X-Git-Url: https://git.distorted.org.uk/u/mdw/putty/blobdiff_plain/74ff0c5567ba248315a85dbe9c55155677bea3b1..3900c2d642c2960fdac52a9afea854a375441fcc:/unix/pterm.1 diff --git a/unix/pterm.1 b/unix/pterm.1 index 569bd9d9..bbdb081a 100644 --- a/unix/pterm.1 +++ b/unix/pterm.1 @@ -36,6 +36,13 @@ will be displayed in different colours instead of a different font, so this option will be ignored. If \fIBoldAsColour\fP is set to 0 and you do not specify a bold font, \fIpterm\fP will overprint the normal font to make it look bolder. +.IP "\fB\-fw\fP \fIfont-name\fP" +Specify the font to use for double-width characters (typically +Chinese, Japanese and Korean text) displayed in the terminal. +.IP "\fB\-fwb\fP \fIfont-name\fP" +Specify the font to use for bold double-width characters (typically +Chinese, Japanese and Korean text) Like \fI-fb\fP, this will be +ignored unless the \fIBoldAsColour\fP resource is set to 0. .IP "\fB\-geometry\fP \fIwidth\fPx\fIheight\fP" Specify the size of the terminal, in rows and columns of text. Unfortunately \fIpterm\fP does not currently support specifying the @@ -90,6 +97,24 @@ to specify it explicitly if you have changed the default using the .IP "\fB\-log\fP \fIfilename\fP" This option makes \fIpterm\fP log all the terminal output to a file as well as displaying it in the terminal. +.IP "\fB\-cs\fP \fIcharset\fP" +This option specifies the character set in which \fIpterm\fP should +assume the session is operating. This character set will be used to +interpret all the data received from the session, and all input you +type or paste into \fIpterm\fP will be converted into this character +set before being sent to the session. + +Any character set name which is valid in a MIME header (and +supported by \fIpterm\fP) should be valid here (examples are +"ISO-8859-1", "windows-1252" or "UTF-8"). Also, any character +encoding which is valid in an X logical font description should be +valid ("ibm-cp437", for example). + +\fIpterm\fP's default behaviour is to use the same character +encoding as its primary font. If you supply a Unicode (iso10646-1) +font, it will default to the UTF-8 character set. + +Character set names are case-insensitive. .IP "\fB\-nethack\fP" Tells \fIpterm\fP to enable NetHack keypad mode, in which the numeric keypad generates the NetHack "hjklyubn" direction keys. This @@ -292,6 +317,16 @@ This resource is the same as the \fI\-fb\fP command-line option: it controls the font used to display bold text when \fIBoldAsColour\fP is turned off. The default is unset (the font will be bolded by printing it twice at a one-pixel offset). +.IP "\fBpterm.WideFont\fP" +This resource is the same as the \fI\-fw\fP command-line option: it +controls the font used to display double-width characters. The +default is unset (double-width characters cannot be displayed). +.IP "\fBpterm.WideBoldFont\fP" +This resource is the same as the \fI\-fwb\fP command-line option: it +controls the font used to display double-width characters in bold, +when \fIBoldAsColour\fP is turned off. The default is unset +(double-width characters are displayed in bold by printing them +twice at a one-pixel offset). .IP "\fBpterm.ShadowBoldOffset\fP" This resource can be set to an integer; the default is \-1. It specifies the offset at which text is overprinted when using "shadow @@ -385,6 +420,14 @@ reset to the very bottom. This option should be set to either 0 or 1; the default is 1. When set to 1, any activity in the display causes the position of the scrollback to be reset to the very bottom. +.IP "\fBpterm.LineCodePage\fP" +This option specifies the character set to be used for the session. +This is the same as the \fI\-cs\fP command-line option. +.IP "\fBpterm.NoRemoteCharset\fP" +This option disables the terminal's ability to change its character +set when it receives escape sequences telling it to. You might need +to do this to interoperate with programs which incorrectly change +the character set to something they think is sensible. .IP "\fBpterm.BCE\fP" This option should be set to either 0 or 1; the default is 1. When set to 1, the various control sequences that erase parts of the