HP Motif/iX Programmer's Supplement : COPYRIGHT NOTICE [ HP Motif/iX Programmer's Supplement ] MPE/iX 5.0 Documentation
HP Motif/iX Programmer's Supplement
900 Series HP 3000 Computer Systems
HP Motif/iX Programmer's Supplement
HP Part No. 36394-90001
Printed in U.S.A.
Edition Third Edition
E0494
________________________________________________________________________
|The information contained in this document is subject to change |
|without notice. |
| |
|Hewlett-Packard makes no warranty of any kind with regard to this |
|material, including, but not limited to, the implied warranties of |
|merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose. Hewlett-Packard |
|shall not be liable for errors contained herein or for direct, |
|indirect, special, incidental or consequential damages in connection |
|with the furnishing or use of this material. |
| |
|Hewlett-Packard assumes no responsibility for the use or reliability |
|of its software on equipment that is not furnished by Hewlett-Packard.|
| |
|This document contains proprietary information which is protected by |
|copyright. All rights are reserved. Reproduction, adaptation, or |
|translation without prior written permission is prohibited, except as |
|allowed under the copyright laws. |
________________________________________________________________________
Copyright (c) 1994 by Hewlett-Packard Company
________________________________________________________________________
|UNIX is a registered trademark of AT&T in the USA and other |
|countries. |
| |
|OSF/Motif is a trademark of the Open Software Foundation, Inc. in the|
|USA and other countries. |
| |
|Hewlett-Packard certifies that HP Motif/iX is OSF/Motif(TM) R1.1 |
|Validated as tested with the OSF/Motif Validation Test Suite R1.0.1 |
|with no waivers. |
| |
|Hewlett-Packard certifies that HP Motif/iX is compliant with the |
|AES/UE Revision Y from Open Software Foundation, Inc. |
| |
|Open Software Foundation, OSF, OSF/Motif and Motif are trademarks of |
|Open Software Foundation, Inc. |
________________________________________________________________________
Certification Legend
Printed 1994
Printing History
The following table lists the printings of this document, together with
the respective release dates for each edition. The software version
indicates the version of the software product at the time this document
was issued. Many product releases do not require changes to the
document. Therefore, do not expect a one-to-one correspondence between
product releases and document editions.
Edition Date Software Version
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
First Edition March 1991 A.00.00
Second Edition June 1992 A.01.00
Third Edition April 1994 C.50.00
Preface
MPE/iX, Multiprogramming Executive with Integrated POSIX, is the latest
in a series of forward-compatible operating systems for the HP 3000 line
of computers.
In HP documentation and in talking with HP 3000 users, you will encounter
references to MPE XL, the direct predecessor of MPE/iX. MPE/iX is a
superset of MPE XL. All programs written for MPE XL will run without
change under MPE/iX. You can continue to use MPE XL system documentation,
although it may not refer to features added to the operating system to
support POSIX (for example, hierarchical directories).
Finally, you may encounter references to MPE V, which is the operating
system for HP 3000s, not based on PA-RISC architecture. MPE V software
can be run on the PA-RISC (Series 900) HP 3000s in what is known as
compatibility mode.
HP Motif/iX(TM) Programmer's Supplement (36394- 90001) is written for
experienced X client application developers.
This supplement is organized into the following chapters and appendix:
Chapter 1 Introduction provides an overview of the HP
Motif/iX product, a definition of the audience, and
directions on how to use this supplement.
Chapter 2 Overview of Implementation Differences provides a
detailed overview of how the implementation of HP
Motif/iX differs from the implementation described
in X Window System and OSF/Motif(TM) developer's
documentation.
Chapter 3 Developing an X Client on MPE/iX describes the
major steps required to develop an X client on a
900 Series HP 3000 computer system.
Chapter 4 Porting an X Client From HP-UX to MPE/iX describes
the major steps required to successfully port an X
client from an HP 9000 to a 900 Series HP 3000
computer system .
Chpater 5 User Interface Language and Motif Resource Manager
provides a detailed overview of how the User
Interface Language (UIL) and the associated Motif
Resource Manager (MRM) differ from the
implementation described in OSF/Motif(TM)
developer's documentation.
Conventions
UPPERCASE In a syntax statement, commands and keywords are
shown in uppercase characters. The characters
must be entered in the order shown; however, you
can enter the characters in either uppercase or
lowercase. For example:
COMMAND
can be entered as any of the following:
command Command COMMAND
It cannot, however, be entered as:
comm com_mand comamnd
italics In a syntax statement or an example, a word in
italics represents a parameter or argument that
you must replace with the actual value. In the
following example, you must replace filename with
the name of the file:
COMMAND filename
bold italics In a syntax statement, a word in bold italics
represents a parameter that you must replace with
the actual value. In the following example, you
must replace filename with the name of the file:
COMMAND filename
punctuation In a syntax statement, punctuation characters
(other than brackets, braces, vertical bars, and
ellipses) must be entered exactly as shown. In
the following example, the parentheses and colon
must be entered:
(filename):(filename)
underlining Within an example that contains interactive
dialog, user input and user responses to prompts
are indicated by underlining. In the following
example, yes is the user's response to the prompt:
Do you want to continue? >> yes
Conventions (continued)
{ } In a syntax statement, braces enclose required
elements. When several elements are stacked
within braces, you must select one. In the
following example, you must select either ON or
OFF:
COMMAND { ON }
{ OFF}
[ ] In a syntax statement, brackets enclose optional
elements. In the following example, OPTION can be
omitted:
COMMAND filename [OPTION]
When several elements are stacked within brackets,
you can select one or none of the elements. In
the following example, you can select OPTION or
parameter or neither. The elements cannot be
repeated.
COMMAND filename [ OPTION ]
[ parameter]
[...] In a syntax statement, horizontal ellipses
enclosed in brackets indicate that you can
repeatedly select the element(s) that appear
within the immediately preceding pair of brackets
or braces. In the example below, you can select
parameter zero or more times. Each instance of
parameter must be preceded by a comma:
[,parameter][...]
In the example below, you only use the comma as a
delimiter if parameter is repeated; no comma is
used before the first occurrence of parameter:
[parameter][,...]
Conventions (continued)
|...| In a syntax statement, horizontal ellipses
enclosed in vertical bars indicate that you can
select more than one element within the
immediately preceding pair of brackets or braces.
However, each particular element can only be
selected once. In the following example, you must
select A, AB, BA, or B. The elements cannot be
repeated.
{ A} |...|
{ B}
... In an example, horizontal or vertical ellipses
indicate where portions of an example have been
omitted.
In a syntax statement, the space symbol shows a
required blank. In the following example,
parameter and parameter must be separated with a
blank:
(parameter) (parameter)
The symbol indicates a key on the keyboard. For
example, RETURN represents the carriage return key
or Shift represents the shift key.
CTRLcharacterCTRLcharacter indicates a control character. For
example, CTRLY means that you press the control
key and the Y key simultaneously.
MPE/iX 5.0 Documentation