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Guy Harris (talk | contribs) →Examples of terminals emulated: If "ANSI" is a set of standards, it would have to be the complete set of standards issued by the American National Standards Institute, a/k/a ANSI. The set in question is the set of standards for "ANSI escape codes", so don't pipe away the full name. |
Guy Harris (talk | contribs) →Examples of terminals emulated: Speak of "Unix-like systems", which includes Linux, the *BSDs, Solaris, AIX, macOS, etc.. |
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==Examples of terminals emulated==
Many terminal emulators have been developed for physical hardware terminals such as [[VT52]], [[VT100]], [[VT220]], [[VT320]], [[IBM 3270|IBM 3270/8/9/E]], [[IBM 5250]], [[IBM 3179G]], [[Data General]] D211, [[Hewlett-Packard]] HP700/92, Sperry/Unisys 2000-series [[Uniscope|UTS60]], Burroughs/Unisys A-series T27/TD830/ET1100, [[Applied Digital Data Systems|ADDS]] ViewPoint, AT386, [[Siemens Nixdorf]] (SNI) 97801, [[Televideo]] 925, and [[Wyse]] 50/60. Additionally, programs have been developed to emulate virtual terminals such as [[xterm]] and assorted console "terminals" such as the [[Sun workstation]] console and the [[Linux console]]. Finally, some emulators simply refer to a set of standards, such as the standards for [[ANSI escape code]]s. Such programs are available on many platforms,
== Implementation details ==
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