Intuition (Amiga)

Intuition is the native windowing system and user interface (UI) engine of AmigaOS. It was developed almost entirely by RJ Mical.[1][2] Intuition should not be confused with Workbench, the AmigaOS desktop environment[3] and spatial file manager, which relies on Intuition for handling windows and input events. Workbench uses Intuition to produce displays and AmigaDOS to interact with filing system: AmigaDOS is built on Exec (OS kernel).[4][3][5]

Intuition is the internal widget and graphics system. It is not implemented primarily as an application-managed graphics library (as most systems, following Xerox's design, have done), but rather as a separate task that maintains the state of all the standard UI elements independently from the application. This makes it responsive because UI gadgets are live even when the application is busy. The Intuition task is driven by user events through the mouse, keyboard, and other input devices. It also arbitrates collisions of the mouse pointer and icons and control of "animated icons". Like most GUIs of the day, Amiga's Intuition followed Xerox's lead anteceding solutions, but pragmatically, a command line interface was also included and it extended the functionality of the platform. Later releases added more improvements, like support for high-color Workbench screens and 3D aspect. Replacement desktop file managers were also made available, such as Directory Opus Magellan and Scalos interface.

Initial releases used blue, orange, white and black palettes. This was intentional – in a time before cheap high-quality video monitors, Commodore tested output on the worst televisions they could find, with the goal of obtaining the best possible contrast under these worst-case conditions.

  1. ^ Mical, Robert J.; Deyl, Susan (1987). Amiga Intuition Reference Manual. Amiga Technical Reference Series. Addison-Wesley. ISBN 0-201-11076-8.
  2. ^ "Robert J. "RJ" Mical". The Amiga Museum. 2016. Archived from the original on 2022-04-30. Retrieved 2022-05-23.
  3. ^ a b "The Amiga Workbench". The Amiga Museum. 2016. Retrieved 2022-05-23.[permanent dead link]
  4. ^ "The Amiga Operating system – Kickstart & Workbench". The Amiga Museum. 2016. Archived from the original on 2022-05-18. Retrieved 2022-05-23.
  5. ^ "Carl Sassenrath". The Amiga Museum. 2016. Archived from the original on 2020-02-25. Retrieved 2022-05-23.