iw4x-client/deps/pdcurses/docs/MANUAL.md

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Definitions and Variables (curses.h)
====================================
Define before inclusion (only those needed):
XCURSES if building / built for X11
PDC_RGB if you want to use RGB color definitions
(Red = 1, Green = 2, Blue = 4) instead of BGR
PDC_WIDE if building / built with wide-character support
PDC_DLL_BUILD if building / built as a Windows DLL
PDC_NCMOUSE to use the ncurses mouse API instead
of PDCurses' traditional mouse API
Defined by this header:
PDCURSES PDCurses-only features are available
PDC_BUILD API build version
PDC_VER_MAJOR major version number
PDC_VER_MINOR minor version number
PDC_VERDOT version string
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
Text Attributes
===============
PDCurses uses a 32-bit integer for its chtype:
+--------------------------------------------------------------------+
|31|30|29|28|27|26|25|24|23|22|21|20|19|18|17|16|15|14|13|..| 2| 1| 0|
+--------------------------------------------------------------------+
color pair | modifiers | character eg 'a'
There are 256 color pairs (8 bits), 8 bits for modifiers, and 16 bits
for character data. The modifiers are bold, underline, right-line,
left-line, italic, reverse and blink, plus the alternate character set
indicator.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
Functions
=========
addch
-----
### Synopsis
int addch(const chtype ch);
int waddch(WINDOW *win, const chtype ch);
int mvaddch(int y, int x, const chtype ch);
int mvwaddch(WINDOW *win, int y, int x, const chtype ch);
int echochar(const chtype ch);
int wechochar(WINDOW *win, const chtype ch);
int addrawch(chtype ch);
int waddrawch(WINDOW *win, chtype ch);
int mvaddrawch(int y, int x, chtype ch);
int mvwaddrawch(WINDOW *win, int y, int x, chtype ch);
int add_wch(const cchar_t *wch);
int wadd_wch(WINDOW *win, const cchar_t *wch);
int mvadd_wch(int y, int x, const cchar_t *wch);
int mvwadd_wch(WINDOW *win, int y, int x, const cchar_t *wch);
int echo_wchar(const cchar_t *wch);
int wecho_wchar(WINDOW *win, const cchar_t *wch);
### Description
addch() adds the chtype ch to the default window (stdscr) at the
current cursor position, and advances the cursor. Note that chtypes
can convey both text (a single character) and attributes, including a
color pair. add_wch() is the wide-character version of this function,
taking a pointer to a cchar_t instead of a chtype.
waddch() is like addch(), but also lets you specify the window. (This
is in fact the core output routine.) wadd_wch() is the wide version.
mvaddch() moves the cursor to the specified (y, x) position, and adds
ch to stdscr. mvadd_wch() is the wide version.
mvwaddch() moves the cursor to the specified position and adds ch to
the specified window. mvwadd_wch() is the wide version.
echochar() adds ch to stdscr at the current cursor position and calls
refresh(). echo_wchar() is the wide version.
wechochar() adds ch to the specified window and calls wrefresh().
wecho_wchar() is the wide version.
addrawch(), waddrawch(), mvaddrawch() and mvwaddrawch() are PDCurses-
specific wrappers for addch() etc. that disable the translation of
control characters.
The following applies to all these functions:
If the cursor moves on to the right margin, an automatic newline is
performed. If scrollok is enabled, and a character is added to the
bottom right corner of the window, the scrolling region will be
scrolled up one line. If scrolling is not allowed, ERR will be
returned.
If ch is a tab, newline, or backspace, the cursor will be moved
appropriately within the window. If ch is a newline, the clrtoeol
routine is called before the cursor is moved to the beginning of the
next line. If newline mapping is off, the cursor will be moved to
the next line, but the x coordinate will be unchanged. If ch is a
tab the cursor is moved to the next tab position within the window.
If ch is another control character, it will be drawn in the ^X
notation. Calling the inch() routine after adding a control
character returns the representation of the control character, not
the control character.
Video attributes can be combined with a character by ORing them into
the parameter. Text, including attributes, can be copied from one
place to another by using inch() and addch().
Note that in PDCurses, for now, a cchar_t and a chtype are the same.
The text field is 16 bits wide, and is treated as Unicode (UCS-2)
when PDCurses is built with wide-character support (define PDC_WIDE).
So, in functions that take a chtype, like addch(), both the wide and
narrow versions will handle Unicode. But for portability, you should
use the wide functions.
### Return Value
All functions return OK on success and ERR on error.
### Portability
X/Open ncurses NetBSD
addch Y Y Y
waddch Y Y Y
mvaddch Y Y Y
mvwaddch Y Y Y
echochar Y Y Y
wechochar Y Y Y
add_wch Y Y Y
wadd_wch Y Y Y
mvadd_wch Y Y Y
mvwadd_wch Y Y Y
echo_wchar Y Y Y
wecho_wchar Y Y Y
addrawch - - -
waddrawch - - -
mvaddrawch - - -
mvwaddrawch - - -
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
addchstr
--------
### Synopsis
int addchstr(const chtype *ch);
int addchnstr(const chtype *ch, int n);
int waddchstr(WINDOW *win, const chtype *ch);
int waddchnstr(WINDOW *win, const chtype *ch, int n);
int mvaddchstr(int y, int x, const chtype *ch);
int mvaddchnstr(int y, int x, const chtype *ch, int n);
int mvwaddchstr(WINDOW *, int y, int x, const chtype *ch);
int mvwaddchnstr(WINDOW *, int y, int x, const chtype *ch, int n);
int add_wchstr(const cchar_t *wch);
int add_wchnstr(const cchar_t *wch, int n);
int wadd_wchstr(WINDOW *win, const cchar_t *wch);
int wadd_wchnstr(WINDOW *win, const cchar_t *wch, int n);
int mvadd_wchstr(int y, int x, const cchar_t *wch);
int mvadd_wchnstr(int y, int x, const cchar_t *wch, int n);
int mvwadd_wchstr(WINDOW *win, int y, int x, const cchar_t *wch);
int mvwadd_wchnstr(WINDOW *win, int y, int x, const cchar_t *wch,
int n);
### Description
These routines write a chtype or cchar_t string directly into the
window structure, starting at the current or specified position. The
four routines with n as the last argument copy at most n elements,
but no more than will fit on the line. If n == -1 then the whole
string is copied, up to the maximum number that will fit on the line.
The cursor position is not advanced. These routines do not check for
newline or other special characters, nor does any line wrapping
occur.
### Return Value
All functions return OK or ERR.
### Portability
X/Open ncurses NetBSD
addchstr Y Y Y
waddchstr Y Y Y
mvaddchstr Y Y Y
mvwaddchstr Y Y Y
addchnstr Y Y Y
waddchnstr Y Y Y
mvaddchnstr Y Y Y
mvwaddchnstr Y Y Y
add_wchstr Y Y Y
wadd_wchstr Y Y Y
mvadd_wchstr Y Y Y
mvwadd_wchstr Y Y Y
add_wchnstr Y Y Y
wadd_wchnstr Y Y Y
mvadd_wchnstr Y Y Y
mvwadd_wchnstr Y Y Y
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
addstr
------
### Synopsis
int addstr(const char *str);
int addnstr(const char *str, int n);
int waddstr(WINDOW *win, const char *str);
int waddnstr(WINDOW *win, const char *str, int n);
int mvaddstr(int y, int x, const char *str);
int mvaddnstr(int y, int x, const char *str, int n);
int mvwaddstr(WINDOW *win, int y, int x, const char *str);
int mvwaddnstr(WINDOW *win, int y, int x, const char *str, int n);
int addwstr(const wchar_t *wstr);
int addnwstr(const wchar_t *wstr, int n);
int waddwstr(WINDOW *win, const wchar_t *wstr);
int waddnwstr(WINDOW *win, const wchar_t *wstr, int n);
int mvaddwstr(int y, int x, const wchar_t *wstr);
int mvaddnwstr(int y, int x, const wchar_t *wstr, int n);
int mvwaddwstr(WINDOW *win, int y, int x, const wchar_t *wstr);
int mvwaddnwstr(WINDOW *win, int y, int x, const wchar_t *wstr, int n);
### Description
These routines write all the characters of the null-terminated string
str or wide-character string wstr to the given window. The
functionality is similar to calling waddch() once for each character
in the string; except that, when PDCurses is built with wide-
character support enabled, the narrow-character functions treat the
string as a multibyte string in the current locale, and convert it.
The routines with n as the last argument write at most n characters;
if n is negative, then the entire string will be added.
### Return Value
All functions return OK or ERR.
### Portability
X/Open ncurses NetBSD
addstr Y Y Y
waddstr Y Y Y
mvaddstr Y Y Y
mvwaddstr Y Y Y
addnstr Y Y Y
waddnstr Y Y Y
mvaddnstr Y Y Y
mvwaddnstr Y Y Y
addwstr Y Y Y
waddwstr Y Y Y
mvaddwstr Y Y Y
mvwaddwstr Y Y Y
addnwstr Y Y Y
waddnwstr Y Y Y
mvaddnwstr Y Y Y
mvwaddnwstr Y Y Y
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
attr
----
### Synopsis
int attroff(chtype attrs);
int wattroff(WINDOW *win, chtype attrs);
int attron(chtype attrs);
int wattron(WINDOW *win, chtype attrs);
int attrset(chtype attrs);
int wattrset(WINDOW *win, chtype attrs);
int standend(void);
int wstandend(WINDOW *win);
int standout(void);
int wstandout(WINDOW *win);
int color_set(short color_pair, void *opts);
int wcolor_set(WINDOW *win, short color_pair, void *opts);
int attr_get(attr_t *attrs, short *color_pair, void *opts);
int attr_off(attr_t attrs, void *opts);
int attr_on(attr_t attrs, void *opts);
int attr_set(attr_t attrs, short color_pair, void *opts);
int wattr_get(WINDOW *win, attr_t *attrs, short *color_pair,
void *opts);
int wattr_off(WINDOW *win, attr_t attrs, void *opts);
int wattr_on(WINDOW *win, attr_t attrs, void *opts);
int wattr_set(WINDOW *win, attr_t attrs, short color_pair,
void *opts);
int chgat(int n, attr_t attr, short color, const void *opts);
int mvchgat(int y, int x, int n, attr_t attr, short color,
const void *opts);
int mvwchgat(WINDOW *win, int y, int x, int n, attr_t attr,
short color, const void *opts);
int wchgat(WINDOW *win, int n, attr_t attr, short color,
const void *opts);
chtype getattrs(WINDOW *win);
int underend(void);
int wunderend(WINDOW *win);
int underscore(void);
int wunderscore(WINDOW *win);
### Description
These functions manipulate the current attributes and/or colors of
the named window. These attributes can be any combination of
A_STANDOUT, A_REVERSE, A_BOLD, A_DIM, A_BLINK, A_UNDERLINE. These
constants are defined in <curses.h> and can be combined with the
bitwise-OR operator (|).
The current attributes of a window are applied to all chtypes that
are written into the window with waddch(). Attributes are a property
of the chtype, and move with the character through any scrolling or
insert/delete operations.
wattrset() sets the current attributes of the given window to attrs.
attrset() is the stdscr version.
wattroff() turns off the named attributes without affecting any other
attributes; wattron() turns them on.
wcolor_set() sets the window color to the value of color_pair. opts
is unused.
standout() is the same as attron(A_STANDOUT). standend() is the same
as attrset(A_NORMAL); that is, it turns off all attributes.
The attr_* and wattr_* functions are intended for use with the WA_*
attributes. In PDCurses, these are the same as A_*, and there is no
difference in bevahior from the chtype-based functions. In all cases,
opts is unused.
wattr_get() retrieves the attributes and color pair for the specified
window.
wchgat() sets the color pair and attributes for the next n cells on
the current line of a given window, without changing the existing
text, or alterting the window's attributes. An n of -1 extends the
change to the edge of the window. The changes take effect
immediately. opts is unused.
wunderscore() turns on the A_UNDERLINE attribute; wunderend() turns
it off. underscore() and underend() are the stdscr versions.
### Return Value
All functions return OK on success and ERR on error.
### Portability
X/Open ncurses NetBSD
attroff Y Y Y
wattroff Y Y Y
attron Y Y Y
wattron Y Y Y
attrset Y Y Y
wattrset Y Y Y
standend Y Y Y
wstandend Y Y Y
standout Y Y Y
wstandout Y Y Y
color_set Y Y Y
wcolor_set Y Y Y
attr_get Y Y Y
wattr_get Y Y Y
attr_on Y Y Y
wattr_on Y Y Y
attr_off Y Y Y
wattr_off Y Y Y
attr_set Y Y Y
wattr_set Y Y Y
chgat Y Y Y
wchgat Y Y Y
mvchgat Y Y Y
mvwchgat Y Y Y
getattrs - Y Y
underend - - Y
wunderend - - Y
underscore - - Y
wunderscore - - Y
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
beep
----
### Synopsis
int beep(void);
int flash(void);
### Description
beep() sounds the audible bell on the terminal, if possible; if not,
it calls flash().
flash() "flashes" the screen, by inverting the foreground and
background of every cell, pausing, and then restoring the original
attributes.
### Return Value
These functions return ERR if called before initscr(), otherwise OK.
### Portability
X/Open ncurses NetBSD
beep Y Y Y
flash Y Y Y
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
bkgd
----
### Synopsis
int bkgd(chtype ch);
void bkgdset(chtype ch);
chtype getbkgd(WINDOW *win);
int wbkgd(WINDOW *win, chtype ch);
void wbkgdset(WINDOW *win, chtype ch);
int bkgrnd(const cchar_t *wch);
void bkgrndset(const cchar_t *wch);
int getbkgrnd(cchar_t *wch);
int wbkgrnd(WINDOW *win, const cchar_t *wch);
void wbkgrndset(WINDOW *win, const cchar_t *wch);
int wgetbkgrnd(WINDOW *win, cchar_t *wch);
### Description
bkgdset() and wbkgdset() manipulate the background of a window. The
background is a chtype consisting of any combination of attributes
and a character; it is combined with each chtype added or inserted to
the window by waddch() or winsch(). Only the attribute part is used
to set the background of non-blank characters, while both character
and attributes are used for blank positions.
bkgd() and wbkgd() not only change the background, but apply it
immediately to every cell in the window.
wbkgrnd(), wbkgrndset() and wgetbkgrnd() are the "wide-character"
versions of these functions, taking a pointer to a cchar_t instead of
a chtype. However, in PDCurses, cchar_t and chtype are the same.
The attributes that are defined with the attrset()/attron() set of
functions take precedence over the background attributes if there is
a conflict (e.g., different color pairs).
### Return Value
bkgd() and wbkgd() return OK, unless the window is NULL, in which
case they return ERR.
### Portability
X/Open ncurses NetBSD
bkgd Y Y Y
bkgdset Y Y Y
getbkgd Y Y Y
wbkgd Y Y Y
wbkgdset Y Y Y
bkgrnd Y Y Y
bkgrndset Y Y Y
getbkgrnd Y Y Y
wbkgrnd Y Y Y
wbkgrndset Y Y Y
wgetbkgrnd Y Y Y
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
border
------
### Synopsis
int border(chtype ls, chtype rs, chtype ts, chtype bs, chtype tl,
chtype tr, chtype bl, chtype br);
int wborder(WINDOW *win, chtype ls, chtype rs, chtype ts,
chtype bs, chtype tl, chtype tr, chtype bl, chtype br);
int box(WINDOW *win, chtype verch, chtype horch);
int hline(chtype ch, int n);
int vline(chtype ch, int n);
int whline(WINDOW *win, chtype ch, int n);
int wvline(WINDOW *win, chtype ch, int n);
int mvhline(int y, int x, chtype ch, int n);
int mvvline(int y, int x, chtype ch, int n);
int mvwhline(WINDOW *win, int y, int x, chtype ch, int n);
int mvwvline(WINDOW *win, int y, int x, chtype ch, int n);
int border_set(const cchar_t *ls, const cchar_t *rs,
const cchar_t *ts, const cchar_t *bs,
const cchar_t *tl, const cchar_t *tr,
const cchar_t *bl, const cchar_t *br);
int wborder_set(WINDOW *win, const cchar_t *ls, const cchar_t *rs,
const cchar_t *ts, const cchar_t *bs,
const cchar_t *tl, const cchar_t *tr,
const cchar_t *bl, const cchar_t *br);
int box_set(WINDOW *win, const cchar_t *verch, const cchar_t *horch);
int hline_set(const cchar_t *wch, int n);
int vline_set(const cchar_t *wch, int n);
int whline_set(WINDOW *win, const cchar_t *wch, int n);
int wvline_set(WINDOW *win, const cchar_t *wch, int n);
int mvhline_set(int y, int x, const cchar_t *wch, int n);
int mvvline_set(int y, int x, const cchar_t *wch, int n);
int mvwhline_set(WINDOW *win, int y, int x, const cchar_t *wch, int n);
int mvwvline_set(WINDOW *win, int y, int x, const cchar_t *wch, int n);
### Description
border(), wborder(), and box() draw a border around the edge of the
window. If any argument is zero, an appropriate default is used:
ls left side of border ACS_VLINE
rs right side of border ACS_VLINE
ts top side of border ACS_HLINE
bs bottom side of border ACS_HLINE
tl top left corner of border ACS_ULCORNER
tr top right corner of border ACS_URCORNER
bl bottom left corner of border ACS_LLCORNER
br bottom right corner of border ACS_LRCORNER
hline() and whline() draw a horizontal line, using ch, starting from
the current cursor position. The cursor position does not change. The
line is at most n characters long, or as many as will fit in the
window.
vline() and wvline() draw a vertical line, using ch, starting from
the current cursor position. The cursor position does not change. The
line is at most n characters long, or as many as will fit in the
window.
The *_set functions are the "wide-character" versions, taking
pointers to cchar_t instead of chtype. Note that in PDCurses, chtype
and cchar_t are the same.
### Return Value
These functions return OK on success and ERR on error.
### Portability
X/Open ncurses NetBSD
border Y Y Y
wborder Y Y Y
box Y Y Y
hline Y Y Y
vline Y Y Y
whline Y Y Y
wvline Y Y Y
mvhline Y Y Y
mvvline Y Y Y
mvwhline Y Y Y
mvwvline Y Y Y
border_set Y Y Y
wborder_set Y Y Y
box_set Y Y Y
hline_set Y Y Y
vline_set Y Y Y
whline_set Y Y Y
wvline_set Y Y Y
mvhline_set Y Y Y
mvvline_set Y Y Y
mvwhline_set Y Y Y
mvwvline_set Y Y Y
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
clear
-----
### Synopsis
int clear(void);
int wclear(WINDOW *win);
int erase(void);
int werase(WINDOW *win);
int clrtobot(void);
int wclrtobot(WINDOW *win);
int clrtoeol(void);
int wclrtoeol(WINDOW *win);
### Description
erase() and werase() copy blanks (i.e. the background chtype) to
every cell of the window.
clear() and wclear() are similar to erase() and werase(), but they
also call clearok() to ensure that the the window is cleared on the
next wrefresh().
clrtobot() and wclrtobot() clear the window from the current cursor
position to the end of the window.
clrtoeol() and wclrtoeol() clear the window from the current cursor
position to the end of the current line.
### Return Value
All functions return OK on success and ERR on error.
### Portability
X/Open ncurses NetBSD
clear Y Y Y
wclear Y Y Y
erase Y Y Y
werase Y Y Y
clrtobot Y Y Y
wclrtobot Y Y Y
clrtoeol Y Y Y
wclrtoeol Y Y Y
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
color
-----
### Synopsis
bool has_colors(void);
int start_color(void);
int init_pair(short pair, short fg, short bg);
int pair_content(short pair, short *fg, short *bg);
bool can_change_color(void);
int init_color(short color, short red, short green, short blue);
int color_content(short color, short *red, short *green, short *blue);
int alloc_pair(int fg, int bg);
int assume_default_colors(int f, int b);
int find_pair(int fg, int bg);
int free_pair(int pair);
int use_default_colors(void);
int PDC_set_line_color(short color);
### Description
To use these routines, first, call start_color(). Colors are always
used in pairs, referred to as color-pairs. A color-pair is created by
init_pair(), and consists of a foreground color and a background
color. After initialization, COLOR_PAIR(n) can be used like any other
video attribute.
has_colors() reports whether the terminal supports color.
start_color() initializes eight basic colors (black, red, green,
yellow, blue, magenta, cyan, and white), and two global variables:
COLORS and COLOR_PAIRS (respectively defining the maximum number of
colors and color-pairs the terminal is capable of displaying).
init_pair() changes the definition of a color-pair. It takes three
arguments: the number of the color-pair to be redefined, and the new
values of the foreground and background colors. The pair number must
be between 0 and COLOR_PAIRS - 1, inclusive. The foreground and
background must be between 0 and COLORS - 1, inclusive. If the color
pair was previously initialized, the screen is refreshed, and all
occurrences of that color-pair are changed to the new definition.
pair_content() is used to determine what the colors of a given color-
pair consist of.
can_change_color() indicates if the terminal has the capability to
change the definition of its colors.
init_color() is used to redefine a color, if possible. Each of the
components -- red, green, and blue -- is specified in a range from 0
to 1000, inclusive.
color_content() reports the current definition of a color in the same
format as used by init_color().
assume_default_colors() and use_default_colors() emulate the ncurses
extensions of the same names. assume_default_colors(f, b) is
essentially the same as init_pair(0, f, b) (which isn't allowed); it
redefines the default colors. use_default_colors() allows the use of
-1 as a foreground or background color with init_pair(), and calls
assume_default_colors(-1, -1); -1 represents the foreground or
background color that the terminal had at startup. If the environment
variable PDC_ORIGINAL_COLORS is set at the time start_color() is
called, that's equivalent to calling use_default_colors().
alloc_pair(), find_pair() and free_pair() are also from ncurses.
free_pair() marks a pair as unused; find_pair() returns an existing
pair with the specified foreground and background colors, if one
exists. And alloc_pair() returns such a pair whether or not it was
previously set, overwriting the oldest initialized pair if there are
no free pairs.
PDC_set_line_color() is used to set the color, globally, for the
color of the lines drawn for the attributes: A_UNDERLINE, A_LEFT and
A_RIGHT. A value of -1 (the default) indicates that the current
foreground color should be used.
NOTE: COLOR_PAIR() and PAIR_NUMBER() are implemented as macros.
### Return Value
Most functions return OK on success and ERR on error. has_colors()
and can_change_colors() return TRUE or FALSE. alloc_pair() and
find_pair() return a pair number, or -1 on error.
### Portability
X/Open ncurses NetBSD
has_colors Y Y Y
start_color Y Y Y
init_pair Y Y Y
pair_content Y Y Y
can_change_color Y Y Y
init_color Y Y Y
color_content Y Y Y
alloc_pair - Y -
assume_default_colors - Y Y
find_pair - Y -
free_pair - Y -
use_default_colors - Y Y
PDC_set_line_color - - -
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
debug
-----
### Synopsis
void traceon(void);
void traceoff(void);
void PDC_debug(const char *, ...);
### Description
traceon() and traceoff() toggle the recording of debugging
information to the file "trace". Although not standard, similar
functions are in some other curses implementations.
PDC_debug() is the function that writes to the file, based on whether
traceon() has been called. It's used from the PDC_LOG() macro.
The environment variable PDC_TRACE_FLUSH controls whether the trace
file contents are fflushed after each write. The default is not. Set
it to enable this (may affect performance).
### Portability
X/Open ncurses NetBSD
traceon - - -
traceoff - - -
PDC_debug - - -
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
delch
-----
### Synopsis
int delch(void);
int wdelch(WINDOW *win);
int mvdelch(int y, int x);
int mvwdelch(WINDOW *win, int y, int x);
### Description
The character under the cursor in the window is deleted. All
characters to the right on the same line are moved to the left one
position and the last character on the line is filled with a blank.
The cursor position does not change (after moving to y, x if
coordinates are specified).
### Return Value
All functions return OK on success and ERR on error.
### Portability
X/Open ncurses NetBSD
delch Y Y Y
wdelch Y Y Y
mvdelch Y Y Y
mvwdelch Y Y Y
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
deleteln
--------
### Synopsis
int deleteln(void);
int wdeleteln(WINDOW *win);
int insdelln(int n);
int winsdelln(WINDOW *win, int n);
int insertln(void);
int winsertln(WINDOW *win);
int mvdeleteln(int y, int x);
int mvwdeleteln(WINDOW *win, int y, int x);
int mvinsertln(int y, int x);
int mvwinsertln(WINDOW *win, int y, int x);
### Description
With the deleteln() and wdeleteln() functions, the line under the
cursor in the window is deleted. All lines below the current line are
moved up one line. The bottom line of the window is cleared. The
cursor position does not change.
With the insertln() and winsertn() functions, a blank line is
inserted above the current line and the bottom line is lost.
mvdeleteln(), mvwdeleteln(), mvinsertln() and mvwinsertln() allow
moving the cursor and inserting/deleting in one call.
### Return Value
All functions return OK on success and ERR on error.
### Portability
X/Open ncurses NetBSD
deleteln Y Y Y
wdeleteln Y Y Y
mvdeleteln - - -
mvwdeleteln - - -
insdelln Y Y Y
winsdelln Y Y Y
insertln Y Y Y
winsertln Y Y Y
mvinsertln - - -
mvwinsertln - - -
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
getch
-----
### Synopsis
int getch(void);
int wgetch(WINDOW *win);
int mvgetch(int y, int x);
int mvwgetch(WINDOW *win, int y, int x);
int ungetch(int ch);
int flushinp(void);
int get_wch(wint_t *wch);
int wget_wch(WINDOW *win, wint_t *wch);
int mvget_wch(int y, int x, wint_t *wch);
int mvwget_wch(WINDOW *win, int y, int x, wint_t *wch);
int unget_wch(const wchar_t wch);
unsigned long PDC_get_key_modifiers(void);
int PDC_return_key_modifiers(bool flag);
### Description
With the getch(), wgetch(), mvgetch(), and mvwgetch() functions, a
character is read from the terminal associated with the window. In
nodelay mode, if there is no input waiting, the value ERR is
returned. In delay mode, the program will hang until the system
passes text through to the program. Depending on the setting of
cbreak(), this will be after one character or after the first
newline. Unless noecho() has been set, the character will also be
echoed into the designated window.
If keypad() is TRUE, and a function key is pressed, the token for
that function key will be returned instead of the raw characters.
Possible function keys are defined in <curses.h> with integers
beginning with 0401, whose names begin with KEY_.
If nodelay(win, TRUE) has been called on the window and no input is
waiting, the value ERR is returned.
ungetch() places ch back onto the input queue to be returned by the
next call to wgetch().
flushinp() throws away any type-ahead that has been typed by the user
and has not yet been read by the program.
wget_wch() is the wide-character version of wgetch(), available when
PDCurses is built with the PDC_WIDE option. It takes a pointer to a
wint_t rather than returning the key as an int, and instead returns
KEY_CODE_YES if the key is a function key. Otherwise, it returns OK
or ERR. It's important to check for KEY_CODE_YES, since regular wide
characters can have the same values as function key codes.
unget_wch() puts a wide character on the input queue.
PDC_get_key_modifiers() returns the keyboard modifiers (shift,
control, alt, numlock) effective at the time of the last getch()
call. Use the macros PDC_KEY_MODIFIER_* to determine which
modifier(s) were set. PDC_return_key_modifiers() tells getch() to
return modifier keys pressed alone as keystrokes (KEY_ALT_L, etc.).
These may not work on all platforms.
NOTE: getch() and ungetch() are implemented as macros, to avoid
conflict with many DOS compiler's runtime libraries.
### Return Value
These functions return ERR or the value of the character, meta
character or function key token.
### Portability
X/Open ncurses NetBSD
getch Y Y Y
wgetch Y Y Y
mvgetch Y Y Y
mvwgetch Y Y Y
ungetch Y Y Y
flushinp Y Y Y
get_wch Y Y Y
wget_wch Y Y Y
mvget_wch Y Y Y
mvwget_wch Y Y Y
unget_wch Y Y Y
PDC_get_key_modifiers - - -
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
getstr
------
### Synopsis
int getstr(char *str);
int wgetstr(WINDOW *win, char *str);
int mvgetstr(int y, int x, char *str);
int mvwgetstr(WINDOW *win, int y, int x, char *str);
int getnstr(char *str, int n);
int wgetnstr(WINDOW *win, char *str, int n);
int mvgetnstr(int y, int x, char *str, int n);
int mvwgetnstr(WINDOW *win, int y, int x, char *str, int n);
int get_wstr(wint_t *wstr);
int wget_wstr(WINDOW *win, wint_t *wstr);
int mvget_wstr(int y, int x, wint_t *wstr);
int mvwget_wstr(WINDOW *win, int, int, wint_t *wstr);
int getn_wstr(wint_t *wstr, int n);
int wgetn_wstr(WINDOW *win, wint_t *wstr, int n);
int mvgetn_wstr(int y, int x, wint_t *wstr, int n);
int mvwgetn_wstr(WINDOW *win, int y, int x, wint_t *wstr, int n);
### Description
These routines call wgetch() repeatedly to build a string,
interpreting erase and kill characters along the way, until a newline
or carriage return is received. When PDCurses is built with wide-
character support enabled, the narrow-character functions convert the
wgetch()'d values into a multibyte string in the current locale
before returning it. The resulting string is placed in the area
pointed to by *str. The routines with n as the last argument read at
most n characters.
Note that there's no way to know how long the buffer passed to
wgetstr() is, so use wgetnstr() to avoid buffer overflows.
### Return Value
These functions return ERR on failure or any other value on success.
### Portability
X/Open ncurses NetBSD
getstr Y Y Y
wgetstr Y Y Y
mvgetstr Y Y Y
mvwgetstr Y Y Y
getnstr Y Y Y
wgetnstr Y Y Y
mvgetnstr Y Y Y
mvwgetnstr Y Y Y
get_wstr Y Y Y
wget_wstr Y Y Y
mvget_wstr Y Y Y
mvwget_wstr Y Y Y
getn_wstr Y Y Y
wgetn_wstr Y Y Y
mvgetn_wstr Y Y Y
mvwgetn_wstr Y Y Y
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
getyx
-----
### Synopsis
void getyx(WINDOW *win, int y, int x);
void getparyx(WINDOW *win, int y, int x);
void getbegyx(WINDOW *win, int y, int x);
void getmaxyx(WINDOW *win, int y, int x);
void getsyx(int y, int x);
void setsyx(int y, int x);
int getbegy(WINDOW *win);
int getbegx(WINDOW *win);
int getcury(WINDOW *win);
int getcurx(WINDOW *win);
int getpary(WINDOW *win);
int getparx(WINDOW *win);
int getmaxy(WINDOW *win);
int getmaxx(WINDOW *win);
### Description
The getyx() macro (defined in curses.h -- the prototypes here are
merely illustrative) puts the current cursor position of the
specified window into y and x. getbegyx() and getmaxyx() return the
starting coordinates and size of the specified window, respectively.
getparyx() returns the starting coordinates of the parent's window,
if the specified window is a subwindow; otherwise it sets y and x to
-1. These are all macros.
getsyx() gets the coordinates of the virtual screen cursor, and
stores them in y and x. If leaveok() is TRUE, it returns -1, -1. If
lines have been removed with ripoffline(), then getsyx() includes
these lines in its count; so, the returned y and x values should only
be used with setsyx().
setsyx() sets the virtual screen cursor to the y, x coordinates. If
either y or x is -1, leaveok() is set TRUE, else it's set FALSE.
getsyx() and setsyx() are meant to be used by a library routine that
manipulates curses windows without altering the position of the
cursor. Note that getsyx() is defined only as a macro.
getbegy(), getbegx(), getcurx(), getcury(), getmaxy(), getmaxx(),
getpary(), and getparx() return the appropriate coordinate or size
values, or ERR in the case of a NULL window.
### Portability
X/Open ncurses NetBSD
getyx Y Y Y
getparyx Y Y Y
getbegyx Y Y Y
getmaxyx Y Y Y
getsyx - Y Y
setsyx - Y Y
getbegy - Y Y
getbegx - Y Y
getcury - Y Y
getcurx - Y Y
getpary - Y Y
getparx - Y Y
getmaxy - Y Y
getmaxx - Y Y
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
inch
----
### Synopsis
chtype inch(void);
chtype winch(WINDOW *win);
chtype mvinch(int y, int x);
chtype mvwinch(WINDOW *win, int y, int x);
int in_wch(cchar_t *wcval);
int win_wch(WINDOW *win, cchar_t *wcval);
int mvin_wch(int y, int x, cchar_t *wcval);
int mvwin_wch(WINDOW *win, int y, int x, cchar_t *wcval);
### Description
The inch() functions retrieve the character and attribute from the
current or specified window position, in the form of a chtype. If a
NULL window is specified, (chtype)ERR is returned.
The in_wch() functions are the wide-character versions; instead of
returning a chtype, they store a cchar_t at the address specified by
wcval, and return OK or ERR. (No value is stored when ERR is
returned.) Note that in PDCurses, chtype and cchar_t are the same.
### Portability
X/Open ncurses NetBSD
inch Y Y Y
winch Y Y Y
mvinch Y Y Y
mvwinch Y Y Y
in_wch Y Y Y
win_wch Y Y Y
mvin_wch Y Y Y
mvwin_wch Y Y Y
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
inchstr
-------
### Synopsis
int inchstr(chtype *ch);
int inchnstr(chtype *ch, int n);
int winchstr(WINDOW *win, chtype *ch);
int winchnstr(WINDOW *win, chtype *ch, int n);
int mvinchstr(int y, int x, chtype *ch);
int mvinchnstr(int y, int x, chtype *ch, int n);
int mvwinchstr(WINDOW *, int y, int x, chtype *ch);
int mvwinchnstr(WINDOW *, int y, int x, chtype *ch, int n);
int in_wchstr(cchar_t *wch);
int in_wchnstr(cchar_t *wch, int n);
int win_wchstr(WINDOW *win, cchar_t *wch);
int win_wchnstr(WINDOW *win, cchar_t *wch, int n);
int mvin_wchstr(int y, int x, cchar_t *wch);
int mvin_wchnstr(int y, int x, cchar_t *wch, int n);
int mvwin_wchstr(WINDOW *win, int y, int x, cchar_t *wch);
int mvwin_wchnstr(WINDOW *win, int y, int x, cchar_t *wch, int n);
### Description
These routines read a chtype or cchar_t string from the window,
starting at the current or specified position, and ending at the
right margin, or after n elements, whichever is less.
### Return Value
All functions return the number of elements read, or ERR on error.
### Portability
X/Open ncurses NetBSD
inchstr Y Y Y
winchstr Y Y Y
mvinchstr Y Y Y
mvwinchstr Y Y Y
inchnstr Y Y Y
winchnstr Y Y Y
mvinchnstr Y Y Y
mvwinchnstr Y Y Y
in_wchstr Y Y Y
win_wchstr Y Y Y
mvin_wchstr Y Y Y
mvwin_wchstr Y Y Y
in_wchnstr Y Y Y
win_wchnstr Y Y Y
mvin_wchnstr Y Y Y
mvwin_wchnstr Y Y Y
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
initscr
-------
### Synopsis
WINDOW *initscr(void);
WINDOW *Xinitscr(int argc, char **argv);
int endwin(void);
bool isendwin(void);
SCREEN *newterm(const char *type, FILE *outfd, FILE *infd);
SCREEN *set_term(SCREEN *new);
void delscreen(SCREEN *sp);
int resize_term(int nlines, int ncols);
bool is_termresized(void);
const char *curses_version(void);
void PDC_get_version(PDC_VERSION *ver);
int set_tabsize(int tabsize);
### Description
initscr() should be the first curses routine called. It will
initialize all curses data structures, and arrange that the first
call to refresh() will clear the screen. In case of error, initscr()
will write a message to standard error and end the program.
endwin() should be called before exiting or escaping from curses mode
temporarily. It will restore tty modes, move the cursor to the lower
left corner of the screen and reset the terminal into the proper
non-visual mode. To resume curses after a temporary escape, call
refresh() or doupdate().
isendwin() returns TRUE if endwin() has been called without a
subsequent refresh, unless SP is NULL.
In some implementations of curses, newterm() allows the use of
multiple terminals. Here, it's just an alternative interface for
initscr(). It always returns SP, or NULL.
delscreen() frees the memory allocated by newterm() or initscr(),
since it's not freed by endwin(). This function is usually not
needed. In PDCurses, the parameter must be the value of SP, and
delscreen() sets SP to NULL.
set_term() does nothing meaningful in PDCurses, but is included for
compatibility with other curses implementations.
resize_term() is effectively two functions: When called with nonzero
values for nlines and ncols, it attempts to resize the screen to the
given size. When called with (0, 0), it merely adjusts the internal
structures to match the current size after the screen is resized by
the user. On the currently supported platforms, SDL, Windows console,
and X11 allow user resizing, while DOS, OS/2, SDL and Windows console
allow programmatic resizing. If you want to support user resizing,
you should check for getch() returning KEY_RESIZE, and/or call
is_termresized() at appropriate times; if either condition occurs,
call resize_term(0, 0). Then, with either user or programmatic
resizing, you'll have to resize any windows you've created, as
appropriate; resize_term() only handles stdscr and curscr.
is_termresized() returns TRUE if the curses screen has been resized
by the user, and a call to resize_term() is needed. Checking for
KEY_RESIZE is generally preferable, unless you're not handling the
keyboard.
curses_version() returns a string describing the version of PDCurses.
PDC_get_version() fills a PDC_VERSION structure provided by the user
with more detailed version info (see curses.h).
set_tabsize() sets the tab interval, stored in TABSIZE.
### Return Value
All functions return NULL on error, except endwin(), which always
returns OK, and resize_term(), which returns either OK or ERR.
### Portability
X/Open ncurses NetBSD
initscr Y Y Y
endwin Y Y Y
isendwin Y Y Y
newterm Y Y Y
set_term Y Y Y
delscreen Y Y Y
resize_term - Y Y
set_tabsize - Y Y
curses_version - Y -
is_termresized - - -
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
inopts
------
### Synopsis
int cbreak(void);
int nocbreak(void);
int echo(void);
int noecho(void);
int halfdelay(int tenths);
int intrflush(WINDOW *win, bool bf);
int keypad(WINDOW *win, bool bf);
int meta(WINDOW *win, bool bf);
int nl(void);
int nonl(void);
int nodelay(WINDOW *win, bool bf);
int notimeout(WINDOW *win, bool bf);
int raw(void);
int noraw(void);
void noqiflush(void);
void qiflush(void);
void timeout(int delay);
void wtimeout(WINDOW *win, int delay);
int wgetdelay(const WINDOW *win);
int typeahead(int fildes);
int crmode(void);
int nocrmode(void);
bool is_keypad(const WINDOW *win);
bool is_nodelay(const WINDOW *win);
bool is_notimeout(const WINDOW *win);
### Description
cbreak() and nocbreak() toggle cbreak mode. In cbreak mode,
characters typed by the user are made available immediately, and
erase/kill character processing is not performed. In nocbreak mode,
typed characters are buffered until a newline or carriage return.
Interrupt and flow control characters are unaffected by this mode.
PDCurses always starts in cbreak mode.
echo() and noecho() control whether typed characters are echoed by
the input routine. Initially, input characters are echoed. Subsequent
calls to echo() and noecho() do not flush type-ahead.
halfdelay() is similar to cbreak(), but allows for a time limit to be
specified, in tenths of a second. This causes getch() to block for
that period before returning ERR if no key has been received. tenths
must be between 1 and 255.
keypad() controls whether getch() returns function/special keys as
single key codes (e.g., the left arrow key as KEY_LEFT). Per X/Open,
the default for keypad mode is OFF. You'll probably want it on. With
keypad mode off, if a special key is pressed, getch() does nothing or
returns ERR.
nodelay() controls whether wgetch() is a non-blocking call. If the
option is enabled, and no input is ready, wgetch() will return ERR.
If disabled, wgetch() will hang until input is ready.
nl() enables the translation of a carriage return into a newline on
input. nonl() disables this. Initially, the translation does occur.
raw() and noraw() toggle raw mode. Raw mode is similar to cbreak
mode, in that characters typed are immediately passed through to the
user program. The difference is that in raw mode, the INTR, QUIT,
SUSP, and STOP characters are passed through without being
interpreted, and without generating a signal.
In PDCurses, the meta() function sets raw mode on or off.
timeout() and wtimeout() set blocking or non-blocking reads for the
specified window. If the delay is negative, a blocking read is used;
if zero, then non-blocking reads are done -- if no input is waiting,
ERR is returned immediately. If the delay is positive, the read
blocks for the delay period; if the period expires, ERR is returned.
The delay is given in milliseconds, but this is rounded down to 50ms
(1/20th sec) intervals, with a minimum of one interval if a postive
delay is given; i.e., 1-99 will wait 50ms, 100-149 will wait 100ms,
etc.
wgetdelay() returns the delay timeout as set in wtimeout().
intrflush(), notimeout(), noqiflush(), qiflush() and typeahead() do
nothing in PDCurses, but are included for compatibility with other
curses implementations.
crmode() and nocrmode() are archaic equivalents to cbreak() and
nocbreak(), respectively.
is_keypad() reports whether the specified window is in keypad mode.
is_nodelay() reports whether the specified window is in nodelay mode.
### Return Value
is_keypad() and is_nodelay() return TRUE or FALSE. is_notimeout() is
provided for compatibility with other curses implementations, and
always returns FALSE. All others return OK on success and ERR on error.
### Portability
X/Open ncurses NetBSD
cbreak Y Y Y
nocbreak Y Y Y
echo Y Y Y
noecho Y Y Y
halfdelay Y Y Y
intrflush Y Y Y
keypad Y Y Y
meta Y Y Y
nl Y Y Y
nonl Y Y Y
nodelay Y Y Y
notimeout Y Y Y
raw Y Y Y
noraw Y Y Y
noqiflush Y Y Y
qiflush Y Y Y
timeout Y Y Y
wtimeout Y Y Y
wgetdelay - Y -
typeahead Y Y Y
crmode Y Y Y
nocrmode Y Y Y
is_keypad - Y Y
is_nodelay - Y -
is_notimeout - Y -
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
insch
-----
### Synopsis
int insch(chtype ch);
int winsch(WINDOW *win, chtype ch);
int mvinsch(int y, int x, chtype ch);
int mvwinsch(WINDOW *win, int y, int x, chtype ch);
int insrawch(chtype ch);
int winsrawch(WINDOW *win, chtype ch);
int mvinsrawch(int y, int x, chtype ch);
int mvwinsrawch(WINDOW *win, int y, int x, chtype ch);
int ins_wch(const cchar_t *wch);
int wins_wch(WINDOW *win, const cchar_t *wch);
int mvins_wch(int y, int x, const cchar_t *wch);
int mvwins_wch(WINDOW *win, int y, int x, const cchar_t *wch);
### Description
The insch() functions insert a chtype into the window at the current
or specified cursor position. The cursor is NOT advanced. A newline
is equivalent to clrtoeol(); tabs are expanded; other control
characters are converted as with unctrl().
The ins_wch() functions are the wide-character equivalents, taking
cchar_t pointers rather than chtypes.
Video attributes can be combined with a character by ORing them into
the parameter. Text, including attributes, can be copied from one
place to another using inch() and insch().
insrawch() etc. are PDCurses-specific wrappers for insch() etc. that
disable the translation of control characters.
### Return Value
All functions return OK on success and ERR on error.
### Portability
X/Open ncurses NetBSD
insch Y Y Y
winsch Y Y Y
mvinsch Y Y Y
mvwinsch Y Y Y
ins_wch Y Y Y
wins_wch Y Y Y
mvins_wch Y Y Y
mvwins_wch Y Y Y
insrawch - - -
winsrawch - - -
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
insstr
------
### Synopsis
int insstr(const char *str);
int insnstr(const char *str, int n);
int winsstr(WINDOW *win, const char *str);
int winsnstr(WINDOW *win, const char *str, int n);
int mvinsstr(int y, int x, const char *str);
int mvinsnstr(int y, int x, const char *str, int n);
int mvwinsstr(WINDOW *win, int y, int x, const char *str);
int mvwinsnstr(WINDOW *win, int y, int x, const char *str, int n);
int ins_wstr(const wchar_t *wstr);
int ins_nwstr(const wchar_t *wstr, int n);
int wins_wstr(WINDOW *win, const wchar_t *wstr);
int wins_nwstr(WINDOW *win, const wchar_t *wstr, int n);
int mvins_wstr(int y, int x, const wchar_t *wstr);
int mvins_nwstr(int y, int x, const wchar_t *wstr, int n);
int mvwins_wstr(WINDOW *win, int y, int x, const wchar_t *wstr);
int mvwins_nwstr(WINDOW *win, int y, int x, const wchar_t *wstr, int n);
### Description
The insstr() functions insert a character string into a window at the
current cursor position, by repeatedly calling winsch(). When
PDCurses is built with wide-character support enabled, the narrow-
character functions treat the string as a multibyte string in the
current locale, and convert it first. All characters to the right of
the cursor are moved to the right, with the possibility of the
rightmost characters on the line being lost. The cursor position
does not change (after moving to y, x, if specified). The routines
with n as the last argument insert at most n characters; if n is
negative, then the entire string is inserted.
### Return Value
All functions return OK on success and ERR on error.
### Portability
X/Open ncurses NetBSD
insstr Y Y Y
winsstr Y Y Y
mvinsstr Y Y Y
mvwinsstr Y Y Y
insnstr Y Y Y
winsnstr Y Y Y
mvinsnstr Y Y Y
mvwinsnstr Y Y Y
ins_wstr Y Y Y
wins_wstr Y Y Y
mvins_wstr Y Y Y
mvwins_wstr Y Y Y
ins_nwstr Y Y Y
wins_nwstr Y Y Y
mvins_nwstr Y Y Y
mvwins_nwstr Y Y Y
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
instr
-----
### Synopsis
int instr(char *str);
int innstr(char *str, int n);
int winstr(WINDOW *win, char *str);
int winnstr(WINDOW *win, char *str, int n);
int mvinstr(int y, int x, char *str);
int mvinnstr(int y, int x, char *str, int n);
int mvwinstr(WINDOW *win, int y, int x, char *str);
int mvwinnstr(WINDOW *win, int y, int x, char *str, int n);
int inwstr(wchar_t *wstr);
int innwstr(wchar_t *wstr, int n);
int winwstr(WINDOW *win, wchar_t *wstr);
int winnwstr(WINDOW *win, wchar_t *wstr, int n);
int mvinwstr(int y, int x, wchar_t *wstr);
int mvinnwstr(int y, int x, wchar_t *wstr, int n);
int mvwinwstr(WINDOW *win, int y, int x, wchar_t *wstr);
int mvwinnwstr(WINDOW *win, int y, int x, wchar_t *wstr, int n);
### Description
These functions take characters (or wide characters) from the current
or specified position in the window, and return them as a string in
str (or wstr). Attributes are ignored. The functions with n as the
last argument return a string at most n characters long.
### Return Value
Upon successful completion, innstr(), mvinnstr(), mvwinnstr() and
winnstr() return the number of characters actually read into the
string; instr(), mvinstr(), mvwinstr() and winstr() return OK.
Otherwise, all these functions return ERR.
### Portability
X/Open ncurses NetBSD
instr Y Y Y
winstr Y Y Y
mvinstr Y Y Y
mvwinstr Y Y Y
innstr Y Y Y
winnstr Y Y Y
mvinnstr Y Y Y
mvwinnstr Y Y Y
inwstr Y Y Y
winwstr Y Y Y
mvinwstr Y Y Y
mvwinwstr Y Y Y
innwstr Y Y Y
winnwstr Y Y Y
mvinnwstr Y Y Y
mvwinnwstr Y Y Y
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
kernel
------
### Synopsis
int def_prog_mode(void);
int def_shell_mode(void);
int reset_prog_mode(void);
int reset_shell_mode(void);
int resetty(void);
int savetty(void);
int ripoffline(int line, int (*init)(WINDOW *, int));
int curs_set(int visibility);
int napms(int ms);
int draino(int ms);
int resetterm(void);
int fixterm(void);
int saveterm(void);
### Description
def_prog_mode() and def_shell_mode() save the current terminal modes
as the "program" (in curses) or "shell" (not in curses) state for use
by the reset_prog_mode() and reset_shell_mode() functions. This is
done automatically by initscr().
reset_prog_mode() and reset_shell_mode() restore the terminal to
"program" (in curses) or "shell" (not in curses) state. These are
done automatically by endwin() and doupdate() after an endwin(), so
they would normally not be called before these functions.
savetty() and resetty() save and restore the state of the terminal
modes. savetty() saves the current state in a buffer, and resetty()
restores the state to what it was at the last call to savetty().
curs_set() alters the appearance of the cursor. A visibility of 0
makes it disappear; 1 makes it appear "normal" (usually an underline)
and 2 makes it "highly visible" (usually a block).
ripoffline() reduces the size of stdscr by one line. If the "line"
parameter is positive, the line is removed from the top of the
screen; if negative, from the bottom. Up to 5 lines can be ripped off
stdscr by calling ripoffline() repeatedly. The function argument,
init, is called from within initscr() or newterm(), so ripoffline()
must be called before either of these functions. The init function
receives a pointer to a one-line WINDOW, and the width of the window.
Calling ripoffline() with a NULL init function pointer is an error.
napms() suspends the program for the specified number of
milliseconds. draino() is an archaic equivalent. Note that since
napms() attempts to give up a time slice and yield control back to
the OS, all times are approximate. (In DOS, the delay is actually
rounded down to 50ms (1/20th sec) intervals, with a minimum of one
interval; i.e., 1-99 will wait 50ms, 100-149 will wait 100ms, etc.)
0 returns immediately.
resetterm(), fixterm() and saveterm() are archaic equivalents for
reset_shell_mode(), reset_prog_mode() and def_prog_mode(),
respectively.
### Return Value
All functions return OK on success and ERR on error, except
curs_set(), which returns the previous visibility.
### Portability
X/Open ncurses NetBSD
def_prog_mode Y Y Y
def_shell_mode Y Y Y
reset_prog_mode Y Y Y
reset_shell_mode Y Y Y
resetty Y Y Y
savetty Y Y Y
ripoffline Y Y Y
curs_set Y Y Y
napms Y Y Y
fixterm - Y -
resetterm - Y -
saveterm - Y -
draino - - -
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
keyname
-------
### Synopsis
char *keyname(int key);
char *key_name(wchar_t c);
bool has_key(int key);
### Description
keyname() returns a string corresponding to the argument key. key may
be any key returned by wgetch().
key_name() is the wide-character version. It takes a wchar_t
parameter, but still returns a char *.
has_key() returns TRUE for recognized keys, FALSE otherwise. This
function is an ncurses extension.
### Portability
X/Open ncurses NetBSD
keyname Y Y Y
key_name Y Y Y
has_key - Y Y
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
mouse
-----
### Synopsis
int mouse_set(mmask_t mbe);
int mouse_on(mmask_t mbe);
int mouse_off(mmask_t mbe);
int request_mouse_pos(void);
void wmouse_position(WINDOW *win, int *y, int *x);
mmask_t getmouse(void);
int mouseinterval(int wait);
bool wenclose(const WINDOW *win, int y, int x);
bool wmouse_trafo(const WINDOW *win, int *y, int *x, bool to_screen);
bool mouse_trafo(int *y, int *x, bool to_screen);
mmask_t mousemask(mmask_t mask, mmask_t *oldmask);
int nc_getmouse(MEVENT *event);
int ungetmouse(MEVENT *event);
bool has_mouse(void);
### Description
As of PDCurses 3.0, there are two separate mouse interfaces: the
classic interface, which is based on the undocumented Sys V mouse
functions; and an ncurses-compatible interface. Both are active at
all times, and you can mix and match functions from each, though it's
not recommended. The ncurses interface is essentially an emulation
layer built on top of the classic interface; it's here to allow
easier porting of ncurses apps.
The classic interface: mouse_set(), mouse_on(), mouse_off(),
request_mouse_pos(), wmouse_position(), and getmouse(). An
application using this interface would start by calling mouse_set()
or mouse_on() with a non-zero value, often ALL_MOUSE_EVENTS. Then it
would check for a KEY_MOUSE return from getch(). If found, it would
call request_mouse_pos() to get the current mouse status.
mouse_set(), mouse_on() and mouse_off() are analagous to attrset(),
attron() and attroff(). These functions set the mouse button events
to trap. The button masks used in these functions are defined in
curses.h and can be or'ed together. They are the group of masks
starting with BUTTON1_RELEASED.
request_mouse_pos() requests curses to fill in the Mouse_status
structure with the current state of the mouse.
wmouse_position() determines if the current mouse position is within
the window passed as an argument. If the mouse is outside the current
window, -1 is returned in the y and x arguments; otherwise the y and
x coordinates of the mouse (relative to the top left corner of the
window) are returned in y and x.
getmouse() returns the current status of the trapped mouse buttons as
set by mouse_set() or mouse_on().
The ncurses interface: mouseinterval(), wenclose(), wmouse_trafo(),
mouse_trafo(), mousemask(), nc_getmouse(), ungetmouse() and
has_mouse(). A typical application using this interface would start
by calling mousemask() with a non-zero value, often ALL_MOUSE_EVENTS.
Then it would check for a KEY_MOUSE return from getch(). If found, it
would call nc_getmouse() to get the current mouse status.
mouseinterval() sets the timeout for a mouse click. On all current
platforms, PDCurses receives mouse button press and release events,
but must synthesize click events. It does this by checking whether a
release event is queued up after a press event. If it gets a press
event, and there are no more events waiting, it will wait for the
timeout interval, then check again for a release. A press followed by
a release is reported as BUTTON_CLICKED; otherwise it's passed
through as BUTTON_PRESSED. The default timeout is 150ms; valid values
are 0 (no clicks reported) through 1000ms. In x11, the timeout can
also be set via the clickPeriod resource. The return value from
mouseinterval() is the old timeout. To check the old value without
setting a new one, call it with a parameter of -1. Note that although
there's no classic equivalent for this function (apart from the
clickPeriod resource), the value set applies in both interfaces.
wenclose() reports whether the given screen-relative y, x coordinates
fall within the given window.
wmouse_trafo() converts between screen-relative and window-relative
coordinates. A to_screen parameter of TRUE means to convert from
window to screen; otherwise the reverse. The function returns FALSE
if the coordinates aren't within the window, or if any of the
parameters are NULL. The coordinates have been converted when the
function returns TRUE.
mouse_trafo() is the stdscr version of wmouse_trafo().
mousemask() is nearly equivalent to mouse_set(), but instead of
OK/ERR, it returns the value of the mask after setting it. (This
isn't necessarily the same value passed in, since the mask could be
altered on some platforms.) And if the second parameter is a non-null
pointer, mousemask() stores the previous mask value there. Also,
since the ncurses interface doesn't work with PDCurses' BUTTON_MOVED
events, mousemask() filters them out.
nc_getmouse() returns the current mouse status in an MEVENT struct.
This is equivalent to ncurses' getmouse(), renamed to avoid conflict
with PDCurses' getmouse(). But if you define PDC_NCMOUSE before
including curses.h, it defines getmouse() to nc_getmouse(), along
with a few other redefintions needed for compatibility with ncurses
code. nc_getmouse() calls request_mouse_pos(), which (not getmouse())
is the classic equivalent.
ungetmouse() is the mouse equivalent of ungetch(). However, PDCurses
doesn't maintain a queue of mouse events; only one can be pushed
back, and it can overwrite or be overwritten by real mouse events.
has_mouse() reports whether the mouse is available at all on the
current platform.
### Portability
X/Open ncurses NetBSD
mouse_set - - -
mouse_on - - -
mouse_off - - -
request_mouse_pos - - -
wmouse_position - - -
getmouse - * -
mouseinterval - Y -
wenclose - Y -
wmouse_trafo - Y -
mouse_trafo - Y -
mousemask - Y -
nc_getmouse - * -
ungetmouse - Y -
has_mouse - Y -
* See above, under Description
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
move
----
### Synopsis
int move(int y, int x);
int mvcur(int oldrow, int oldcol, int newrow, int newcol);
int wmove(WINDOW *win, int y, int x);
### Description
move() and wmove() move the cursor associated with the window to the
given location. This does not move the physical cursor of the
terminal until refresh() is called. The position specified is
relative to the upper left corner of the window, which is (0,0).
mvcur() moves the physical cursor without updating any window cursor
positions.
### Return Value
All functions return OK on success and ERR on error.
### Portability
X/Open ncurses NetBSD
move Y Y Y
mvcur Y Y Y
wmove Y Y Y
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
outopts
-------
### Synopsis
int clearok(WINDOW *win, bool bf);
int idlok(WINDOW *win, bool bf);
void idcok(WINDOW *win, bool bf);
void immedok(WINDOW *win, bool bf);
int leaveok(WINDOW *win, bool bf);
int setscrreg(int top, int bot);
int wsetscrreg(WINDOW *win, int top, int bot);
int wgetscrreg(const WINDOW *win, int *top, int *bot);
int scrollok(WINDOW *win, bool bf);
int raw_output(bool bf);
bool is_cleared(const WINDOW *win);
bool is_idlok(const WINDOW *win);
bool is_idcok(const WINDOW *win);
bool is_immedok(const WINDOW *win);
bool is_leaveok(const WINDOW *win);
bool is_scrollok(const WINDOW *win);
### Description
With clearok(), if bf is TRUE, the next call to wrefresh() with this
window will clear the screen completely and redraw the entire screen.
immedok(), called with a second argument of TRUE, causes an automatic
wrefresh() every time a change is made to the specified window.
Normally, the hardware cursor is left at the location of the window
being refreshed. leaveok() allows the cursor to be left wherever the
update happens to leave it. It's useful for applications where the
cursor is not used, since it reduces the need for cursor motions. If
possible, the cursor is made invisible when this option is enabled.
wsetscrreg() sets a scrolling region in a window; "top" and "bot" are
the line numbers for the top and bottom margins. If this option and
scrollok() are enabled, any attempt to move off the bottom margin
will cause all lines in the scrolling region to scroll up one line.
setscrreg() is the stdscr version.
wgetscrreg() gets the top and bottom margins as set in wsetscrreg().
idlok() and idcok() do nothing in PDCurses, but are provided for
compatibility with other curses implementations, likewise is_idlok()
and is_idcok().
raw_output() enables the output of raw characters using the standard
*add* and *ins* curses functions (that is, it disables translation of
control characters).
is_cleared() reports whether the specified window causes clear at next
refresh.
is_immedok() reports whether the specified window is in immedok mode.
is_leaveok() reports whether the specified window is in leaveok mode.
is_scrollok() reports whether the specified window allows scrolling.
### Return Value
is_cleared(), is_immedok(), is_leaveok() and is_scrollok() return TRUE
or FALSE. is_idlok() and is_idcok() are provided for compatibility with
other curses implementations, and always return FALSE. All others
return OK on success and ERR on error.
### Portability
X/Open ncurses NetBSD
clearok Y Y Y
idlok Y Y Y
idcok Y Y Y
immedok Y Y Y
leaveok Y Y Y
setscrreg Y Y Y
wsetscrreg Y Y Y
wgetscrreg - Y -
scrollok Y Y Y
is_cleared - Y -
is_idlok - Y -
is_idcok - Y -
is_immedok - Y -
is_leaveok - Y Y
is_scrollok - Y -
raw_output - - -
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
overlay
-------
### Synopsis
int overlay(const WINDOW *src_w, WINDOW *dst_w)
int overwrite(const WINDOW *src_w, WINDOW *dst_w)
int copywin(const WINDOW *src_w, WINDOW *dst_w, int src_tr,
int src_tc, int dst_tr, int dst_tc, int dst_br,
int dst_bc, int _overlay)
### Description
overlay() and overwrite() copy all the text from src_w into dst_w.
The windows need not be the same size. Those characters in the source
window that intersect with the destination window are copied, so that
the characters appear in the same physical position on the screen.
The difference between the two functions is that overlay() is non-
destructive (blanks are not copied) while overwrite() is destructive
(blanks are copied).
copywin() is similar, but doesn't require that the two windows
overlap. The arguments src_tc and src_tr specify the top left corner
of the region to be copied. dst_tc, dst_tr, dst_br, and dst_bc
specify the region within the destination window to copy to. The
argument "overlay", if TRUE, indicates that the copy is done non-
destructively (as in overlay()); blanks in the source window are not
copied to the destination window. When overlay is FALSE, blanks are
copied.
### Return Value
All functions return OK on success and ERR on error.
### Portability
X/Open ncurses NetBSD
overlay Y Y Y
overwrite Y Y Y
copywin Y Y Y
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
pad
---
### Synopsis
WINDOW *newpad(int nlines, int ncols);
WINDOW *subpad(WINDOW *orig, int nlines, int ncols,
int begy, int begx);
int prefresh(WINDOW *win, int py, int px, int sy1, int sx1,
int sy2, int sx2);
int pnoutrefresh(WINDOW *w, int py, int px, int sy1, int sx1,
int sy2, int sx2);
int pechochar(WINDOW *pad, chtype ch);
int pecho_wchar(WINDOW *pad, const cchar_t *wch);
bool is_pad(const WINDOW *pad);
### Description
A pad is a special kind of window, which is not restricted by the
screen size, and is not necessarily associated with a particular part
of the screen. You can use a pad when you need a large window, and
only a part of the window will be on the screen at one time. Pads are
not refreshed automatically (e.g., from scrolling or echoing of
input). You can't call wrefresh() with a pad as an argument; use
prefresh() or pnoutrefresh() instead. Note that these routines
require additional parameters to specify the part of the pad to be
displayed, and the location to use on the screen.
newpad() creates a new pad data structure.
subpad() creates a new sub-pad within a pad, at position (begy,
begx), with dimensions of nlines lines and ncols columns. This
position is relative to the pad, and not to the screen as with
subwin. Changes to either the parent pad or sub-pad will affect both.
When using sub-pads, you may need to call touchwin() before calling
prefresh().
pnoutrefresh() copies the specified pad to the virtual screen.
prefresh() calls pnoutrefresh(), followed by doupdate().
These routines are analogous to wnoutrefresh() and wrefresh(). (py,
px) specifies the upper left corner of the part of the pad to be
displayed; (sy1, sx1) and (sy2, sx2) describe the screen rectangle
that will contain the selected part of the pad.
pechochar() is functionally equivalent to addch() followed by a call
to prefresh(), with the last-used coordinates and dimensions.
pecho_wchar() is the wide-character version.
is_pad() reports whether the specified window is a pad.
### Return Value
All functions except is_pad() return OK on success and ERR on error.
### Portability
X/Open ncurses NetBSD
newpad Y Y Y
subpad Y Y Y
prefresh Y Y Y
pnoutrefresh Y Y Y
pechochar Y Y Y
pecho_wchar Y Y Y
is_pad - Y Y
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
panel
-----
### Synopsis
int bottom_panel(PANEL *pan);
int del_panel(PANEL *pan);
int hide_panel(PANEL *pan);
int move_panel(PANEL *pan, int starty, int startx);
PANEL *new_panel(WINDOW *win);
PANEL *panel_above(const PANEL *pan);
PANEL *panel_below(const PANEL *pan);
int panel_hidden(const PANEL *pan);
const void *panel_userptr(const PANEL *pan);
WINDOW *panel_window(const PANEL *pan);
int replace_panel(PANEL *pan, WINDOW *win);
int set_panel_userptr(PANEL *pan, const void *uptr);
int show_panel(PANEL *pan);
int top_panel(PANEL *pan);
void update_panels(void);
### Description
For historic reasons, and for compatibility with other versions of
curses, the panel functions are prototyped in a separate header,
panel.h. In many implementations, they're also in a separate library,
but PDCurses incorporates them.
The panel functions provide a way to have depth relationships between
curses windows. Panels can overlap without making visible the
overlapped portions of underlying windows. The initial curses window,
stdscr, lies beneath all panels. The set of currently visible panels
is the 'deck' of panels.
You can create panels, fetch and set their associated windows,
shuffle panels in the deck, and manipulate them in other ways.
bottom_panel() places pan at the bottom of the deck. The size,
location and contents of the panel are unchanged.
del_panel() deletes pan, but not its associated winwow.
hide_panel() removes a panel from the deck and thus hides it from
view.
move_panel() moves the curses window associated with pan, so that its
upper lefthand corner is at the supplied coordinates. (Don't use
mvwin() on the window.)
new_panel() creates a new panel associated with win and returns the
panel pointer. The new panel is placed at the top of the deck.
panel_above() returns a pointer to the panel in the deck above pan,
or NULL if pan is the top panel. If the value of pan passed is NULL,
this function returns a pointer to the bottom panel in the deck.
panel_below() returns a pointer to the panel in the deck below pan,
or NULL if pan is the bottom panel. If the value of pan passed is
NULL, this function returns a pointer to the top panel in the deck.
panel_hidden() returns OK if pan is hidden and ERR if it is not.
panel_userptr() - Each panel has a user pointer available for
maintaining relevant information. This function returns a pointer to
that information previously set up by set_panel_userptr().
panel_window() returns a pointer to the curses window associated with
the panel.
replace_panel() replaces the current window of pan with win.
set_panel_userptr() - Each panel has a user pointer available for
maintaining relevant information. This function sets the value of
that information.
show_panel() makes a previously hidden panel visible and places it
back in the deck on top.
top_panel() places pan on the top of the deck. The size, location and
contents of the panel are unchanged.
update_panels() refreshes the virtual screen to reflect the depth
relationships between the panels in the deck. The user must use
doupdate() to refresh the physical screen.
### Return Value
Each routine that returns a pointer to an object returns NULL if an
error occurs. Each panel routine that returns an integer, returns OK
if it executes successfully and ERR if it does not.
### Portability
X/Open ncurses NetBSD
bottom_panel - Y Y
del_panel - Y Y
hide_panel - Y Y
move_panel - Y Y
new_panel - Y Y
panel_above - Y Y
panel_below - Y Y
panel_hidden - Y Y
panel_userptr - Y Y
panel_window - Y Y
replace_panel - Y Y
set_panel_userptr - Y Y
show_panel - Y Y
top_panel - Y Y
update_panels - Y Y
Credits:
Original Author - Warren Tucker <wht@n4hgf.mt-park.ga.us>
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
printw
------
### Synopsis
int printw(const char *fmt, ...);
int wprintw(WINDOW *win, const char *fmt, ...);
int mvprintw(int y, int x, const char *fmt, ...);
int mvwprintw(WINDOW *win, int y, int x, const char *fmt,...);
int vwprintw(WINDOW *win, const char *fmt, va_list varglist);
int vw_printw(WINDOW *win, const char *fmt, va_list varglist);
### Description
The printw() functions add a formatted string to the window at the
current or specified cursor position. The format strings are the same
as used in the standard C library's printf(). (printw() can be used
as a drop-in replacement for printf().)
The duplication between vwprintw() and vw_printw() is for historic
reasons. In PDCurses, they're the same.
### Return Value
All functions return the number of characters printed, or ERR on
error.
### Portability
X/Open ncurses NetBSD
printw Y Y Y
wprintw Y Y Y
mvprintw Y Y Y
mvwprintw Y Y Y
vwprintw Y Y Y
vw_printw Y Y Y
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
refresh
-------
### Synopsis
int refresh(void);
int wrefresh(WINDOW *win);
int wnoutrefresh(WINDOW *win);
int doupdate(void);
int redrawwin(WINDOW *win);
int wredrawln(WINDOW *win, int beg_line, int num_lines);
### Description
wrefresh() copies the named window to the physical terminal screen,
taking into account what is already there in order to optimize cursor
movement. refresh() does the same, using stdscr. These routines must
be called to get any output on the terminal, as other routines only
manipulate data structures. Unless leaveok() has been enabled, the
physical cursor of the terminal is left at the location of the
window's cursor.
wnoutrefresh() and doupdate() allow multiple updates with more
efficiency than wrefresh() alone. wrefresh() works by first calling
wnoutrefresh(), which copies the named window to the virtual screen.
It then calls doupdate(), which compares the virtual screen to the
physical screen and does the actual update. A series of calls to
wrefresh() will result in alternating calls to wnoutrefresh() and
doupdate(), causing several bursts of output to the screen. By first
calling wnoutrefresh() for each window, it is then possible to call
doupdate() only once.
In PDCurses, redrawwin() is equivalent to touchwin(), and wredrawln()
is the same as touchline(). In some other curses implementations,
there's a subtle distinction, but it has no meaning in PDCurses.
### Return Value
All functions return OK on success and ERR on error.
### Portability
X/Open ncurses NetBSD
refresh Y Y Y
wrefresh Y Y Y
wnoutrefresh Y Y Y
doupdate Y Y Y
redrawwin Y Y Y
wredrawln Y Y Y
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
scanw
-----
### Synopsis
int scanw(const char *fmt, ...);
int wscanw(WINDOW *win, const char *fmt, ...);
int mvscanw(int y, int x, const char *fmt, ...);
int mvwscanw(WINDOW *win, int y, int x, const char *fmt, ...);
int vwscanw(WINDOW *win, const char *fmt, va_list varglist);
int vw_scanw(WINDOW *win, const char *fmt, va_list varglist);
### Description
These routines correspond to the standard C library's scanf() family.
Each gets a string from the window via wgetnstr(), and uses the
resulting line as input for the scan.
The duplication between vwscanw() and vw_scanw() is for historic
reasons. In PDCurses, they're the same.
### Return Value
On successful completion, these functions return the number of items
successfully matched. Otherwise they return ERR.
### Portability
X/Open ncurses NetBSD
scanw Y Y Y
wscanw Y Y Y
mvscanw Y Y Y
mvwscanw Y Y Y
vwscanw Y Y Y
vw_scanw Y Y Y
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
scr_dump
--------
### Synopsis
int putwin(WINDOW *win, FILE *filep);
WINDOW *getwin(FILE *filep);
int scr_dump(const char *filename);
int scr_init(const char *filename);
int scr_restore(const char *filename);
int scr_set(const char *filename);
### Description
getwin() reads window-related data previously stored in a file by
putwin(). It then creates and initialises a new window using that
data.
putwin() writes all data associated with a window into a file, using
an unspecified format. This information can be retrieved later using
getwin().
scr_dump() writes the current contents of the virtual screen to the
file named by filename in an unspecified format.
scr_restore() function sets the virtual screen to the contents of the
file named by filename, which must have been written using
scr_dump(). The next refresh operation restores the screen to the way
it looked in the dump file.
In PDCurses, scr_init() does nothing, and scr_set() is a synonym for
scr_restore(). Also, scr_dump() and scr_restore() save and load from
curscr. This differs from some other implementations, where
scr_init() works with curscr, and scr_restore() works with newscr;
but the effect should be the same. (PDCurses has no newscr.)
### Return Value
On successful completion, getwin() returns a pointer to the window it
created. Otherwise, it returns a null pointer. Other functions return
OK or ERR.
### Portability
X/Open ncurses NetBSD
putwin Y Y Y
getwin Y Y Y
scr_dump Y Y -
scr_init Y Y -
scr_restore Y Y -
scr_set Y Y -
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
scroll
------
### Synopsis
int scroll(WINDOW *win);
int scrl(int n);
int wscrl(WINDOW *win, int n);
### Description
scroll() causes the window to scroll up one line. This involves
moving the lines in the window data strcture.
With a positive n, scrl() and wscrl() scroll the window up n lines
(line i + n becomes i); otherwise they scroll the window down n
lines.
For these functions to work, scrolling must be enabled via
scrollok(). Note also that scrolling is not allowed if the supplied
window is a pad.
### Return Value
All functions return OK on success and ERR on error.
### Portability
X/Open ncurses NetBSD
scroll Y Y Y
scrl Y Y Y
wscrl Y Y Y
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
slk
---
### Synopsis
int slk_init(int fmt);
int slk_set(int labnum, const char *label, int justify);
int slk_refresh(void);
int slk_noutrefresh(void);
char *slk_label(int labnum);
int slk_clear(void);
int slk_restore(void);
int slk_touch(void);
int slk_attron(const chtype attrs);
int slk_attr_on(const attr_t attrs, void *opts);
int slk_attrset(const chtype attrs);
int slk_attr_set(const attr_t attrs, short color_pair, void *opts);
int slk_attroff(const chtype attrs);
int slk_attr_off(const attr_t attrs, void *opts);
int slk_color(short color_pair);
int slk_wset(int labnum, const wchar_t *label, int justify);
int PDC_mouse_in_slk(int y, int x);
void PDC_slk_free(void);
void PDC_slk_initialize(void);
wchar_t *slk_wlabel(int labnum)
### Description
These functions manipulate a window that contain Soft Label Keys
(SLK). To use the SLK functions, a call to slk_init() must be made
BEFORE initscr() or newterm(). slk_init() removes 1 or 2 lines from
the useable screen, depending on the format selected.
The line(s) removed from the screen are used as a separate window, in
which SLKs are displayed.
slk_init() requires a single parameter which describes the format of
the SLKs as follows:
0 3-2-3 format
1 4-4 format
2 4-4-4 format (ncurses extension)
3 4-4-4 format with index line (ncurses extension)
2 lines used
55 5-5 format (pdcurses format)
slk_refresh(), slk_noutrefresh() and slk_touch() are analogous to
refresh(), noutrefresh() and touch().
### Return Value
All functions return OK on success and ERR on error.
### Portability
X/Open ncurses NetBSD
slk_init Y Y Y
slk_set Y Y Y
slk_refresh Y Y Y
slk_noutrefresh Y Y Y
slk_label Y Y Y
slk_clear Y Y Y
slk_restore Y Y Y
slk_touch Y Y Y
slk_attron Y Y Y
slk_attrset Y Y Y
slk_attroff Y Y Y
slk_attr_on Y Y Y
slk_attr_set Y Y Y
slk_attr_off Y Y Y
slk_wset Y Y Y
PDC_mouse_in_slk - - -
PDC_slk_free - - -
PDC_slk_initialize - - -
slk_wlabel - - -
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
termattr
--------
### Synopsis
int baudrate(void);
char erasechar(void);
bool has_ic(void);
bool has_il(void);
char killchar(void);
char *longname(void);
chtype termattrs(void);
attr_t term_attrs(void);
char *termname(void);
int erasewchar(wchar_t *ch);
int killwchar(wchar_t *ch);
char wordchar(void);
### Description
baudrate() is supposed to return the output speed of the terminal. In
PDCurses, it simply returns INT_MAX.
has_ic and has_il() return TRUE. These functions have meaning in some
other implementations of curses.
erasechar() and killchar() return ^H and ^U, respectively -- the
ERASE and KILL characters. In other curses implementations, these may
vary by terminal type. erasewchar() and killwchar() are the wide-
character versions; they take a pointer to a location in which to
store the character, and return OK or ERR.
longname() returns a pointer to a static area containing a verbose
description of the current terminal. The maximum length of the string
is 128 characters. It is defined only after the call to initscr() or
newterm().
termname() returns a pointer to a static area containing a short
description of the current terminal (14 characters).
termattrs() returns a logical OR of all video attributes supported by
the terminal.
wordchar() is a PDCurses extension of the concept behind the
functions erasechar() and killchar(), returning the "delete word"
character, ^W.
### Portability
X/Open ncurses NetBSD
baudrate Y Y Y
erasechar Y Y Y
has_ic Y Y Y
has_il Y Y Y
killchar Y Y Y
longname Y Y Y
termattrs Y Y Y
termname Y Y Y
erasewchar Y Y Y
killwchar Y Y Y
term_attrs Y Y Y
wordchar - - -
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
touch
-----
### Synopsis
int touchwin(WINDOW *win);
int touchline(WINDOW *win, int start, int count);
int untouchwin(WINDOW *win);
int wtouchln(WINDOW *win, int y, int n, int changed);
bool is_linetouched(WINDOW *win, int line);
bool is_wintouched(WINDOW *win);
int touchoverlap(const WINDOW *win1, WINDOW *win2);
### Description
touchwin() and touchline() throw away all information about which
parts of the window have been touched, pretending that the entire
window has been drawn on. This is sometimes necessary when using
overlapping windows, since a change to one window will affect the
other window, but the records of which lines have been changed in the
other window will not reflect the change.
untouchwin() marks all lines in the window as unchanged since the
last call to wrefresh().
wtouchln() makes n lines in the window, starting at line y, look as
if they have (changed == 1) or have not (changed == 0) been changed
since the last call to wrefresh().
is_linetouched() returns TRUE if the specified line in the specified
window has been changed since the last call to wrefresh().
is_wintouched() returns TRUE if the specified window has been changed
since the last call to wrefresh().
touchoverlap(win1, win2) marks the portion of win2 which overlaps
with win1 as modified.
### Return Value
All functions return OK on success and ERR on error except
is_wintouched() and is_linetouched().
### Portability
X/Open ncurses NetBSD
touchwin Y Y Y
touchline Y Y Y
untouchwin Y Y Y
wtouchln Y Y Y
is_linetouched Y Y Y
is_wintouched Y Y Y
touchoverlap - - Y
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
util
----
### Synopsis
char *unctrl(chtype c);
void filter(void);
void use_env(bool x);
int delay_output(int ms);
int getcchar(const cchar_t *wcval, wchar_t *wch, attr_t *attrs,
short *color_pair, void *opts);
int setcchar(cchar_t *wcval, const wchar_t *wch, const attr_t attrs,
short color_pair, const void *opts);
wchar_t *wunctrl(cchar_t *wc);
int PDC_mbtowc(wchar_t *pwc, const char *s, size_t n);
size_t PDC_mbstowcs(wchar_t *dest, const char *src, size_t n);
size_t PDC_wcstombs(char *dest, const wchar_t *src, size_t n);
### Description
unctrl() expands the text portion of the chtype c into a printable
string. Control characters are changed to the "^X" notation; others
are passed through. wunctrl() is the wide-character version of the
function.
filter() and use_env() are no-ops in PDCurses.
delay_output() inserts an ms millisecond pause in output.
getcchar() works in two modes: When wch is not NULL, it reads the
cchar_t pointed to by wcval and stores the attributes in attrs, the
color pair in color_pair, and the text in the wide-character string
wch. When wch is NULL, getcchar() merely returns the number of wide
characters in wcval. In either mode, the opts argument is unused.
setcchar constructs a cchar_t at wcval from the wide-character text
at wch, the attributes in attr and the color pair in color_pair. The
opts argument is unused.
Currently, the length returned by getcchar() is always 1 or 0.
Similarly, setcchar() will only take the first wide character from
wch, and ignore any others that it "should" take (i.e., combining
characters). Nor will it correctly handle any character outside the
basic multilingual plane (UCS-2).
### Return Value
wunctrl() returns NULL on failure. delay_output() always returns OK.
getcchar() returns the number of wide characters wcval points to when
wch is NULL; when it's not, getcchar() returns OK or ERR.
setcchar() returns OK or ERR.
### Portability
X/Open ncurses NetBSD
unctrl Y Y Y
filter Y Y Y
use_env Y Y Y
delay_output Y Y Y
getcchar Y Y Y
setcchar Y Y Y
wunctrl Y Y Y
PDC_mbtowc - - -
PDC_mbstowcs - - -
PDC_wcstombs - - -
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
window
------
### Synopsis
WINDOW *newwin(int nlines, int ncols, int begy, int begx);
WINDOW *derwin(WINDOW* orig, int nlines, int ncols,
int begy, int begx);
WINDOW *subwin(WINDOW* orig, int nlines, int ncols,
int begy, int begx);
WINDOW *dupwin(WINDOW *win);
WINDOW *wgetparent(const WINDOW *win);
int delwin(WINDOW *win);
int mvwin(WINDOW *win, int y, int x);
int mvderwin(WINDOW *win, int pary, int parx);
int syncok(WINDOW *win, bool bf);
bool is_subwin(const WINDOW *win);
bool is_syncok(const WINDOW *win);
void wsyncup(WINDOW *win);
void wcursyncup(WINDOW *win);
void wsyncdown(WINDOW *win);
WINDOW *resize_window(WINDOW *win, int nlines, int ncols);
int wresize(WINDOW *win, int nlines, int ncols);
WINDOW *PDC_makelines(WINDOW *win);
WINDOW *PDC_makenew(int nlines, int ncols, int begy, int begx);
void PDC_sync(WINDOW *win);
### Description
newwin() creates a new window with the given number of lines, nlines
and columns, ncols. The upper left corner of the window is at line
begy, column begx. If nlines is zero, it defaults to LINES - begy;
ncols to COLS - begx. Create a new full-screen window by calling
newwin(0, 0, 0, 0).
delwin() deletes the named window, freeing all associated memory. In
the case of overlapping windows, subwindows should be deleted before
the main window.
mvwin() moves the window so that the upper left-hand corner is at
position (y,x). If the move would cause the window to be off the
screen, it is an error and the window is not moved. Moving subwindows
is allowed.
subwin() creates a new subwindow within a window. The dimensions of
the subwindow are nlines lines and ncols columns. The subwindow is at
position (begy, begx) on the screen. This position is relative to the
screen, and not to the window orig. Changes made to either window
will affect both. When using this routine, you will often need to
call touchwin() before calling wrefresh().
derwin() is the same as subwin(), except that begy and begx are
relative to the origin of the window orig rather than the screen.
There is no difference between subwindows and derived windows.
mvderwin() moves a derived window (or subwindow) inside its parent
window. The screen-relative parameters of the window are not changed.
This routine is used to display different parts of the parent window
at the same physical position on the screen.
dupwin() creates an exact duplicate of the window win.
wgetparent() returns the parent WINDOW pointer for subwindows, or NULL
for windows having no parent.
wsyncup() causes a touchwin() of all of the window's parents.
If syncok() is called with a second argument of TRUE, this causes a
wsyncup() to be called every time the window is changed.
is_subwin() reports whether the specified window is a subwindow,
created by subwin() or derwin().
is_syncok() reports whether the specified window is in syncok mode.
wcursyncup() causes the current cursor position of all of a window's
ancestors to reflect the current cursor position of the current
window.
wsyncdown() causes a touchwin() of the current window if any of its
parent's windows have been touched.
resize_window() allows the user to resize an existing window. It
returns the pointer to the new window, or NULL on failure.
wresize() is an ncurses-compatible wrapper for resize_window(). Note
that, unlike ncurses, it will NOT process any subwindows of the
window. (However, you still can call it _on_ subwindows.) It returns
OK or ERR.
PDC_makenew() allocates all data for a new WINDOW * except the actual
lines themselves. If it's unable to allocate memory for the window
structure, it will free all allocated memory and return a NULL
pointer.
PDC_makelines() allocates the memory for the lines.
PDC_sync() handles wrefresh() and wsyncup() calls when a window is
changed.
### Return Value
newwin(), subwin(), derwin() and dupwin() return a pointer to the new
window, or NULL on failure. delwin(), mvwin(), mvderwin() and
syncok() return OK or ERR. wsyncup(), wcursyncup() and wsyncdown()
return nothing.
is_subwin() and is_syncok() returns TRUE or FALSE.
### Errors
It is an error to call resize_window() before calling initscr().
Also, an error will be generated if we fail to create a newly sized
replacement window for curscr, or stdscr. This could happen when
increasing the window size. NOTE: If this happens, the previously
successfully allocated windows are left alone; i.e., the resize is
NOT cancelled for those windows.
### Portability
X/Open ncurses NetBSD
newwin Y Y Y
delwin Y Y Y
mvwin Y Y Y
subwin Y Y Y
derwin Y Y Y
mvderwin Y Y Y
dupwin Y Y Y
wgetparent - Y -
wsyncup Y Y Y
syncok Y Y Y
is_subwin - Y -
is_syncok - Y -
wcursyncup Y Y Y
wsyncdown Y Y Y
wresize - Y Y
resize_window - - -
PDC_makelines - - -
PDC_makenew - - -
PDC_sync - - -
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
clipboard
---------
### Synopsis
int PDC_getclipboard(char **contents, long *length);
int PDC_setclipboard(const char *contents, long length);
int PDC_freeclipboard(char *contents);
int PDC_clearclipboard(void);
### Description
PDC_getclipboard() gets the textual contents of the system's
clipboard. This function returns the contents of the clipboard in the
contents argument. It is the responsibility of the caller to free the
memory returned, via PDC_freeclipboard(). The length of the clipboard
contents is returned in the length argument.
PDC_setclipboard copies the supplied text into the system's
clipboard, emptying the clipboard prior to the copy.
PDC_clearclipboard() clears the internal clipboard.
### Return Values
indicator of success/failure of call.
PDC_CLIP_SUCCESS the call was successful
PDC_CLIP_MEMORY_ERROR unable to allocate sufficient memory for
the clipboard contents
PDC_CLIP_EMPTY the clipboard contains no text
PDC_CLIP_ACCESS_ERROR no clipboard support
### Portability
X/Open ncurses NetBSD
PDC_getclipboard - - -
PDC_setclipboard - - -
PDC_freeclipboard - - -
PDC_clearclipboard - - -
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
pdcsetsc
--------
### Synopsis
int PDC_set_blink(bool blinkon);
int PDC_set_bold(bool boldon);
void PDC_set_title(const char *title);
### Description
PDC_set_blink() toggles whether the A_BLINK attribute sets an actual
blink mode (TRUE), or sets the background color to high intensity
(FALSE). The default is platform-dependent (FALSE in most cases). It
returns OK if it could set the state to match the given parameter,
ERR otherwise.
PDC_set_bold() toggles whether the A_BOLD attribute selects an actual
bold font (TRUE), or sets the foreground color to high intensity
(FALSE). It returns OK if it could set the state to match the given
parameter, ERR otherwise.
PDC_set_title() sets the title of the window in which the curses
program is running. This function may not do anything on some
platforms.
### Portability
X/Open ncurses NetBSD
PDC_set_blink - - -
PDC_set_title - - -
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
sb
--
### Synopsis
int sb_init(void)
int sb_set_horz(int total, int viewport, int cur)
int sb_set_vert(int total, int viewport, int cur)
int sb_get_horz(int *total, int *viewport, int *cur)
int sb_get_vert(int *total, int *viewport, int *cur)
int sb_refresh(void);
### Description
These functions manipulate the scrollbar.
### Return Value
All functions return OK on success and ERR on error.
### Portability
X/Open ncurses NetBSD
sb_init - - -
sb_set_horz - - -
sb_set_vert - - -
sb_get_horz - - -
sb_get_vert - - -
sb_refresh - - -
--------------------------------------------------------------------------