Working in conversational mode, Key functions, Working in block mode – HP Integrity NonStop H-Series User Manual

Page 148: Working in conversational, Mode

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Table 19 Terminal Options (continued)

Values

Option

Reverse specifies reverse video.

dim

The default for each attribute is normal.

underline

The following example illustrates a. tn6530init file. The screen option is set to 1 (132 characters
by 27 lines), the bell will ring at column 72, and the underline is set to display as reverse video:

# terminal option settings (Jan 14, 1990)
screen 1
bellcolumn 72
underline reverse

Working in Conversational Mode

In conversational mode, all characters you enter at the keyboard are immediately sent to the remote
host. The characters are not displayed on the screen until the remote host echoes them back. The
only exceptions are a few control codes that affect the display but are not transmitted to the host.

Display memory is organized as one continuous page of 300 display lines, 24 of which appear
at one time. You can scroll the displayed text up and down one line or one page at a time.
Characters you enter or characters received from the host are displayed at the current cursor
position. If you scroll, you may write over existing characters unless you return to the last line of
text.

To speed up the display in conversational mode, line 25 is displayed on line 3 of the screen and
may scroll off your screen.

Key Functions

In conversational mode, keys that invoke the following functions are ignored:

Cursor to beginning of line
Cursor to end of line
Back tab
Insert character
Insert line
Delete character
Delete line
Insert mode

Working in Block Mode

In block mode, the emulator transmits and receives data in blocks, and the host controls the format
of each page and which page is displayed on the screen. You can type in several lines (up to a
full screen) and edit the data before it is transmitted.

Block mode has two submodes: protect and nonprotect:

Protect submode allows the host application to designate specific areas of the screen as
protected; for example, a screen form might have protected and unprotected fields. The cursor
skips over the protected areas.

Nonprotect submode does not allow the designation of protected areas and is used by
applications such as editing programs that allow you to determine the format of the data you
enter. You can move the cursor to any position on the screen (except the status line) and enter
any type of characters, depending on the data attributes the application defines for the field.
The application can define an unprotected field with the following attributes:

Free entry—You can enter any type of character.

Alphabetic—You can enter only letters.

148

Using Your Workstation as a 6530 Terminal

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