and perl scripts CONTACT US for php custom perl scripts
HOME
 

8.2. Xterm Fonts

To use some of the most attractive prompts in the Bash Prompt package, you need to get and install fonts that support the character sets expected by the prompts. These are "VGA Fonts," which support different character sets than regular Xterm fonts. Standard Xterm fonts support an extended alphabet, including a lot of letters with accents. In VGA fonts, this material is replaced by graphical characters - blocks, dots, lines. I asked for an explanation of this difference, and Sérgio Vale e Pace (space@gold.com.br) wrote me:

I love computer history so here goes:

When IBM designed the first PC they needed some character codes to use, so they got the ASCII character table (128 numbers, letters, and some punctuation) and to fill a byte addressed table they added 128 more characters. Since the PC was designed to be a home computer, they fill the remaining 128 characters with dots, lines, points, etc, to be able to do borders, and grayscale effects (remember that we are talking about 2 color graphics).

Time passes, PCs become a standard, IBM creates more powerful systems and the VGA standard is born, along with 256 colour graphics, and IBM continues to include their IBM-ASCII characters table.

More time passes, IBM has lost their leadership in the PC market, and the OS authors dicover that there are other languages in the world that use non-english characters, so they add international alphabet support in their systems. Since we now have bright and colorful screens, we can trash the dots, lines, etc. and use their space for accented characters and some greek letters, which you'll see in Linux.


Linux HOWTO full list
   This document, LDP HOWTO-INDEX, is copyrighted (c) 1995 - 2002 by Tim Bynum, Guylhem Aznar, Joshua Drake and Greg Ferguson. Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.1 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, with no Front-Cover Texts, and with no Back-Cover Texts. A copy of the license is available at http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html. If you have questions, please contact the LDP.
Web Design Copyright © 1999-2003. Chrisranjana Software Solutions Pvt Ltd. syndicate rss feed