ANSI.SYS Ü ßßßßßßßßß Defines functions that change display graphics, control cursor movement, and reassign keys. The ANSI.SYS device driver supports the use of ANSI escape sequences to control the system's screen and keyboard. Syntax: DEVICE=[drive:][path]ansi.sys [/X] [/K] [drive:][path] Specifies the location of the ANSI.SYS file. /X Remaps extended keys independtly on 101-key keyboards. /K Ignores extended keys on 101-key keyboards. Parameters used in ANSI escape sequences Pn Numeric paramter. Specifies a decimal number. Ps Selective parameter. Specifies a decimal number that you use to select a function. You can specify more than one function by separating the parameters with semicolons. PL Line parameter. Specifies a decimal number that represents one of the lines on your display or on another device. Pc Column parameter. Specifies a decimal number that represents one of the columns on your screen or on another device. ANSI escape sequences In the following list of ANSI escape sequences, the abbreviate ESC represents the ASCII escape character 27 (1Bh), which appears at the beginning of each escape sequence. ESC[PL;PcH or ESC[PL;Pcf Cursor Position. Moves the cursor to the specified location (coordinates). If you do not specify a position, the cursor moves to the home position (home 0, column 0). ESC[PnA Cursor Up. Moves the cursor up by the specified number of lines without changing columns. ESC[PnB Cursor Down. Moves the cursor down by the sepcified number of lines without changing columns. ESC[PnC Cursor Forward. Moves the cursor forward by the specified number of columns without changing lines. ESC[PnD Cursor Backward. Moves the cursor back by the specified number of columns without changing lines. ESC[s Save Cursor Position. Saves the current position. You can move the cursor to the saved cursor position by using the Restore Cursor Position sequence. ESC[u Restore Cursor Position. Returns the cursor to the position saved by the Save Cursor Position sequence. ESC[2J Erase Display. Clears the screen and moves the cursor to the home position (line 0, column 0). ESC[K Erase Line. Clears all characters from the cursor position to the end of the line. ESC[Ps;...;Psm Set Graphics Mode. Calls the graphics functions specified by the following values. These functions remain active until the next occurrence of this escape sequence. Text attributes 0 All attributes off 1 Bold on 4 Underscore (on monochrome display adapter only) 5 Blink on 7 Reverse video on 8 Concealed on Foreground colors 30 Black 31 Red 32 Green 33 Yellow 34 Blue 35 Magenta 36 Cyan 37 White Background colors 40 Black 41 Red 42 Green 43 Yellow 44 Blue 45 Magenta 46 Cyan 47 White Parameters 30 through 47 meet the ISO 6429 standard. ESC[=Psh Set Mode. Changes the screen width or type to the mode specified by one of the following values: 0 40x25 monochrome (text) 1 40x25 color (text) 2 80x25 monochrome (text) 3 80x25 color (text) 4 320x200 4-color (graphics) 5 320x200 monochrome (graphics) 6 640x200 monochrome (graphics) 7 Enables line wrapping 13 320x200 color (graphics) 14 640x200 color (16-color graphics) 15 640x350 monochrome (2-color graphics) 16 640x350 color (16-color graphics) 17 640x480 monochrome (2-color graphics) 18 640x480 color (16-color graphics) 19 320x200 color (256-color graphics) ESC[Psl Reset Mode. Resets the mode by using the same values that Set Mode uses, except for 7, which disables line wrapping. Examples: To exchange backslash and question-mark keys by using literal strings, type the following sequence: ESC["\";"?"pESC["?";"\"p To exchange the backslash and question-mark keys by using each key's ASCII value, type the following escape sequence: ESC[92;63pESC[63;92p To restore the backslash and question-mark keys to their original meanings, type the following sequence: ESC[92;92pESC[63;63p