Terminal (OS X)
Terminal 2.2 running the top program under Mac OS
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| Developer(s) | Apple Inc. |
|---|---|
| Stable release | 2.5.1 (343.6) |
| Operating system | OS X |
| Type | Terminal emulator |
| License | Bundled with OS X |
| Website | http://www.apple.com/osx/specs/ |
Terminal (Terminal.app) is the terminal emulator included in the OS X operating system by Apple.[1][dead link]
Terminal originated in NeXTSTEP and OPENSTEP, the predecessor operating systems of OS X.
As a terminal emulator, the application provides text-based access to the operating system, in contrast to the mostly graphical nature of the user experience of OS X, by providing a command line interface to the operating system when used in conjunction with a Unix shell, such as bash.
The preferences dialog for Terminal.app in OS X 10.8 (Mountain Lion) offers choices for values of the TERM environment variable. Available options are ansi, dtterm, nsterm, rxvt, vt52, vt100, vt102, xterm, xterm-16color and xterm-256color, which differ from the OS X 10.5 (Leopard) choices by dropping the xterm-color and adding xterm-16color and xterm-256color. These settings do not alter the operation of Terminal, and the xterm settings do not match the behavior of xterm.[2]
Terminal includes several features that specifically access OS X APIs and features. These include the ability to use the standard OS X Help search function to find manual pages and integration with Spotlight.[citation needed] Terminal was used by Apple as a showcase for OS X graphics APIs in early advertising of Mac OS X,[citation needed] offering a range of custom font and coloring options, including transparent backgrounds.
References[edit]
- ^ "What Is Mac OS X - All Applications and Utilities - Terminal". Apple Inc.
- ^ "nsterm - AppKit Terminal.app", terminfo.src, retrieved June 7, 2013
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