Display Settings
Display settings vary depending on the host type and are specific to the session you are configuring.
Color Mapping
You can customize the color of your screen and the appearance of different host attributes in the terminal window. For each item, you can select a color for the foreground and the background colors for all supported host connections. Colors are specified using the color grid or by entering the Hex code format.
There are many web sites that list available Hex colors, for an example see w3schools.com HTML Color Picker.
You may see different options depending on the type of host connection.
Options specific to UTS hosts
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Use color information from the host - To use the colors specified here rather than any colors specified by the host, clear this option.
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Enable blink - To disable blinking, clear this option.
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Select attribute to edit - In UTS emulation, colors are set directly by the host. You can specify colors for text associated with specific screen display options. Including the following and available combinations:
Plain, Underline(UND), Strikethru (STK), Left Column Separator (LCS), Control Page, and Status Line (OIA).
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Video intensity - The video intensities, Blink, Dim, Protected, and Reverse are combined with the attributes to create additional combinations. For example, you could map foreground or background colors to all cells with Dim + Blink + Underline or Reverse + Protected + Strikethru + Underline.
When you select a video intensity (or combination of intensities), those intensities are combined with the value of the attribute drop down list to form a single color mapping.
Options specific to VT and T27 hosts
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Enable blink - To disable blinking, clear this option.
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Enable bold - Displays text set with bold attributes as bold text in the terminal window. To display bold characters as plain text, clear this option.
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Enable underline - Displays text with underline.
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Inverse video (VT-only) - This option reverses the foreground and background colors when the VT host sends an inverse video escape sequence. If this option is not enabled, the inverse video sequences sent from the host are ignored.
To customize colors for all host types
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From the left navigation panel, click Display.
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Under Color Mappings, click the background color field to open the color grid. From the color grid, select the color you want to use as the host background color. Alternatively, type the Hex color number for the color you want to use.
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From the drop down list, select the default host color you want to change. For example, if you select host pink from the drop down list and then change the foreground color to red, whenever you encounter pink text it will appear as red.
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Open the color grid for the Foreground to choose a color to map the new color for the text or type the Hex code you want to use. Select Background to map the new color to the background field.
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Click Save to close the Display panel and resume configuring your host connection.
Restore defaults clears any changes you made and resets the colors to the default host settings.
Configure Hotspots
Hotspots are buttons that appear over common host commands in terminal sessions. When you use hotspots you can control the terminal session using a mouse or a finger-tap instead of the keyboard. The hotspot transmits a terminal key or command to the host. By default, hotspots are configured for the most common 3270, 5250, and VT commands.
Hotspots are enabled and visible by default, however you can disable hotspots for a particular session or choose to hide them.
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Enable hotspots
Choose No to disable hotspots for the session you are connecting to.
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Show hotspots
Choose No to hide hotspots on the screen. Hotspots remain functional.
Hotspots for 3270 hosts
Hotspot | Description |
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PF1...PF24 | Transmits a PF1...PF24 to the host |
PA1, PA2, or PA3 | Transmits a PA1, PA2, or PA3 to the host |
enter | Transmits an Enter key to the host |
more | Transmits a Clear key to the host |
Hotspots for 5250 hosts
Hotspot | Description |
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enter | Transmits an Enter key to the host |
more | Transmits a Roll Up key to the host (scrolls down one page) |
PF1...PF24 | Transmits a PF1...PF24 to the host |
Hotspots for VT hosts
Hotspot | Description |
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F1...F20 | Transmits a F1...F20 to the host |
Configure screen dimensions for VT, UTS and T27 hosts
As an administrator you can select the number of columns and rows for VT, UTS and T27 sessions.
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Open the Display panel.
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Under Dimensions, specify the number of columns and rows you want each screen to possess. The default values are 80 columns by 24 rows.
There are some host-specific settings available:
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Pages - If you are connecting to a T27 host screen, you can set the number of pages to display. The default is 2.
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Clear on host change - If you are connecting to a VT host screen, select this option to clear the terminal window and move the contents to the scrollback buffer when the column size changes.
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Click Save.
Set Cursor Options
Use the cursor options to configure the appearance and behavior of the cursor and ruler.
This option | Does this... |
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Cursor type |
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Ruler type |
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Cursor color | Click the color field to open the color grid. From the color grid, select the color you want to use as the color of both the cursor and ruler. Alternatively, type the Hex color number for the color you want to use. |
Cursor blinks | By default, the cursor (whether in block or underline mode) blinks. Clear this option to display a visible non-blinking cursor. |
Set Font Options
Use these font options to make sure that your terminal characters display with your preferred font size and style.
This option | Does this... |
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Font size |
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Zero character |
To differentiate the default zero character from the letter O, select one of the following options:
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Set VT Scrollback Buffer Options
The VT scrollback buffer contains the data that has scrolled off the display and is no longer accessible by the host computer. When a scrollback buffer exists, you can view it by using the vertical scroll bar.
The scrollback buffer is enabled by default. When enabled, the session maintains a buffer of lines that have scrolled off the terminal screen. This option is available to all users when they are granted permission to modify Terminal Display Settings by the administrator.
This option | Does this... |
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Scrollback row limit | Limits the number of rows held in the scrollback buffer. The default setting is 500 rows. |
Save display before clearing | When selected (the default), the data on the terminal display moves into the scrollback buffer when you, or the host, clear the terminal display. If you prefer not to have the terminal display saved to the scrollback buffer, clear this option; when the terminal display is cleared, the data is discarded |
Save from scrolling regions | When top and bottom screen margins are set (for example, by a text editor such as EDT or TPU, or with the DECSTBM function) the area within the margins is called the scrolling region. When this option is cleared, scrolling text within this region isn’t saved to the scrollback buffer. Select this option to save information within scrolling regions to the scrollback buffer. Note: This can cause display memory to fill quickly. |
Save before clearing from any row | This setting specifies whether data that has been cleared from a portion of the terminal window is saved in display memory. |
Compress blank rows | Select this option to save room in display memory by compressing multiple blank rows into a single blank row. |
Set Keyboard Options
You can set the following keyboard options:
3270 options
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Typeahead
When this option is selected, Host Access for the Cloud buffers the characters that you type in the terminal window. Typeahead allows you to keep typing after you send data to the host. Without typeahead, characters you type are ignored until the host is ready for more data.
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Word wrap
When this option is selected, word wrap functionality is enabled within a multi-line, unprotected field. In word wrap mode, some of the blank spaces between words are replaced by line breaks so that each line is visible in the terminal window and can be read without horizontal scrolling.
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Attention key sends
Specifies what is sent when the ATTN key is pressed. The options are Telnet break, Abort output, and Interrupt process.
5250 options
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Typeahead
When this option is selected, Host Access for the Cloud buffers the characters that you type in the terminal window. Typeahead allows you to keep typing after you send data to the host. Without typeahead, characters you type are ignored until the host is ready for more data.
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Error auto reset
When selected, the next key pressed after a keyboard error clears the error, restores the previous error line data, and attempts to execute the keystroke as follows:
If the cursor is in a valid input field and the key is a data key, the data is entered there if it is valid data for that field (for example, a numeric character in an input field that only accepts numbers).
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If the cursor is in a valid input field and the key is a function key, the key operation is executed.
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If the current cursor position is not in a valid input field and the key is a data key, the cursor is moved to the next valid input field and the data is entered there if it is valid data for that field.
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If the current cursor position is not in a valid input field and the key is a function key, the cursor is moved to the next valid input field and the key is ignored.
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If the current screen contains no valid input fields, you'll see an error message with each keystroke you press, and no keystrokes are executed
When cleared, you must press Reset to clear the error message from the error line before you can resume data entry.
By default, this option is not selected.
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Waive field checks for PF key
Select this option to allow PF keys to be sent to the host from restricted fields. This option is cleared by default.
VT options
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Backspace sends
Configures the function that the Backspace key sends. On the VT terminal keyboard the back arrow key
(<x)
is configurable: it can send either a delete (ASCII 127) or a backspace (ASCII 8) character. -
Local echo (VT)
This option causes each character typed at the keyboard to be displayed on the screen. This option is cleared by default, because most hosts echo back received characters.
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Cursor keys
Controls the characters that the four arrow keys (on both the numeric and editing keypad) transmit. This setting is typically set by the host. In general, you should keep this set to Normal.
If the arrow keys aren’t working properly, it may mean that this option remained incorrectly set to Application when a host program terminated abnormally. Changing this setting back to Normal should fix the problem with the arrow keys.
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Keypad
Controls the characters that the numeric keypad keys transmit. This setting is typically set by the host. In general, you should keep this set to Numeric.
If the number or PF keys aren’t working properly, it may mean that this option was incorrectly left set to Application when a host program terminated abnormally. Changing this setting back to Numeric should fix the numeric keypad.
T27 options
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Enable lower case (T27)
Enables lower case, as well as upper case letters to be displayed on the screen. Default. If this is option is disabled only upper case letters will display.
Terminal Settings
Terminal settings vary depending on your host type.
3270 and 5250 terminal settings
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Host character set
Select the 3270 or 5250 host character set you want to use. This setting chooses a conversion table to convert host characters (EBCDIC) into PC characters (ANSI). This setting should match the national character set used by your host system. If it doesn't match, then some characters, such as accents, may not display correctly. See your host documentation for definitions of the characters in each set. The default value is US English (037).
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Country extended graphics code (3270 only)
With this option selected (the default), additional characters are available in the configured National character set. See your host documentation for details.
VT terminal settings
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Terminal type (VT)
Specifies which terminal should be emulated. These choices affect the codes generated by the numeric keypad, the interpretation of control functions, and the response to terminal identification requests.
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Terminal ID (VT)
Specifies the response that Host Access for the Cloud sends to the host after a primary device attributes (DA) request. This response lets the host know what terminal functions it can perform. This setting is independent of the terminal type setting. When set to the default value of Reflection, Host Access for the Cloud responds to a primary DA request with the set of features it supports. If your host requires a more specific terminal ID, select another value from the list.
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New line (VT)
Select this option to send both a carriage return and linefeed when you press Enter. When Host Access for the Cloud receives a linefeed, form feed, or vertical tab, it moves the cursor to the first column of the next line. When this option is cleared (default), the Enter key sends only a carriage return. A linefeed, form feed, or vertical tab received from the host moves the cursor down one line in the current column. If lines on the display keep getting overwritten (that is, the host is not sending a linefeed along with a carriage return), select this option. If the New line option is selected but the host does not expect to receive a linefeed with each carriage return, lines will be double-spaced on the display.
T27 terminal settings
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Host character set (T27)
Using this option you can specify host to screen translation. Select the language used to convert characters received from the host before they are displayed on the local machine. The default is No translation.
Set Other Display Options
This option | Does this... |
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Column separator style (5250) | Use this option to specify which character (if any) should be used to render column separators in 5250 terminal sessions. The options are:
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Input field underlining (3270, 5250) | You can determine how the underlining of host input fields is handled:
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Status line (VT) | To enable a status line at the bottom of the display.
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Preserve aspect ratio | Select this option to maintain the host screen aspect ratio regardless of the size of the browser window. Aspect ratio describes the proportional relationship between the width of an image and its height. |
Display OIA (3270, 5250) | Select this option to display the operation and status messages in the Operator Information Area (OIA) at the bottom of the terminal window . By default, OIA display is enabled. |
Display status line (ALC) | Turns on a status line at the bottom of the display. |
Ignore mouse click on window activation | When a mouse click activates the terminal window, this option specifies whether actions such as updating the terminal cursor position, clearing a selection, or executing a hotspot are also performed. By default, these actions are not performed. |
Auto wrap (VT) | When selected, characters automatically wrap at the right margin and continue on the next line. When cleared, characters do not wrap when they reach the right margin of the display. New characters overwrite the character at the right margin until a carriage return is entered. |