X-Git-Url: http://ncurses.scripts.mit.edu/?p=ncurses.git;a=blobdiff_plain;f=doc%2Fhtml%2Fman%2Fcurs_getch.3x.html;h=90d336f955c5605711e4228d2e548af1e6ddf719;hp=3af0cc77543de1c9e96a1c84bcba3f37adb18ba1;hb=5dbe81a41e3c75806996cd762b9e55dcc9edb835;hpb=027d0c57c4c4d6690e8d8727888d3282dbe9aa86 diff --git a/doc/html/man/curs_getch.3x.html b/doc/html/man/curs_getch.3x.html index 3af0cc77..90d336f9 100644 --- a/doc/html/man/curs_getch.3x.html +++ b/doc/html/man/curs_getch.3x.html @@ -1,7 +1,7 @@ @@ -46,26 +46,25 @@ - -

NAME

+

NAME

        getch, wgetch, mvgetch, mvwgetch, ungetch, has_key - get
        (or push back) characters from curses terminal keyboard
 
 
-
-

SYNOPSIS

+

SYNOPSIS

        #include <curses.h>
 
        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 has_key(int ch);
+       int wgetch(WINDOW *win);
+       int mvgetch(int y, int x);
+       int mvwgetch(WINDOW *win, int y, int x);
+       int ungetch(int ch);
+       int has_key(int ch);
 
 
-
-

DESCRIPTION

+

DESCRIPTION

+
+

Reading characters

        The getch, wgetch, mvgetch and mvwgetch, routines  read  a
        character  from the window.  In no-delay mode, if no input
        is waiting, the value ERR is returned.  In delay mode, the
@@ -99,13 +98,23 @@
        fied since the last call to  wrefresh,  wrefresh  will  be
        called before another character is read.
 
+
+

Keypad mode

        If  keypad is TRUE, and a function key is pressed, the to-
        ken for that function key is returned instead of  the  raw
-       characters.   Possible function keys are defined in <curs-
-       es.h> as macros with values outside  the  range  of  8-bit
-       characters  whose names begin with KEY_.  Thus, a variable
-       intended to hold the return value of a function  key  must
-       be of short size or larger.
+       characters:
+
+       o   The  predefined function keys are listed in <curses.h>
+           as macros with values outside the range of 8-bit char-
+           acters.  Their names begin with KEY_.
+
+       o   Other  (user-defined)  function  keys which may be de-
+           fined using define_key(3x) have no names, but also are
+           expected  to  have  values  outside the range of 8-bit
+           characters.
+
+       Thus, a variable intended to hold the return  value  of  a
+       function key must be of short size or larger.
 
        When a character that could be the beginning of a function
        key is received (which, on modern terminals, means an  es-
@@ -116,17 +125,27 @@
        experience a delay between the time a user presses the es-
        cape key and the escape is returned to the program.
 
+
+

Ungetting characters

        The ungetch routine places ch back onto the input queue to
        be returned by the next call to wgetch.  There is just one
        input queue for all windows.
 
 
-
-

Function Keys

-       The following function keys, defined in <curses.h>,  might
-       be  returned  by  getch  if keypad has been enabled.  Note
-       that not all of these are  necessarily  supported  on  any
-       particular terminal.
+

Predefined key-codes

+       The following special keys are defined in <curses.h>.
+
+       o   Except for the special case KEY_RESIZE, it  is  neces-
+           sary to enable keypad for getch to return these codes.
+
+       o   Not all of these are necessarily supported on any par-
+           ticular terminal.
+
+       o   The naming convention may seem obscure, with some  ap-
+           parent  misspellings  (such  as "RSUME" for "resume").
+           The names correspond to the long  terminfo  capability
+           names  for the keys, and were defined long ago, in the
+           1980s.
 
             Name            Key name
             -------------------------------------------------
@@ -160,6 +179,7 @@
             KEY_RESET       Reset or hard reset
             KEY_PRINT       Print or copy
             KEY_LL          Home down or bottom (lower left)
+
             KEY_A1          Upper left of keypad
             KEY_A3          Upper right of keypad
             KEY_B2          Center of keypad
@@ -180,7 +200,6 @@
             KEY_MESSAGE     Message key
             KEY_MOUSE       Mouse event read
             KEY_MOVE        Move key
-
             KEY_NEXT        Next object key
             KEY_OPEN        Open key
             KEY_OPTIONS     Options key
@@ -227,7 +246,6 @@
 
        Keypad is arranged like this:
 
-
                          +-----+------+-------+
                          | A1  |  up  |  A3   |
                          +-----+------+-------+
@@ -235,18 +253,39 @@
                          +-----+------+-------+
                          | C1  | down |  C3   |
                          +-----+------+-------+
-       The has_key routine takes a key value from the above list,
-       and returns TRUE or FALSE according to whether the current
-       terminal type recognizes a key with that value.  Note that
-       a  few  values  do  not  correspond  to  a real key, e.g.,
-       KEY_RESIZE and KEY_MOUSE.  See resizeterm(3x) for more de-
-       tails  about  KEY_RESIZE, and curs_mouse(3x) for a discus-
-       sion of KEY_MOUSE.
+       A  few  of  these predefined values do not correspond to a
+       real key:
 
+       o   KEY_RESIZE is returned when the  SIGWINCH  signal  has
+           been  detected  (see  curs_initscr(3x) and resizeterm(3x)).
+           This code is returned whether or not keypad  has  been
+           enabled.
 
-
-

RETURN VALUE

-       All routines return the integer ERR upon  failure  and  an
+       o   KEY_MOUSE    is   returned   for   mouse-events   (see
+           curs_mouse(3x)).  This code relies upon whether or not
+           keypad(3x) has been enabled, because (e.g., with xterm
+           mouse prototocol) ncurses must read escape  sequences,
+           just like a function key.
+
+
+

Testing key-codes

+       The  has_key routine takes a key-code value from the above
+       list, and returns TRUE or FALSE according to  whether  the
+       current terminal type recognizes a key with that value.
+
+       The library also supports these extensions:
+
+          define_key
+               defines  a  key-code  for  a given string (see de-
+               fine_key(3x)).
+
+          key_defined
+               checks if there is a key-code defined for a  given
+               string (see key_defined(3x)).
+
+
+

RETURN VALUE

+       All  routines  return  the integer ERR upon failure and an
        integer value other than ERR (OK in the case of ungetch())
        upon successful completion.
 
@@ -254,104 +293,109 @@
                returns ERR if there is no more room in the FIFO.
 
           wgetch
-               returns ERR if the window pointer is null,  or  if
+               returns  ERR  if the window pointer is null, or if
                its timeout expires without having any data.
 
-       Functions  with a "mv" prefix first perform a cursor move-
-       ment using wmove, and return an error if the  position  is
+       Functions with a "mv" prefix first perform a cursor  move-
+       ment  using  wmove, and return an error if the position is
        outside the window, or if the window pointer is null.
 
 
-
-

NOTES

+

NOTES

        Use of the escape key by a programmer for a single charac-
-       ter function is discouraged, as it will cause a  delay  of
+       ter  function  is discouraged, as it will cause a delay of
        up to one second while the keypad code looks for a follow-
        ing function-key sequence.
 
-       Note that some keys may be the same as commonly used  con-
-       trol keys, e.g., KEY_ENTER versus control/M, KEY_BACKSPACE
-       versus control/H.  Some curses implementations may  differ
-       according  to  whether  they treat these control keys spe-
-       cially (and ignore the terminfo), or use the terminfo def-
-       initions.   Ncurses  uses  the terminfo definition.  If it
-       says  that  KEY_ENTER  is  control/M,  getch  will  return
-       KEY_ENTER when you press control/M.
+       Some  keys  may be the same as commonly used control keys,
+       e.g., KEY_ENTER  versus  control/M,  KEY_BACKSPACE  versus
+       control/H.  Some curses implementations may differ accord-
+       ing to whether they treat  these  control  keys  specially
+       (and  ignore  the  terminfo),  or use the terminfo defini-
+       tions.  Ncurses uses the terminfo definition.  If it  says
+       that  KEY_ENTER  is control/M, getch will return KEY_ENTER
+       when you press control/M.
 
-       Generally,  KEY_ENTER denotes the character(s) sent by the
+       Generally, KEY_ENTER denotes the character(s) sent by  the
        Enter key on the numeric keypad:
 
        o   the terminal description lists the most useful keys,
 
-       o   the Enter key on the regular keyboard is already  han-
+       o   the  Enter key on the regular keyboard is already han-
            dled by the standard ASCII characters for carriage-re-
            turn and line-feed,
 
-       o   depending on whether nl or nonl was  called,  pressing
-           "Enter"  on  the  regular keyboard may return either a
+       o   depending  on  whether nl or nonl was called, pressing
+           "Enter" on the regular keyboard may  return  either  a
            carriage-return or line-feed, and finally
 
-       o   "Enter or send" is the standard description  for  this
+       o   "Enter  or  send" is the standard description for this
            key.
 
-       When  using  getch, wgetch, mvgetch, or mvwgetch, nocbreak
+       When using getch, wgetch, mvgetch, or  mvwgetch,  nocbreak
        mode (nocbreak) and echo mode (echo) should not be used at
-       the  same  time.  Depending on the state of the tty driver
-       when each character is typed, the program may produce  un-
+       the same time.  Depending on the state of the  tty  driver
+       when  each character is typed, the program may produce un-
        desirable results.
 
        Note that getch, mvgetch, and mvwgetch may be macros.
 
        Historically, the set of keypad macros was largely defined
-       by the extremely function-key-rich keyboard  of  the  AT&T
-       7300,  aka  3B1,  aka Safari 4.  Modern personal computers
-       usually have only a small subset of these.   IBM  PC-style
-       consoles   typically  support  little  more  than  KEY_UP,
-       KEY_DOWN,   KEY_LEFT,   KEY_RIGHT,   KEY_HOME,    KEY_END,
+       by  the  extremely  function-key-rich keyboard of the AT&T
+       7300, aka 3B1, aka Safari 4.   Modern  personal  computers
+       usually  have  only a small subset of these.  IBM PC-style
+       consoles  typically  support  little  more  than   KEY_UP,
+       KEY_DOWN,    KEY_LEFT,   KEY_RIGHT,   KEY_HOME,   KEY_END,
        KEY_NPAGE, KEY_PPAGE, and function keys 1 through 12.  The
        Ins key is usually mapped to KEY_IC.
 
 
-
-

PORTABILITY

-       The *get* functions are described in the XSI Curses  stan-
-       dard,  Issue  4.   They  read single-byte characters only.
-       The standard specifies that they return  ERR  on  failure,
+

PORTABILITY

+       The  *get* functions are described in the XSI Curses stan-
+       dard, Issue 4.  They  read  single-byte  characters  only.
+       The  standard  specifies  that they return ERR on failure,
        but specifies no error conditions.
 
-       The  echo  behavior of these functions on input of KEY_ or
-       backspace characters was not specified in the  SVr4  docu-
+       The echo behavior of these functions on input of  KEY_  or
+       backspace  characters  was not specified in the SVr4 docu-
        mentation.  This description is adopted from the XSI Curs-
        es standard.
 
-       The behavior of getch and friends in the presence of  han-
-       dled  signals  is  unspecified  in the SVr4 and XSI Curses
-       documentation.  Under historical  curses  implementations,
-       it  varied depending on whether the operating system's im-
-       plementation  of  handled  signal  receipt  interrupts   a
-       read(2)  call in progress or not, and also (in some imple-
-       mentations) depending on whether an input timeout or  non-
+       The  behavior of getch and friends in the presence of han-
+       dled signals is unspecified in the  SVr4  and  XSI  Curses
+       documentation.   Under  historical curses implementations,
+       it varied depending on whether the operating system's  im-
+       plementation   of  handled  signal  receipt  interrupts  a
+       read(2) call in progress or not, and also (in some  imple-
+       mentations)  depending on whether an input timeout or non-
        blocking mode has been set.
 
+       KEY_MOUSE is mentioned in XSI Curses, along with a few re-
+       lated terminfo capabilities, but no higher-level functions
+       use the feature.  The implementation in ncurses is an  ex-
+       tension.
+
+       KEY_RESIZE  is an extension first implemented for ncurses.
+       NetBSD curses later added this extension.
+
        Programmers concerned about portability should be prepared
-       for either of two cases: (a) signal receipt does  not  in-
-       terrupt  getch;  (b)  signal  receipt interrupts getch and
-       causes it to return ERR with errno set  to  EINTR.   Under
-       the  ncurses  implementation, handled signals never inter-
+       for  either  of two cases: (a) signal receipt does not in-
+       terrupt getch; (b) signal  receipt  interrupts  getch  and
+       causes  it  to  return ERR with errno set to EINTR.  Under
+       the ncurses implementation, handled signals  never  inter-
        rupt getch.
 
-       The has_key function is unique to ncurses.   We  recommend
-       that  any  code  using it be conditionalized on the NCURS-
+       The  has_key  function is unique to ncurses.  We recommend
+       that any code using it be conditionalized  on  the  NCURS-
        ES_VERSION feature macro.
 
 
-
-

SEE ALSO

+

SEE ALSO

        curses(3x),       curs_inopts(3x),       curs_outopts(3x),
        curs_mouse(3x),   curs_move(3x),   curs_refresh(3x),   re-
        sizeterm(3x).
 
-       Comparable functions in the wide-character (ncursesw)  li-
+       Comparable  functions in the wide-character (ncursesw) li-
        brary are described in curs_get_wch(3x).
 
 
@@ -364,7 +408,11 @@
 
  • SYNOPSIS
  • DESCRIPTION
  • RETURN VALUE