Oberon Computing
Appearance
"Oberon Computing" includes multiple aspects.[2] For an overview, begin with the Wikipedia article. For authoritative documents see Bibliography. For other uses of the name Oberon, refer to the disambiguation page.
Table of contents
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- Introduction
- Audience
- System Characteristics
- Use Cases
- Text
- Editing a Text
- Programmatical Access to a Text
- How Text Works ...
- In V2
- In ETH Oberon
- In the Oberon Subsystem of A2
- In V5
- Text.FindPiece and the cache
- Licenses
- ETH Oberon License
- ETH Bluebottle/Aos/A2 License
- Project Oberon, Revised Edition 2013
- The Oberon System, V1 and V2
- Text in V2
- Sources in V2
- ETH Oberon
ETH Oberon on a Tatung TWN-5213 CU tablet.[3] - Links
- Installing
- Adding a Calendar and Clock
- Text
- Module Sources
- Texts
- Tools
- Linz Oberon, V4
Oberon V4 on an iMac M1. - Installing
- Configuring
- Starting V4 on Linux
- Usage Notes
- Bug Fixes
- Module Sources
- A2
Firefox and A2 with Weston and XWayland on a Debian 10 system with twin screens. - Links
- Installing and Running UnixAos
- User and Machine Specific Configuration of UnixAos
- The A2 Repository
- Running
- User Level Applications
- The Oberon Sub-system
- Module Sources, Tools and Configuration Texts
- V5
- Installing
- Text
- Notes
- Sources
- Booting
- V2
- ETH Oberon
- V4
- V5
- Multi-booting
- Comparing
- Comparing Texts
- Comparing Wikibook Pages
- Contributing to this Wikibook
- Formatting a Source Text
- Styling a Source Text
- Footnotes
- ↑ Substantial content is present. Improvements remain possible and editing continues at a modest pace.
- ↑ The Oberon programming language with multiple dialects, various Oberon operating systems, computing hardware where the operating systems have been used and the hardware description language, Lola-2, used to configure a FPGA.
- ↑ An adapter is required to connect a conventional serial mouse to the Hirose 3540-16P-CV connector. Support for the touchscreen has yet to be implemented.