VT100.net

This site is dedicated to the range of video terminals produced by Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC) from 1970 to 1995. The most famous of these is the VT100, a name which is recognised most often today as a setting in terminal emulation programs.

I started this site in October 1998 as a place to put information that I had collected about the VT320 which I have been using for ten years. Although I’ve used various Digital terminals over the past decade, my favourite is the VT320, mainly because I’ve spent more time writing programs to take advantage of (and stretch) its capabilities than for any other in the range.

Primary Sources

VT05

VT50 Series (VT52, VT55)

VT100 Series

Probably the most famous terminal name in the world, and the most emulated. The VT100 User Guide is essential reading for anyone who wants to construct a VT100 emulator. If you use this as the specification and test your implementation with vttest, you won’t go far wrong.

Other manuals: serial printer interface VT1XX-AC User Guide (EK-VT1AC-UG), VT101 Hot Line Troubleshooting Card (EK-101HL-RC), VT101 Series Pocket Service Guide (EK-VT101-PS).

VT220 Information

VT320 Information

General Information

Emulation

The VT Emulation sections contains all the materials about standards and escape sequences previously linked from this page.

Other Manufacturers

There are now so many manuals online from other terminal manufacturers that I’ll only be listing new ones here. For the full listings of manuals, please look at the page for that manufacturer. The following companies are currently covered: Alpha Microsystems, Ann Arbor, Beehive, C. Itoh, Data General, Hazeltine, Heath/Zenith, Kimtron, Lear Siegler (LSI), Lynwood, Qume, Research, Inc., Soroc Technology, Sycor, Tandy, Tektronix, TeleVideo, Terminal Technology Ltd., Visual Technology, Volker-Craig, Wyse

I have gradually been accumulating terminals by other manufacturers. The following manuals are online:

Resources Elsewhere

The most comprehensive set of links I know of is maintained by Richard Shuford in his Terminal Information Archive. Richard has been scouring newsgroups for years, archiving the best postings on terminal-related topics. This is an essential bookmark.