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Links

 
Wikipedia: Links (web browser)
 
Links

Screenshot of a graphical Links
Developer(s) Mikuláš Patočka
Initial release 1999
Stable release 2.2  (2008-07-11; 11 months ago) [+/−]
Preview release none  (n/a) [+/−]
Written in C
Operating system Unix, Linux, Windows, FreeBSD, Mac OS X
Type Web browser
License GPL
Website links.sourceforge.net

Links is an open source text and graphic web browser with a pull-down menu system.[1] It renders complex pages, has partial HTML 4.0 support (including tables and frames and support for multiple character sets such as UTF-8), supports color and monochrome terminals and allows horizontal scrolling.

It is oriented toward visual users who want to retain many typical elements of graphical user interfaces (pop up windows, menus etc.) in a text-only environment. The focus on intuitive usability makes it suitable as a web browser for low-end terminals in libraries, Internet cafes etc.

The original version of Links was developed by Mikuláš Patočka in the Czech Republic. His group, Twibright Labs, later developed version 2 of the Links browser, that displays graphics, renders fonts in different sizes (with anti-aliasing) and supports JavaScript (up to version 2.1pre29). The resulting browser is very fast, but it does not display many pages as they were intended. The graphical mode works even on Unix systems without X or any other window environment, using either SVGALib or the framebuffer of the system's graphics card.

Contents

Elinks

ELinks ("Experimental/Enhanced Links") is a fork of Links led by Petr Baudis. It is based on Links 0.9. It has a more open development and incorporates patches from other Links versions (such as additional extension scripting in Lua) and from Internet users.

Links Hacked

Links Hacked is another version of the Links browser which has merged some of Elinks' features into Links 2.

Andrey Mirtchovski has ported it to Plan 9. It is considered a good browser on that operating system, though some users have griped about its inability to cut and paste with the Plan 9 snarf buffer.

Evolt hosts an unsupported version on its archive for 32 bit Windows, dated June 29, 2002.[2][3]

See also

External links

References

  1. ^ Links home page
  2. ^ Evolt (November 2008). "browsers". http://browsers.evolt.org. Retrieved on 2008-12-17. 
  3. ^ Evolt (June 2002). "browsers.evolt.org: / links / win32". http://browsers.evolt.org/?links/win32. Retrieved on 2008-12-18. 

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Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Links (web browser)" Read more

 

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