Compaq AA-RH8RD-TE Computer Accessories User Manual


 
The ToolTalk User’s Guide is useful to developers who create or maintain
applications that use the ToolTalk service to interoperate with other
applications; it is also useful to system administrators who set up
workstations.
The reader should be familiar with operating system commands, system
administrator commands, and system terminology.
ToolTalk Reference Manual
The ToolTalk Reference Manual describes components of the ToolTalk
application programming interface such as enumerated types and
functions. It also describes enhanced operating system shell commands,
error messages, and standard ToolTalk messaging sets.
4.3.14 X Window System Documentation
The X Window System is a network-transparent window system, in which
multiple applications can run simultaneously in windows, generating
text and graphics in monochrome or color on a bitmap display. Network
transparency means that application programs can run on machines
scattered throughout the network. Because the X Window System permits
applications to be device-independent, applications need not be rewritten,
recompiled, or even relinked to work with new display hardware.
The documentation described in this section was written by the engineers
who developed the X Window System and was provided by the X Consortium.
X Window System: The Complete Reference to Xlib, X Protocol, ICCCM,
XFLD
The X Window System: The Complete Reference to Xlib, X Protocol,
ICCCM, XFLD manual describes the features of X Window System
Version 11, Release 4. This manual was written by Robert W. Scheifler
and James Gettys, and was originally published by Digital Press.
X Window System Protocol
The X Window System Protocol manual describes Version 11, Release 6
of the X Window System protocol. This paper was written by Robert
W. Scheifler.
Inter-Client Communication Conventions Manual
The Inter-Client Communication Conventions Manual proposes suitable
conventions for interclient communications with X Window System
Version 11 software. The proposed conventions do not attempt to enforce
any particular user interface. To permit clients written in different
languages to communicate, these conventions are expressed in terms
of protocol operations, rather than the more familiar associated Xlib
interfaces.
Programming Documentation 4–11