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| subject: | RE: ANSI.SYS |
From: shadow{at}shadowgard.com
On 4 Dec 2003 at 10:17, da Silva, Joe wrote:
> I guess it's case sensitive because it's _not_ a DOS thing.
> AFAIK, this ANSI sequence stuff originated as a terminal
> (from the time before personal computers were available or
> at least readily available) control "language", I think from the
> DEC VT100 terminal or one of its relatives. The DOS ANSI
> driver simply emulates this, so the original terminal must
> have been case sensitive.
There were a whole *bunch* of model specific sets of
control codes. ANSI decided that there should be a
standard. And the DEC VT52 set was considered the
best, but it is (or at least *was*) ANSI policy that
standards of this sort couldn't be identical
something already in use by a specific manufacturer
(to avoid giving them a major advantage in the
market.)
So the ANSI x3.64 standard (which is what ANSI.SYS
is derived from) chanded a few things. Starting with
requiring the ESC char to be followed by a left
square bracket.
VT100 uses an extension of ANSI X3.64. The PC uses
part of it, mixed with some stuff that doesn't
follow the standard.
There used to be a VT100.SYS driver floating around.
--
Leonard Erickson (aka shadow)
shadow at krypton dot rain dot com
--- Internet Rex 2.29
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