X-Git-Url: http://ncurses.scripts.mit.edu/?a=blobdiff_plain;ds=sidebyside;f=doc%2Fhtml%2Fman%2Fcurs_terminfo.3x.html;h=6084b51ee038fc2bd69831b5875042577dbd4337;hb=67327e4e3b2121f8273fb73ec14ef234ed01231e;hp=4c4246b7ba7727089fc8cc6343b823cb2d2bca50;hpb=47d2fb4537d9ad5bb14f4810561a327930ca4280;p=ncurses.git diff --git a/doc/html/man/curs_terminfo.3x.html b/doc/html/man/curs_terminfo.3x.html index 4c4246b7..6084b51e 100644 --- a/doc/html/man/curs_terminfo.3x.html +++ b/doc/html/man/curs_terminfo.3x.html @@ -1,6 +1,7 @@ - -curs_terminfo 3x +curs_terminfo 3x 2023-12-30 ncurses 6.4 Library calls - + -

curs_terminfo 3x

+

curs_terminfo 3x 2023-12-30 ncurses 6.4 Library calls

-curs_terminfo(3x)                                            curs_terminfo(3x)
+curs_terminfo(3x)                Library calls               curs_terminfo(3x)
 
 
 
 
 

NAME

-       del_curterm, mvcur, putp, restartterm, set_curterm, setterm, setupterm,
-       tigetflag, tigetnum, tigetstr, tiparm, tparm, tputs, vid_attr,
-       vid_puts, vidattr, vidputs - curses interfaces to terminfo database
+       del_curterm,   mvcur,   putp,   restartterm,   set_curterm,  setupterm,
+       tigetflag,  tigetnum,  tigetstr,  tiparm,  tiparm_s,  tiscan_s,  tparm,
+       tputs,  vid_attr,  vid_puts,  vidattr,  vidputs  - curses interfaces to
+       terminfo database
 
 
 

SYNOPSIS

@@ -74,12 +83,14 @@
        const char * const strfnames[];
 
        int setupterm(const char *term, int filedes, int *errret);
-       int setterm(const char *term);
        TERMINAL *set_curterm(TERMINAL *nterm);
        int del_curterm(TERMINAL *oterm);
        int restartterm(const char *term, int filedes, int *errret);
 
-       char *tparm(const char *str, ...);
+       char *tparm(const char *str, ...);
+            /* or */
+       char *tparm(const char *str, long p1 ... long p9);
+
        int tputs(const char *str, int affcnt, int (*putc)(int));
        int putp(const char *str);
 
@@ -88,47 +99,63 @@
        int vid_puts(attr_t attrs, short pair, void *opts, int (*putc)(int));
        int vid_attr(attr_t attrs, short pair, void *opts);
 
-       int mvcur(int oldrow, int oldcol, int newrow, int newcol);
+       int mvcur(int oldrow, int oldcol, int newrow, int newcol);
 
        int tigetflag(const char *capname);
        int tigetnum(const char *capname);
        char *tigetstr(const char *capname);
 
-       char *tiparm(const char *str, ...);
+       char *tiparm(const char *str, ...);
+
+       /* extensions */
+       char *tiparm_s(int expected, int mask, const char *str, ...);
+       int tiscan_s(int *expected, int *mask, const char *str);
+
+       /* deprecated */
+       int setterm(const char *term);
 
 
 

DESCRIPTION

-       These  low-level  routines must be called by programs that have to deal
-       directly with the terminfo database to handle certain terminal capabil-
-       ities, such as programming function keys.  For all other functionality,
-       curses routines are more suitable and their use is recommended.
+       These low-level routines must be called by programs that have  to  deal
+       directly   with  the  terminfo  database  to  handle  certain  terminal
+       capabilities,  such  as  programming  function  keys.   For  all  other
+       functionality,  curses  routines  are  more  suitable  and their use is
+       recommended.
+
+       None of these functions use  (or  are  aware  of)  multibyte  character
+       strings such as UTF-8.
+
+       o   Capability names and codes use the POSIX portable character set.
+
+       o   Capability  string  values  have  no  associated encoding; they are
+           strings of 8-bit characters.
 
 
 

Initialization

-       Initially, setupterm should be called.  The high-level curses functions
+       Initially, setupterm should be called.  The high-level curses functions
        initscr  and  newterm call setupterm to initialize the low-level set of
-       terminal-dependent variables [listed in terminfo(5)].
+       terminal-dependent variables listed in term_variables(3x).
 
        Applications can use the terminal  capabilities  either  directly  (via
-       header  definitions),  or by special functions.  The header files curs-
-       es.h and term.h should be included (in this order) to get  the  defini-
-       tions for these strings, numbers, and flags.
+       header  definitions),  or  by  special  functions.   The  header  files
+       curses.h and term.h should be included  (in  that  order)  to  get  the
+       definitions for these strings, numbers, and flags.
 
-       The  terminfo  variables lines and columns are initialized by setupterm
+       The  terminfo  variables lines and columns are initialized by setupterm
        as follows:
 
        o   If use_env(FALSE) has been called, values  for  lines  and  columns
-           specified in terminfo are used.
+           specified in terminfo are used.
 
-       o   Otherwise,  if  the  environment variables LINES and COLUMNS exist,
+       o   Otherwise,  if  the  environment variables LINES and COLUMNS exist,
            their values are used.  If these environment variables do not exist
            and  the program is running in a window, the current window size is
            used.  Otherwise, if the environment variables do  not  exist,  the
-           values for lines and columns specified in the terminfo database are
+           values for lines and columns specified in the terminfo database are
            used.
 
        Parameterized strings should be passed  through  tparm  to  instantiate
-       them.   All  terminfo strings (including the output of tparm) should be
+       them.   All  terminfo strings (including the output of tparm) should be
        printed with tputs or putp.  Call reset_shell_mode to restore  the  tty
        modes before exiting [see curs_kernel(3x)].
 
@@ -146,163 +173,198 @@
        o   output enter_ca_mode and call reset_prog_mode after returning  from
            the shell.
 
-       The  setupterm routine reads in the terminfo database, initializing the
-       terminfo structures, but does not  set  up  the  output  virtualization
-       structures used by curses.  These are its parameters:
+       The  setupterm routine reads in the terminfo database, initializing the
+       terminfo structures, but does not  set  up  the  output  virtualization
+       structures used by curses.  These are its parameters:
 
           term is the terminal type, a character string.  If term is null, the
-               environment variable TERM is used.
+               environment variable TERM is used.
 
           filedes
-               is the file descriptor used for all output.
+               is the file descriptor used for getting  and  setting  terminal
+               I/O modes.
+
+               Higher-level  applications use newterm(3x) for initializing the
+               terminal, passing an output stream rather  than  a  descriptor.
+               In   curses,  the  two  are  the  same  because  newterm  calls
+               setupterm, passing the file descriptor derived from its  output
+               stream parameter.
 
           errret
-               points to an optional location where an error status can be re-
-               turned  to  the  caller.  If errret is not null, then setupterm
-               returns OK or ERR and stores a  status  value  in  the  integer
-               pointed  to by errret.  A return value of OK combined with sta-
-               tus of 1 in errret is normal.
+               points  to  an  optional  location where an error status can be
+               returned to the caller.  If errret is not null, then  setupterm
+               returns  OK  or  ERR  and  stores a status value in the integer
+               pointed to by errret.  A  return  value  of  OK  combined  with
+               status of 1 in errret is normal.
 
                If ERR is returned, examine errret:
 
-               1    means that the terminal is hardcopy, cannot  be  used  for
-                    curses applications.
+               1    means  that  the  terminal is hardcopy, cannot be used for
+                    curses applications.
 
-                    setupterm  determines  if  the entry is a hardcopy type by
+                    setupterm determines if the entry is a  hardcopy  type  by
                     checking the hc (hardcopy) capability.
 
-               0    means that the terminal could not be found, or that it  is
-                    a  generic  type, having too little information for curses
+               0    means  that the terminal could not be found, or that it is
+                    a generic type, having too little information  for  curses
                     applications to run.
 
-                    setupterm determines if the entry is  a  generic  type  by
-                    checking the gn (generic) capability.
+                    setupterm  determines  if  the  entry is a generic type by
+                    checking the gn (generic_type) capability.
 
-               -1   means that the terminfo database could not be found.
+               -1   means that the terminfo database could not be found.
 
-               If errret is null, setupterm prints an error message upon find-
-               ing an error and exits.  Thus, the simplest call is:
+               If errret is null,  setupterm  prints  an  error  message  upon
+               finding an error and exits.  Thus, the simplest call is:
 
-                     setupterm((char *)0, 1, (int *)0);,
+                      setupterm((char *)0, 1, (int *)0);
 
                which uses all the defaults and sends the output to stdout.
 
-       The setterm routine was replaced by setupterm.  The call:
-
-             setupterm(term, 1, (int *)0)
-
-       provides the same functionality as setterm(term).  The setterm  routine
-       is  provided for BSD compatibility, and is not recommended for new pro-
-       grams.
-
 
 

The Terminal State

-       The setupterm routine stores its information about the  terminal  in  a
-       TERMINAL  structure  pointed to by the global variable cur_term.  If it
-       detects an error, or decides that the terminal is unsuitable  (hardcopy
-       or  generic),  it discards this information, making it not available to
+       The  setupterm  routine  stores its information about the terminal in a
+       TERMINAL structure pointed to by the global variable cur_term.   If  it
+       detects  an error, or decides that the terminal is unsuitable (hardcopy
+       or generic), it discards this information, making it not  available  to
        applications.
 
-       If setupterm is called repeatedly for the same terminal type,  it  will
-       reuse  the  information.   It maintains only one copy of a given termi-
-       nal's capabilities in memory.  If it is called for  different  terminal
-       types,  setupterm  allocates new storage for each set of terminal capa-
-       bilities.
+       If  setupterm  is called repeatedly for the same terminal type, it will
+       reuse  the  information.   It  maintains  only  one  copy  of  a  given
+       terminal's  capabilities  in  memory.   If  it  is called for different
+       terminal types,  setupterm  allocates  new  storage  for  each  set  of
+       terminal capabilities.
 
-       The set_curterm routine sets cur_term to nterm, and makes  all  of  the
-       terminfo  boolean,  numeric,  and  string variables use the values from
-       nterm.  It returns the old value of cur_term.
+       set_curterm  sets  cur_term  to  nterm,  and  makes all of the terminfo
+       Boolean, numeric, and string variables use the values from  nterm.   It
+       returns the old value of cur_term.
 
-       The del_curterm routine frees the space pointed to by oterm  and  makes
-       it available for further use.  If oterm is the same as cur_term, refer-
-       ences to any of the terminfo boolean,  numeric,  and  string  variables
-       thereafter  may  refer  to  invalid  memory locations until another se-
-       tupterm has been called.
+       del_curterm  routine  frees  the space pointed to by oterm and makes it
+       available  for  further  use.   If  oterm  is  the  same  as  cur_term,
+       references  to  any  of  the  terminfo  Boolean,  numeric,  and  string
+       variables thereafter  may  refer  to  invalid  memory  locations  until
+       another setupterm has been called.
 
-       The restartterm routine is similar to  setupterm  and  initscr,  except
-       that it is called after restoring memory to a previous state (for exam-
-       ple, when reloading a game saved as a core  image  dump).   restartterm
-       assumes  that the windows and the input and output options are the same
-       as when memory was saved, but the terminal type and baud  rate  may  be
-       different.   Accordingly,  restartterm  saves  various  tty state bits,
-       calls setupterm, and then restores the bits.
+       The  restartterm  routine  is  similar to setupterm and initscr, except
+       that it is called after restoring  memory  to  a  previous  state  (for
+       example,   when   reloading  a  game  saved  as  a  core  image  dump).
+       restartterm assumes that the windows and the input and  output  options
+       are  the  same as when memory was saved, but the terminal type and baud
+       rate may be different.   Accordingly,  restartterm  saves  various  tty
+       state bits, calls setupterm, and then restores the bits.
 
 
 

Formatting Output

-       The tparm routine instantiates the string str with  parameters  pi.   A
-       pointer  is  returned to the result of str with the parameters applied.
-       Application developers should keep in mind these quirks of  the  inter-
-       face:
+       The  tparm  routine  instantiates the string str with parameters pi.  A
+       pointer is returned to the result of str with the  parameters  applied.
+       Application  developers  should  keep  in  mind  these  quirks  of  the
+       interface:
 
-       o   Although  tparm's actual parameters may be integers or strings, the
+       o   Although tparm's actual parameters may be integers or strings,  the
            prototype expects long (integer) values.
 
-       o   Aside from the set_attributes (sgr) capability, most terminal capa-
-           bilities require no more than one or two parameters.
+       o   Aside  from  the  set_attributes  (sgr)  capability,  most terminal
+           capabilities require no more than one or two parameters.
+
+       o   Padding information is ignored  by  tparm;  it  is  interpreted  by
+           tputs.
 
-       tiparm  is  a  newer  form of tparm which uses <stdarg.h> rather than a
-       fixed-parameter list.  Its numeric parameters are integers (int) rather
-       than longs.
+       o   The  capability  string  is  null-terminated.   Use "\200" where an
+           ASCII NUL is needed in the output.
+
+       tiparm is a newer form of tparm  which  uses  stdarg.h  rather  than  a
+       fixed-parameter  list.   Its  numeric  parameters  are ints rather than
+       longs.
+
+       Both tparm and tiparm assume that  the  application  passes  parameters
+       consistent  with the terminal description.  Two extensions are provided
+       as alternatives to deal with untrusted data:
+
+       o   tiparm_s is an extension which is a safer formatting function  than
+           tparm or tiparm, because it allows the developer to tell the curses
+           library how many parameters to expect in the  parameter  list,  and
+           which may be string parameters.
+
+           The  mask  parameter has one bit set for each of the parameters (up
+           to 9) which will be passed as char* rather than numbers.
+
+       o   The  extension  tiscan_s  allows  the  application  to  inspect   a
+           formatting capability to see what the curses library would assume.
 
 
 

Output Functions

-       The  tputs  routine  applies  padding information to the string str and
-       outputs it:
+       String  capabilities  can  contain  padding  information,  a time delay
+       (accommodating performance limitations of hardware terminals) expressed
+       as $<n>, where n is a nonnegative integral count of milliseconds.  If n
+       exceeds 30,000 (thirty seconds), it is capped at that value.
 
-       o   The str parameter must be a terminfo string variable or the  return
+       The tputs routine interprets time-delay information in the  string  str
+       and outputs it, executing the delays:
+
+       o   The  str parameter must be a terminfo string variable or the return
            value from tparm, tiparm, tgetstr, or tgoto.
 
-           The  tgetstr and tgoto functions are part of the termcap interface,
-           which happens to share this function name with the terminfo  inter-
-           face.
+           The tgetstr and tgoto functions are part of the termcap  interface,
+           which  happens  to  share  this  function  name  with  the terminfo
+           interface.
 
        o   affcnt is the number of lines affected, or 1 if not applicable.
 
-       o   putc  is a putchar-like routine to which the characters are passed,
+       o   putc is a putchar-like function to which the characters are passed,
            one at a time.
 
-       The putp routine calls tputs(str, 1, putchar).  The output of putp  al-
-       ways goes to stdout, rather than the filedes specified in setupterm.
+           If  tputs  processes  a  time-delay,  it  uses the delay_output(3x)
+           function, routing any resulting  padding  characters  through  this
+           function.
+
+       The  putp  routine  calls  tputs(str,  1, putchar).  The output of putp
+       always goes to stdout, rather than the filedes specified in setupterm.
 
-       The  vidputs  routine  displays the string on the terminal in the video
+       The vidputs routine displays the string on the terminal  in  the  video
        attribute mode attrs, which is any combination of the attributes listed
-       in  curses(3x).   The characters are passed to the putchar-like routine
+       in curses(3x).  The characters are passed to the putchar-like  function
        putc.
 
        The vidattr routine is like the vidputs routine, except that it outputs
-       through putchar.
+       through putchar.
 
-       The  vid_attr  and vid_puts routines correspond to vidattr and vidputs,
-       respectively.  They use a set of arguments for representing  the  video
-       attributes plus color, i.e.,
+       vid_attr and vid_puts correspond to vidattr and vidputs,  respectively.
+       They  use multiple parameters to represent the character attributes and
+       color; namely,
 
-       o   attrs of type attr_t for the attributes and
+       o   attrs, of type attr_t, for the attributes and
 
-       o   pair of type short for the color-pair number.
+       o   pair, of type short, for the color pair number.
 
-       The  vid_attr  and  vid_puts routines are designed to use the attribute
-       constants with the WA_ prefix.
+       Use the attribute constants  prefixed  with  "WA_"  with  vid_attr  and
+       vid_puts.
 
-       X/Open Curses reserves the opts argument for future  use,  saying  that
-       applications  must provide a null pointer for that argument.  As an ex-
-       tension, this implementation allows opts to be used  as  a  pointer  to
-       int, which overrides the pair (short) argument.
+       X/Open  Curses  reserves  the opts argument for future use, saying that
+       applications must provide a null pointer for  that  argument;  but  see
+       section "EXTENSIONS" below.
 
        The  mvcur  routine  provides low-level cursor motion.  It takes effect
-       immediately (rather than at the next refresh).
+       immediately (rather than at the next refresh).  Unlike the  other  low-
+       level  output  functions,  which either write to the standard output or
+       pass an output function parameter, mvcur uses an output file descriptor
+       derived from the output stream parameter of newterm(3x).
+
+       While putp and mvcur are low-level functions which do not use the high-
+       level curses state, they are declared in curses.h because System V  did
+       this (see HISTORY).
 
 
 

Terminal Capability Functions

-       The tigetflag, tigetnum and tigetstr routines return the value  of  the
-       capability  corresponding  to the terminfo capname passed to them, such
-       as xenl.  The capname for each capability is given in the table  column
+       The  tigetflag,  tigetnum and tigetstr routines return the value of the
+       capability corresponding to the terminfo capname passed to  them,  such
+       as  xenl.  The capname for each capability is given in the table column
        entitled capname code in the capabilities section of terminfo(5).
 
        These routines return special values to denote errors.
 
        The tigetflag routine returns
 
-       -1     if capname is not a boolean capability, or
+       -1     if capname is not a Boolean capability, or
 
        0      if it is canceled or absent from the terminal description.
 
@@ -323,230 +385,331 @@
 

Terminal Capability Names

        These null-terminated arrays contain
 
-       o   the short terminfo names ("codes"),
+       o   the short terminfo names ("codes"),
 
-       o   the termcap names ("names", and
+       o   the termcap names ("names"), and
 
-       o   the long terminfo names ("fnames")
+       o   the long terminfo names ("fnames")
 
-       for each of the predefined terminfo variables:
+       for each of the predefined terminfo variables:
 
               const char *boolnames[], *boolcodes[], *boolfnames[]
               const char *numnames[], *numcodes[], *numfnames[]
               const char *strnames[], *strcodes[], *strfnames[]
 
 
-

RETURN VALUE

-       Routines  that  return  an integer return ERR upon failure and OK (SVr4
-       only specifies "an integer value other than ERR") upon successful  com-
-       pletion, unless otherwise noted in the preceding routine descriptions.
+

Releasing Memory

+       Each successful call to setupterm allocates memory to hold the terminal
+       description.   As  a  side-effect,  it  sets  cur_term to point to this
+       memory.  If an application calls
 
-       Routines that return pointers always return NULL on error.
+              del_curterm(cur_term);
 
-       X/Open defines no error conditions.  In this implementation
+       the memory will be freed.
 
-          del_curterm
-               returns an error if its terminal parameter is null.
+       The formatting functions tparm and tiparm extend the storage  allocated
+       by setupterm:
 
-          putp calls tputs, returning the same error-codes.
+       o   the  "static"  terminfo variables [a-z].  Before ncurses 6.3, those
+           were shared by all screens.  With ncurses 6.3, those are  allocated
+           per screen.  See terminfo(5) for details.
 
-          restartterm
-               returns an error if the associated call to setupterm returns an
-               error.
+       o   to  improve performance, ncurses 6.3 caches the result of analyzing
+           terminfo strings for their parameter types.  That is  stored  as  a
+           binary tree referenced from the TERMINAL structure.
 
-          setupterm
-               returns an error if it cannot allocate enough memory, or create
-               the initial windows (stdscr, curscr, newscr).  Other error con-
-               ditions are documented above.
+       The higher-level initscr and newterm functions use setupterm.  Normally
+       they do not free this memory, but it is possible to do that  using  the
+       delscreen(3x) function.
 
-          tputs
-               returns an error if the string parameter is null.  It does  not
-               detect  I/O errors: X/Open states that tputs ignores the return
-               value of the output function putc.
 
+

RETURN VALUE

+       X/Open defines no failure conditions.  In ncurses,
 
-

HISTORY

-       SVr2 introduced the terminfo feature.  Its programming manual mentioned
-       these low-level functions:
+       del_curterm
+            returns an error if its terminal parameter is null.
 
-       Function    Description
-       ------------------------------------------------------------
-       fixterm     restore tty to "in curses" state
-       gettmode    establish current tty modes
-       mvcur       low level cursor motion
-       putp        utility  function that uses tputs to send char-
-                   acters via putchar.
-       resetterm   set tty modes to "out of curses" state
-       resetty     reset tty flags to stored value
-       saveterm    save current modes as "in curses" state
-       savetty     store current tty flags
-       setterm     establish terminal with given type
-       setupterm   establish terminal with given type
-       tparm       instantiate a string expression with parameters
-       tputs       apply padding information to a string
-       vidattr     like vidputs, but outputs through putchar
-       vidputs     output a string to put terminal in a  specified
-                   video attribute mode
-
-       The  programming  manual  also mentioned functions provided for termcap
-       compatibility (commenting that they "may go away at a later date"):
+       putp calls tputs, returning the same error-codes.
 
-       Function   Description
-       ------------------------------------------------
-       tgetent    look up termcap entry for given name
-       tgetflag   get boolean entry for given id
-       tgetnum    get numeric entry for given id
-       tgetstr    get string entry for given id
-       tgoto      apply parameters to given capability
-       tputs      apply padding to capability, calling
-                  a function to put characters
-
-       Early  terminfo  programs  obtained capability values from the TERMINAL
-       structure initialized by setupterm.
+       restartterm
+            returns  an  error  if the associated call to setupterm returns an
+            error.
 
-       SVr3 extended terminfo by adding functions to retrieve capability  val-
-       ues (like the termcap interface), and reusing tgoto and tputs:
+       setupterm
+            returns an error if it cannot allocate enough  memory,  or  create
+            the  initial  windows  (stdscr,  curscr,  and  newscr) Other error
+            conditions are documented above.
 
-       Function    Description
-       -------------------------------------------
-       tigetflag   get boolean entry for given id
-       tigetnum    get numeric entry for given id
-       tigetstr    get string entry for given id
+       tparm
+            returns  a  null  if  the  capability  would  require   unexpected
+            parameters,  e.g.,  too many, too few, or incorrect types (strings
+            where integers are expected, or vice versa).
 
-       SVr3  also replaced several of the SVr2 terminfo functions which had no
-       counterpart in the termcap interface, documenting them as obsolete:
+       tputs
+            returns an error if the string parameter is  null.   It  does  not
+            detect  I/O  errors:  X/Open  Curses states that tputs ignores the
+            return value of the output function putc.
 
-       Function    Replaced by
-       -----------------------------
-       crmode      cbreak
-       fixterm     reset_prog_mode
-       gettmode    N/A
-       nocrmode    nocbreak
-       resetterm   reset_shell_mode
-       saveterm    def_prog_mode
-       setterm     setupterm
 
-       SVr3 kept the mvcur, vidattr and vidputs functions,  along  with  putp,
-       tparm  and  tputs.  The latter were needed to support padding, and han-
-       dling functions such as vidattr (which used more than the  two  parame-
-       ters supported by tgoto).
+

NOTES

+       The vid_attr function in ncurses is a special case.  It was  originally
+       implemented based on a draft of X/Open Curses, as a macro, before other
+       parts of the ncurses wide-character API were developed, and unlike  the
+       other  wide-character  functions,  is  also  provided  in the non-wide-
+       character configuration.
 
-       SVr3  introduced  the functions for switching between terminal descrip-
-       tions, e.g., set_curterm.  The various global variables such  as  bool-
-       names were mentioned in the programming manual at this point.
 
-       SVr4 added the vid_attr and vid_puts functions.
+

EXTENSIONS

+       The functions marked as extensions were designed for ncurses,  and  are
+       not  found  in SVr4 curses, 4.4BSD curses, or any other previous curses
+       implementation.
 
-       There are other low-level functions declared in the curses header files
-       on Unix systems, but none were documented.  The functions marked "obso-
-       lete" remained in use by the Unix vi editor.
+       ncurses allows opts to be a pointer to int, which  overrides  the  pair
+       (short) argument.
 
 
 

PORTABILITY

+       setterm is not described by X/Open and must be considered non-portable.
+       All other functions are as described by X/Open.
+
 
-

Legacy functions

-       X/Open notes that vidattr and vidputs may be macros.
+

Compatibility Macros

+       This implementation  provides  a  few  macros  for  compatibility  with
+       systems  before  SVr4  (see  section  "HISTORY"  below).   They include
+       Bcrmode, Bfixterm, Bgettmode,  Bnocrmode,  Bresetterm,  Bsaveterm,  and
+       Bsetterm.
 
-       The  function setterm is not described by X/Open and must be considered
-       non-portable.  All other functions are as described by X/Open.
+       In  SVr4,  these  are  found  in  curses.h, but except for setterm, are
+       likewise macros.  The one function, setterm, is mentioned in the manual
+       page.  It further notes that setterm was replaced by setupterm, stating
+       that the call
+              setupterm(term, 1, (int *)0)
+       provides the same  functionality  as  setterm(term),  discouraging  the
+       latter  for  new programs.  ncurses implements each of these symbols as
+       macros for BSD curses compatibility.
 
 
-

Legacy data

+

Legacy Data

        setupterm copies the terminal name to the array ttytype.  This  is  not
        part of X/Open Curses, but is assumed by some applications.
 
        Other  implementions  may not declare the capability name arrays.  Some
        provide them without declaring them.  X/Open does not specify them.
 
-       Extended terminal capability names, e.g., as defined by tic -x, are not
+       Extended terminal capability names, as defined  by  "tic -x",  are  not
        stored in the arrays described here.
 
 
-

Output buffering

-       Older  versions  of  ncurses assumed that the file descriptor passed to
+

Output Buffering

+       Older  versions  of  ncurses assumed that the file descriptor passed to
        setupterm from initscr or newterm uses buffered I/O, and would write to
-       the  corresponding stream.  In addition to the limitation that the ter-
-       minal was left in block-buffered mode on exit (like System  V  curses),
-       it  was  problematic  because  ncurses  did not allow a reliable way to
-       cleanup on receiving SIGTSTP.
+       the  corresponding  stream.   In  addition  to  the limitation that the
+       terminal was  left  in  block-buffered  mode  on  exit  (like  System V
+       curses),  it  was  problematic because ncurses did not allow a reliable
+       way to cleanup on receiving SIGTSTP.
 
        The current version (ncurses6) uses output buffers managed directly  by
-       ncurses.  Some of the low-level functions described in this manual page
-       write to the standard output.  They are not signal-safe.  The high-lev-
-       el functions in ncurses use alternate versions of these functions using
-       the more reliable buffering scheme.
+       ncurses.  Some of the low-level functions described in this manual page
+       write to the standard output.  They are  not  signal-safe.   The  high-
+       level functions in ncurses employ alternate versions of these functions
+       using the more reliable buffering scheme.
 
 
-

Function prototypes

-       The X/Open Curses prototypes are based on the SVr4 curses header decla-
-       rations,  which  were defined at the same time the C language was first
-       standardized in the late 1980s.
+

Function Prototypes

+       The X/Open Curses prototypes  are  based  on  the  SVr4  curses  header
+       declarations,  which  were  defined at the same time the C language was
+       first standardized in the late 1980s.
 
-       o   X/Open Curses uses const  less  effectively  than  a  later  design
+       o   X/Open Curses uses const  less  effectively  than  a  later  design
            might,  in  some cases applying it needlessly to values are already
            constant, and in most cases overlooking parameters  which  normally
-           would  use const.  Using constant parameters for functions which do
-           not use const may prevent the program from compiling.  On the other
-           hand, writable strings are an obsolescent feature.
+           would  use const.  Using constant parameters for functions which do
+           not use const may prevent the program from compiling.  On the other
+           hand, "writable strings" are an obsolescent feature.
 
            As  an  extension,  this implementation can be configured to change
-           the function prototypes to use the const keyword.  The ncurses  ABI
+           the function prototypes to use the const keyword.  The ncurses  ABI
            6 enables this feature by default.
 
        o   X/Open  Curses  prototypes tparm with a fixed number of parameters,
            rather than a variable argument list.
 
-           This implementation uses a variable argument list, but can be  con-
-           figured  to  use  the  fixed-parameter list.  Portable applications
+           This implementation uses a  variable  argument  list,  but  can  be
+           configured  to use the fixed-parameter list.  Portable applications
            should provide 9 parameters after the format; zeroes are  fine  for
            this purpose.
 
            In  response  to review comments by Thomas E. Dickey, X/Open Curses
            Issue 7 proposed the tiparm function in mid-2009.
 
+           While tiparm is always provided in ncurses, the older form is  only
+           available  as  a build-time configuration option.  If not specially
+           configured, tparm is the same as tiparm.
+
+       Both forms of tparm have drawbacks:
+
+       o   Most of the calls to tparm use only one or two parameters.  Passing
+           nine on each call is awkward.
 
-

Special TERM treatment

+           Using  long  for the numeric parameter type is a workaround to make
+           the parameter use the same amount of  stack  as  a  pointer.   That
+           approach  dates  back  to the mid-1980s, before C was standardized.
+           Since then, there is a standard (and pointers are not  required  to
+           fit in a long).
+
+       o   Providing  the  right  number of parameters for a variadic function
+           such  as  tiparm  can  be  a  problem,  in  particular  for  string
+           parameters.   However,  only a few terminfo capabilities use string
+           parameters (e.g., the ones used for programmable function keys).
+
+           The ncurses library checks usage of these capabilities, and returns
+           an  error  if  the capability mishandles string parameters.  But it
+           cannot check if a calling program provides  strings  in  the  right
+           places for the tparm calls.
+
+           The  tput(1)  program  checks  its use of these capabilities with a
+           table, so that it calls tparm correctly.
+
+   Special TERM treatment
        If configured to use the terminal-driver, e.g., for the MinGW port,
 
-       o   setupterm interprets a missing/empty TERM variable as  the  special
+       o   setupterm interprets a missing/empty TERM variable as  the  special
            value "unknown".
 
+           SVr4 curses uses the special value "dumb".
+
+           The  difference  between  the two is that the former uses the gn (-
+           generic_type) terminfo capability, while the latter  does  not.   A
+           generic terminal is unsuitable for full-screen applications.
+
        o   setupterm  allows explicit use of the the windows console driver by
-           checking if $TERM is set to "#win32con" or an abbreviation of  that
+           checking if $TERM is set to "#win32con" or an abbreviation of  that
            string.
 
 
-

Other portability issues

-       In  System  V Release 4, set_curterm has an int return type and returns
-       OK or ERR.  We have chosen to implement the X/Open Curses semantics.
+

Other Portability Issues

+       In  SVr4,  set_curterm  returns  an  int, OK or ERR.  We have chosen to
+       implement the X/Open Curses semantics.
+
+       In SVr4, the third argument of tputs has the type "int (*putc)(char)".
 
-       In System V Release 4, the third argument of tputs  has  the  type  int
-       (*putc)(char).
+       At least one implementation of X/Open Curses (Solaris) returns a  value
+       other  than OK or ERR from tputs.  It instead returns the length of the
+       string, and does no error checking.
 
-       At  least one implementation of X/Open Curses (Solaris) returns a value
-       other than OK/ERR from tputs.  That returns the length of  the  string,
-       and does no error-checking.
+       X/Open Curses notes that after calling mvcur, the curses state may  not
+       match  the  actual terminal state, and that an application should touch
+       and refresh the window  before  resuming  normal  curses  calls.   Both
+       ncurses and SVr4 curses implement mvcur using the SCREEN data allocated
+       in either initscr or newterm.  So though it is documented as a terminfo
+       function, mvcur is really a curses function that is not well specified.
 
        X/Open  notes  that after calling mvcur, the curses state may not match
-       the actual terminal state, and that an application should touch and re-
-       fresh the window before resuming normal curses calls.  Both ncurses and
-       System V Release 4 curses implement mvcur using the SCREEN  data  allo-
-       cated  in  either  initscr or newterm.  So though it is documented as a
-       terminfo function, mvcur is really a curses function which is not  well
-       specified.
+       the actual terminal state, and that an  application  should  touch  and
+       refresh  the  window before resuming normal curses calls.  Both ncurses
+       and System V Release 4 curses implement mvcur  using  the  SCREEN  data
+       allocated  in either initscr or newterm.  So though it is documented as
+       a terminfo function, mvcur is really a curses  function  which  is  not
+       well specified.
+
+       X/Open  Curses  states that the old location must be given for mvcur to
+       accommodate terminals that lack absolute cursor  positioning.   ncurses
+       allows the caller to use -1 for either or both old coordinates.  The -1
+       tells ncurses that the old location is unknown, and that  it  must  use
+       only  absolute  motion  (such  as cursor_address) rather than the least
+       costly combination of absolute and relative motion.
+
+
+

HISTORY

+       SVr2 (1984) introduced the terminfo feature.   Its  programming  manual
+       mentioned the following low-level functions.
+
+       Function    Description
+       ------------------------------------------------------------------------
+       fixterm     restore tty to "in curses" state
+       gettmode    establish current tty modes
+       mvcur       low level cursor motion
+       putp        use tputs to send characters via putchar
+       resetterm   set tty modes to "out of curses" state
+       resetty     reset tty flags to stored value
+       saveterm    save current modes as "in curses" state
+       savetty     store current tty flags
+       setterm     establish terminal with given type
+       setupterm   establish terminal with given type
+       tparm       interpolate parameters into string capability
+       tputs       apply padding information to a string
+       vidattr     like vidputs, but output through putchar
+       vidputs     write string to terminal, applying specified attributes
+
+       The  programming  manual  also mentioned functions provided for termcap
+       compatibility (commenting that they "may go away at a later date").
+
+       Function   Description
+       ------------------------------------------------------------------------
+       tgetent    look up termcap entry for given name
+       tgetflag   get Boolean entry for given id
+       tgetnum    get numeric entry for given id
+       tgetstr    get string entry for given id
+       tgoto      apply parameters to given capability
+       tputs      write characters via a function parameter, applying padding
+
+       Early terminfo programs obtained capability values  from  the  TERMINAL
+       structure initialized by setupterm.
+
+       SVr3   (1987)   extended  terminfo  by  adding  functions  to  retrieve
+       capability values (like the termcap interface), and reusing  tgoto  and
+       tputs.
+
+       Function    Description
+       ------------------------------------------------------------------------
+       tigetflag   get Boolean entry for given id
+       tigetnum    get numeric entry for given id
+       tigetstr    get string entry for given id
+
+       SVr3  also  replaced several of the SVr2 terminfo functions that had no
+       counterpart in the termcap interface, documenting them as obsolete.
+
+       Function    Replaced by
+       ------------------------------------------------------------------------
+       crmode      cbreak
+       fixterm     reset_prog_mode
+       gettmode    n/a
+       nocrmode    nocbreak
+       resetterm   reset_shell_mode
+       saveterm    def_prog_mode
+       setterm     setupterm
+
+       SVr3 kept the mvcur, vidattr, and vidputs functions, along  with  putp,
+       tparm,  and  tputs.   The latter were needed to support padding, and to
+       handle capabilities accessed by functions such as vidattr  (which  used
+       more than the two parameters supported by tgoto).
+
+       SVr3   introduced   the   functions   for  switching  between  terminal
+       descriptions;  for  example,  set_curterm.   Some   changes   reflected
+       incremental improvements to the SVr2 library.
 
-       X/Open  states that the old location must be given for mvcur.  This im-
-       plementation allows the caller to use -1's for the old  ordinates.   In
-       that case, the old location is unknown.
+       o   The  TERMINAL  type  definition  was introduced in SVr3.01, for the
+           term structure provided in SVr2.
+
+       o   Various global variables such as boolnames were  mentioned  in  the
+           programming  manual  at  this  point, though the variables had been
+           provided in SVr2.
+
+       SVr4 (1989) added the vid_attr and vid_puts functions.
+
+       Other low-level functions are declared in the curses  header  files  of
+       Unix  systems,  but  none are documented.  Those noted as "obsolete" by
+       SVr3 remained in use by System V's vi(1) editor.
 
 
 

SEE ALSO

-       curses(3x),    curs_initscr(3x),   curs_kernel(3x),   curs_termcap(3x),
-       curs_variables(3x), term_variables(3x), putc(3), terminfo(5)
+       curses(3x),   curs_initscr(3x),   curs_kernel(3x),   curs_memleaks(3x),
+       curs_termcap(3x),   curs_variables(3x),   putc(3),  term_variables(3x),
+       terminfo(5)
 
 
 
-                                                             curs_terminfo(3x)
+ncurses 6.4                       2023-12-30                 curs_terminfo(3x)