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Chapter 14 The User View of Operating Systems

Chapter 14 The User View of Operating Systems. The Architecture of Computer Hardware and Systems Software: An Information Technology Approach 3rd Edition, Irv Englander John Wiley and Sons  2003. User Interface. Help the user use the computer system productively

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Chapter 14 The User View of Operating Systems

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  1. Chapter 14The User View of Operating Systems The Architecture of Computer Hardware and Systems Software: An Information Technology Approach 3rd Edition, Irv Englander John Wiley and Sons 2003

  2. User Interface • Help the user use the computer system productively • Provide consistent user interface services to application programs to lower learning curves and increase productivity • Choice of user interface depends on the kind of user • Writing programs vs. running applications Chapter 14 User View of Operating Systems

  3. User Functions • Program execution • File commands • Mount and unmount devices • Printer spooling • Security • Inter-user communication • System Status • Program Services • DCOM, CORBA, Remote Procedure Call (RPC) Chapter 14 User View of Operating Systems

  4. Interface Design • CLI - Command Line Interface • Batch System Commands • Menu-Driven Interfaces • GUI - Graphical User Interface Chapter 14 User View of Operating Systems

  5. Command Line Interface • command <operand1> <operand2> … <switch1> <switch2> … • Operands • keyword (switches) and/or positional • Advantages • More flexible and powerful • Faster for experienced users • Can combine commands Chapter 14 User View of Operating Systems

  6. Command Line Interfaces Chapter 14 User View of Operating Systems

  7. Command Languages • Provide a mechanism to combine sequences of commands together. These pseudo-programs are known as scriptsor batch files. • Startup files – OS configuration, user preferences • Features of Command Languages • Can accept input from the user and can output messages to I/O devices • Provide ability to create and manipulate variables • Include the ability to branch and loop • Ability to specify arguments to the program command and to transfer those arguments to variables within the program • Provide error detection and recovery Chapter 14 User View of Operating Systems

  8. DOS Batch File Chapter 14 User View of Operating Systems

  9. UNIX Shell Script Chapter 14 User View of Operating Systems

  10. Menu-Driven Interface • No need to memorize commands • All available commands are listed • Menus can be nested • Low data requirements • Still used in many ATM and Point-of-Sale systems Chapter 14 User View of Operating Systems

  11. Menu Driven Interface Chapter 14 User View of Operating Systems

  12. Windows Interfaces • Also known as Graphical User Interfaces (GUIs) • Mouse-driven and icon-based • Windows • Are allocated to the use of a particular program or process • Contain a title bar, menu bar, and widgets Chapter 14 User View of Operating Systems

  13. GUI Interface – Windows XP Chapter 14 User View of Operating Systems

  14. GUI Interface – Linux KDE Chapter 14 User View of Operating Systems

  15. GUI Interface - MacIntosh Chapter 14 User View of Operating Systems

  16. GUI Advantages Easy to learn and use Little training Amenable to multi-tasking Disadvantages Harder to implement More HW/SW requirements Requires lots of memory SW is complex and difficult to write CLI Advantages More flexible and powerful Faster for experienced users Can combine commands Disadvantages More difficult to learn and use GUI vs. CLI Chapter 14 User View of Operating Systems

  17. X-Windows Chapter 14 User View of Operating Systems

  18. Duocentric Interface • Focus on the document rather than the application being executed • Expand role of OS by moving capabilities from the application to system services • Example: click on document to run program • Effort to assure that every application program responds in similar ways to user actions. Chapter 14 User View of Operating Systems

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