.\" authorization. *
.\"***************************************************************************
.\"
-.\" $Id: tput.1,v 1.56 2017/11/18 23:51:17 tom Exp $
+.\" $Id: tput.1,v 1.57 2017/11/20 01:07:02 tom Exp $
.TH @TPUT@ 1 ""
.ds d @TERMINFO@
.ds n 1
.bP
standard input and
.bP
-ultimately \*(lq/dev/tty\*(rq
+ultimately \*(``/dev/tty\*(''
.RE
.IP
to obtain terminal settings.
.TP 5
\fB@TPUT@ cup 0 0\fR
Send the sequence to move the cursor to row \fB0\fR, column \fB0\fR
-(the upper left corner of the screen, usually known as the \*(lqhome\*(rq
+(the upper left corner of the screen, usually known as the \*(``home\*(''
cursor position).
.TP 5
\fB@TPUT@ clear\fR
Also, Bostic's BSD \fBtput\fP did not modify the terminal I/O modes
as the earlier BSD \fBtset\fP had done.
.PP
-At the same time, Bostic added a shell script named \*(lqclear\*(rq,
+At the same time, Bostic added a shell script named \*(``clear\*('',
which used \fBtput\fP to clear the screen.
.PP
Both of these appeared in 4.4BSD,
-becoming the \*(lqmodern\*(rq BSD implementation of \fBtput\fP.
+becoming the \*(``modern\*('' BSD implementation of \fBtput\fP.
.PP
This implementation of \fBtput\fP began from a different source than
AT&T or BSD: Ross Ridge's \fImytinfo\fP package, published on
The AT&T implementation's \fBinit\fP and \fBreset\fP commands
use the BSD (4.1c) \fBtset\fP source, which manipulates terminal modes.
It successively tries standard output, standard error, standard input
-before falling back to \*(lq/dev/tty\*(rq and finally just assumes
+before falling back to \*(``/dev/tty\*('' and finally just assumes
a 1200Bd terminal.
When updating terminal modes, it ignores errors.
.IP