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Index for Section 1 |
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Alphabetical listing for N |
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netscape(1)
NAME
netscape - Invokes Netscape browser for the World Wide Web
SYNOPSIS
netscape [options] [{ file|URL } ...]
OPTIONS
-display display
Specifies the X Window System server to use for display. The
specification is in the form hostname:display. For example:
-display carnifex.spqr.com:0
-geometry =WxH[[+|-]X[[+|-]Y]
Specifies the size and location of the netscape window. Values are in
pixels. The W and H values determine the width and height,
respectively, of the window. The X and Y values, if present, determine
the window's horizontal and vertical positions, respectively. A
positive value for X or Y specifies displacement of the window from the
left or top edge of the display. A negative value specifies
displacement from the right or bottom edge.
-help
Causes Netscape to display a help message listing the command's options
and their meanings. The Netscape application itself is not started.
-iconic
Causes Netscape to start up minimized instead of starting with its
window displayed.
-id window-id
Specifies the ID of a window to which remote commands are to be sent.
(See the description of the -remote option.) If unspecified, the first
window found is used.
-install
Instructs Netscape to install a private colormap.
-mono
Forces Netscape to use one-bit-deep display of images. Text and other
non-image elements can still be in color.
-ncols N
When not using -install, sets the maximum number of colors to allocate
for images to N.
-no-install
Instructs Netscape to use the default colormap.
-noraise
Instructs Netscape not to auto-raise the window to which subsequent
remote commands are issued with the -remote command.
-raise
Instructs Netscape to auto-raise the window to which subsequent remote
commands are issued with the -remote command. The default condition is
to raise the target window (-raise).
-remote remote-command
Instructs Netscape to execute a command in a Netscape process that is
already running. See the online Netscape handbook for a list of valid
commands.
-version
Causes Netscape to show its version number and build date. The
Netscape application itself is not started.
-visual {id|number}
Instructs Netscape to use a specific X Window System server visual.
Server visuals are different ways that a server can handle the mapping
of color information (TrueColor, GrayScale, PseudoColor, and so forth).
For information about the available visuals for a particular server,
use the xdpyinfo command. The visual IDs reported by xdpyinfo can be
used as parameters for the -visual option.
-xrm resource-spec
Causes Netscape to set a specific X Window System resource. See the
sample file /usr/doc/netscape/Netscape.ad for a list of the available
resources and their meanings.
OPERANDS
file
Specifies a local file to be viewed.
URL Specifies a Uniform Resource Locator (URL) address to be viewed.
DESCRIPTION
The netscape command invokes the Netscape browser for the World Wide Web.
Netscape enables you to view documents (called "pages" or "Web pages") that
have been formatted with the HTML hypertext markup language. You can also
access FTP directories, Gopher archives, and other types of objects.
Through the use of helper applications, you can view files for which
Netscape itself does not provide support. Document types and their
corresponding helper applications are specified in your $HOME/.mailcap
file.
The netscape window contains a menu bar with menu items that allow you to
open, print, or save pages, to view the source of HTML pages, to move
between pages, to maintain a list of "bookmarks," to set preferences and
options, and to perform other useful tasks. Optionally (by default),
Netscape also displays a button bar at the top of its window; the buttons
provide more direct access to the most-used features of the menus.
If you invoke Netscape with no input file or URL arguments, the program
defaults to display its "home page." As supplied by Compaq, the home page
is the Tru64 UNIX InfoCenter, from which you have access to documentation
and other services on your local Tru64 UNIX system. You can specify a
different home page using the Preferences choice under Netscape's Options
menu.
Although you can specify X Window System resources using the -xrm
resource-spec option, the most effective way to customize Netscape is to
set the options controlled by the program's Options menu. The online
Netscape handbook, accessible from Netscape's Help menu, provides complete
information about setting options and preferences.
FILES
/usr/doc/netscape/hot-convert.sh
Shell script for converting Mosaic hotlist files to Netscape bookmark
format.
/usr/doc/netscape/Netscape.ad
Sample X Window System resource file.