>John T. Hoffoss writes: >> On that topic, and just out of weird curiosity, has anyone seen an ascii >> gui to a commandline interface? I'm picturing something with gkrellm-like >> info on the right, some other system info or something on the bottom, and >> the rest of the screen just a plain old command line, all with no X. >> >> Not that this would be extremely useful, but would be interesting to play >> with for a few minutes. I suppose it could be useful over ssh sessions or >> something if you don't need live remote monitoring info on your servers. Munir Nassar wrote: >using screen you can partition your terminal in any number of ways. What you >want can be done. GNU Emacs can partition a terminal (window) in a wide variety of ways and functions within each such partition. For GNU Emacs to be used as a strict ASCII GUI, it would started with the -nw (No X11 windows) option. Some people do everything within emacs and may even make it their default shell. Sincerely, Ken Fuchs <kfuchs at winternet.com> _______________________________________________ TCLUG Mailing List - Minneapolis/St. Paul, Minnesota http://www.mn-linux.org tclug-list at mn-linux.org https://mailman.real-time.com/mailman/listinfo/tclug-list