X-Git-Url: http://ncurses.scripts.mit.edu/?p=ncurses.git;a=blobdiff_plain;f=doc%2Fhtml%2Fman%2Fncurses.3x.html;h=d1e9f1f6ff95a2ef2681fb4e95c69501200a0613;hp=530b293ac1c87f23be19f7ced997adcf50ff9ced;hb=761e4f0825b330e970558e82a4bd638383914429;hpb=f367fa254ce3fe29710c86971f04e03111c2bd2c diff --git a/doc/html/man/ncurses.3x.html b/doc/html/man/ncurses.3x.html index 530b293a..d1e9f1f6 100644 --- a/doc/html/man/ncurses.3x.html +++ b/doc/html/man/ncurses.3x.html @@ -1,8 +1,8 @@ - + @@ -63,7 +63,7 @@ sonable optimization. This implementation is ``new curses'' (ncurses) and is the approved replacement for 4.4BSD classic curses, which has been discontinued. This - describes ncurses version 5.9 (patch 20120107). + describes ncurses version 5.9 (patch 20130518). The ncurses library emulates the curses library of System V Release 4 UNIX, and XPG4 (X/Open Portability Guide) @@ -150,48 +150,48 @@ Among those, the most basic routines are move and addch. More general versions of these routines are included with names beginning with w, allowing the user to specify a - window. The routines not beginning with w affect stdscr. + window. The routines not beginning with w affect stdscr. - After using routines to manipulate a window, refresh is - called, telling curses to make the user's CRT screen look - like stdscr. The characters in a window are actually of - type chtype, (character and attribute data) so that other - information about the character may also be stored with + After using routines to manipulate a window, refresh is + called, telling curses to make the user's CRT screen look + like stdscr. The characters in a window are actually of + type chtype, (character and attribute data) so that other + information about the character may also be stored with each character. - Special windows called pads may also be manipulated. + Special windows called pads may also be manipulated. These are windows which are not constrained to the size of - the screen and whose contents need not be completely dis- + the screen and whose contents need not be completely dis- played. See curs_pad(3x) for more information. - In addition to drawing characters on the screen, video - attributes and colors may be supported, causing the char- - acters to show up in such modes as underlined, in reverse - video, or in color on terminals that support such display + In addition to drawing characters on the screen, video + attributes and colors may be supported, causing the char- + acters to show up in such modes as underlined, in reverse + video, or in color on terminals that support such display enhancements. Line drawing characters may be specified to - be output. On input, curses is also able to translate - arrow and function keys that transmit escape sequences - into single values. The video attributes, line drawing - characters, and input values use names, defined in + be output. On input, curses is also able to translate + arrow and function keys that transmit escape sequences + into single values. The video attributes, line drawing + characters, and input values use names, defined in <curses.h>, such as A_REVERSE, ACS_HLINE, and KEY_LEFT. If the environment variables LINES and COLUMNS are set, or - if the program is executing in a window environment, line - and column information in the environment will override + if the program is executing in a window environment, line + and column information in the environment will override information read by terminfo. This would affect a program - running in an AT&T 630 layer, for example, where the size + running in an AT&T 630 layer, for example, where the size of a screen is changeable (see ENVIRONMENT). - If the environment variable TERMINFO is defined, any pro- - gram using curses checks for a local terminal definition - before checking in the standard place. For example, if + If the environment variable TERMINFO is defined, any pro- + gram using curses checks for a local terminal definition + before checking in the standard place. For example, if TERM is set to att4424, then the compiled terminal defini- tion is found in /usr/share/terminfo/a/att4424. (The a is copied from the first letter of att4424 to avoid - creation of huge directories.) However, if TERMINFO is + creation of huge directories.) However, if TERMINFO is set to $HOME/myterms, curses first checks $HOME/myterms/a/att4424, @@ -200,119 +200,117 @@ /usr/share/terminfo/a/att4424. - This is useful for developing experimental definitions or + This is useful for developing experimental definitions or when write permission in /usr/share/terminfo is not avail- able. - The integer variables LINES and COLS are defined in - <curses.h> and will be filled in by initscr with the size + The integer variables LINES and COLS are defined in + <curses.h> and will be filled in by initscr with the size of the screen. The constants TRUE and FALSE have the val- ues 1 and 0, respectively. - The curses routines also define the WINDOW * variable + The curses routines also define the WINDOW * variable curscr which is used for certain low-level operations like - clearing and redrawing a screen containing garbage. The + clearing and redrawing a screen containing garbage. The curscr can be used in only a few routines. Routine and Argument Names - Many curses routines have two or more versions. The rou- + Many curses routines have two or more versions. The rou- tines prefixed with w require a window argument. The rou- tines prefixed with p require a pad argument. Those with- out a prefix generally use stdscr. The routines prefixed with mv require a y and x coordinate - to move to before performing the appropriate action. The - mv routines imply a call to move before the call to the - other routine. The coordinate y always refers to the row - (of the window), and x always refers to the column. The + to move to before performing the appropriate action. The + mv routines imply a call to move before the call to the + other routine. The coordinate y always refers to the row + (of the window), and x always refers to the column. The upper left-hand corner is always (0,0), not (1,1). The routines prefixed with mvw take both a window argument - and x and y coordinates. The window argument is always + and x and y coordinates. The window argument is always specified before the coordinates. - In each case, win is the window affected, and pad is the + In each case, win is the window affected, and pad is the pad affected; win and pad are always pointers to type WIN- DOW. Option setting routines require a Boolean flag bf with the - value TRUE or FALSE; bf is always of type bool. Most of - the data types used in the library routines, such as WIN- - DOW, SCREEN, bool, and chtype are defined in <curses.h>. - Types used for the terminfo routines such as TERMINAL are + value TRUE or FALSE; bf is always of type bool. Most of + the data types used in the library routines, such as WIN- + DOW, SCREEN, bool, and chtype are defined in <curses.h>. + Types used for the terminfo routines such as TERMINAL are defined in <term.h>. - This manual page describes functions which may appear in - any configuration of the library. There are two common + This manual page describes functions which may appear in + any configuration of the library. There are two common configurations of the library: ncurses the "normal" library, which handles 8-bit characters. The normal (8-bit) library stores - characters combined with attributes in chtype + characters combined with attributes in chtype data. - Attributes alone (no corresponding character) - may be stored in chtype or the equivalent - attr_t data. In either case, the data is + Attributes alone (no corresponding character) + may be stored in chtype or the equivalent + attr_t data. In either case, the data is stored in something like an integer. - Each cell (row and column) in a WINDOW is + Each cell (row and column) in a WINDOW is stored as a chtype. ncursesw - the so-called "wide" library, which handles - multibyte characters (see the section on + the so-called "wide" library, which handles + multibyte characters (see the section on ALTERNATE CONFIGURATIONS). The "wide" library - includes all of the calls from the "normal" - library. It adds about one third more calls + includes all of the calls from the "normal" + library. It adds about one third more calls using data types which store multibyte charac- ters: cchar_t - corresponds to chtype. However it is a - structure, because more data is stored - than can fit into an integer. The char- + corresponds to chtype. However it is a + structure, because more data is stored + than can fit into an integer. The char- acters are large enough to require a full - integer value - and there may be more - than one character per cell. The video - attributes and color are stored in sepa- + integer value - and there may be more + than one character per cell. The video + attributes and color are stored in sepa- rate fields of the structure. Each cell (row and column) in a WINDOW is stored as a cchar_t. wchar_t - stores a "wide" character. Like chtype, + stores a "wide" character. Like chtype, this may be an integer. wint_t - stores a wchar_t or WEOF - not the same, + stores a wchar_t or WEOF - not the same, though both may have the same size. The "wide" library provides new functions - which are analogous to functions in the "nor- - mal" library. There is a naming convention - which relates many of the normal/wide vari- - ants: a "_w" is inserted into the name. For + which are analogous to functions in the "nor- + mal" library. There is a naming convention + which relates many of the normal/wide vari- + ants: a "_w" is inserted into the name. For example, waddch becomes wadd_wch. - Routine Name Index The following table lists each curses routine and the name - of the manual page on which it is described. Routines - flagged with `*' are ncurses-specific, not described by + of the manual page on which it is described. Routines + flagged with `*' are ncurses-specific, not described by XPG4 or present in SVr4. - curses Routine Name Manual Page Name -------------------------------------------- COLOR_PAIR curs_color(3x) PAIR_NUMBER curs_attr(3x) _nc_free_and_exit curs_memleaks(3x)* - _nc_freeall curs_memleaks(3x)* _nc_tracebits curs_trace(3x)* + _traceattr curs_trace(3x)* _traceattr2 curs_trace(3x)* _tracechar curs_trace(3x)* @@ -376,9 +374,9 @@ echo curs_inopts(3x) echo_wchar curs_add_wch(3x) echochar curs_addch(3x) - endwin curs_initscr(3x) erase curs_clear(3x) + erasechar curs_termattrs(3x) erasewchar curs_termattrs(3x) filter curs_util(3x) @@ -442,9 +440,9 @@ intrflush curs_inopts(3x) inwstr curs_inwstr(3x) is_cleared curs_opaque(3x)* - is_idcok curs_opaque(3x)* is_idlok curs_opaque(3x)* + is_immedok curs_opaque(3x)* is_keypad curs_opaque(3x)* is_leaveok curs_opaque(3x)* @@ -508,9 +506,9 @@ mvinsch curs_insch(3x) mvinsnstr curs_insstr(3x) mvinsstr curs_insstr(3x) - mvinstr curs_instr(3x) mvinwstr curs_inwstr(3x) + mvprintw curs_printw(3x) mvscanw curs_scanw(3x) mvvline curs_border(3x) @@ -574,9 +572,9 @@ pair_content curs_color(3x) pechochar curs_pad(3x) pnoutrefresh curs_pad(3x) - prefresh curs_pad(3x) printw curs_printw(3x) + putp curs_terminfo(3x) putwin curs_util(3x) qiflush curs_inopts(3x) @@ -640,9 +638,9 @@ tigetstr curs_terminfo(3x) timeout curs_inopts(3x) touchline curs_touch(3x) - touchwin curs_touch(3x) tparm curs_terminfo(3x) + tputs curs_termcap(3x) tputs curs_terminfo(3x) trace curs_trace(3x)* @@ -656,6 +654,7 @@ use_env curs_util(3x) use_extended_names curs_extend(3x)* use_legacy_coding legacy_coding(3x)* + use_tioctl curs_util(3x) vid_attr curs_terminfo(3x) vid_puts curs_terminfo(3x) vidattr curs_terminfo(3x) @@ -706,8 +705,8 @@ wgetbkgrnd curs_bkgrnd(3x) wgetch curs_getch(3x) wgetn_wstr curs_get_wstr(3x) - wgetnstr curs_getstr(3x) + wgetstr curs_getstr(3x) whline curs_border(3x) whline_set curs_border_set(3x) @@ -752,17 +751,17 @@

RETURN VALUE

-       Routines that return an integer return  ERR  upon  failure
-       and  an  integer value other than ERR upon successful com-
-       pletion, unless otherwise noted in  the  routine  descrip-
+       Routines  that  return  an integer return ERR upon failure
+       and an integer value other than ERR upon  successful  com-
+       pletion,  unless  otherwise  noted in the routine descrip-
        tions.
 
        As a general rule, routines check for null pointers passed
        as parameters, and handle this as an error.
 
-       All macros return the  value  of  the  w  version,  except
+       All  macros  return  the  value  of  the w version, except
        setscrreg, wsetscrreg, getyx, getbegyx, and getmaxyx.  The
-       return values of setscrreg, wsetscrreg,  getyx,  getbegyx,
+       return  values  of setscrreg, wsetscrreg, getyx, getbegyx,
        and getmaxyx are undefined (i.e., these should not be used
        as the right-hand side of assignment statements).
 
@@ -776,16 +775,17 @@
        important ones have been already discussed in detail.
 
        BAUDRATE
-            The debugging library checks this environment  symbol
-            when the application has redirected output to a file.
-            The symbol's numeric value is used for the  baudrate.
-            If no value is found, ncurses uses 9600.  This allows
-            testers to construct repeatable test-cases that  take
-            into account costs that depend on baudrate.
+            The  debugging  library checks this environment vari-
+            able when the application has redirected output to  a
+            file.   The  variable's numeric value is used for the
+            baudrate.  If no value is found, ncurses  uses  9600.
+            This  allows  testers  to  construct repeatable test-
+            cases that take into account  costs  that  depend  on
+            baudrate.
 
        CC   When set, change occurrences of the command_character
             (i.e., the cmdch capability) of the  loaded  terminfo
-            entries  to  the value of this symbol.  Very few ter-
+            entries to the value of this variable.  Very few ter-
             minfo entries provide this feature.
 
             Because this name is also used in  development  envi-
@@ -820,39 +820,42 @@
             as emulations.
 
             Use the use_env function to disable all use of exter-
-            nal environment (including system calls) to determine
-            the screen size.
+            nal  environment  (but not including system calls) to
+            determine the screen size.  Use the use_tioctl  func-
+            tion  to  update COLUMNS or LINES to match the screen
+            size obtained from system calls or the terminal data-
+            base.
 
        ESCDELAY
-            Specifies the total time, in milliseconds, for  which
-            ncurses  will  await  a  character  sequence, e.g., a
-            function key.  The default value, 1000  milliseconds,
+            Specifies  the total time, in milliseconds, for which
+            ncurses will await  a  character  sequence,  e.g.,  a
+            function  key.  The default value, 1000 milliseconds,
             is enough for most uses.  However, it is made a vari-
             able to accommodate unusual applications.
 
             The most common instance where you may wish to change
-            this  value is to work with slow hosts, e.g., running
-            on a network.  If the  host  cannot  read  characters
-            rapidly  enough,  it  will have the same effect as if
-            the terminal did not send characters rapidly  enough.
+            this value is to work with slow hosts, e.g.,  running
+            on  a  network.   If  the host cannot read characters
+            rapidly enough, it will have the same  effect  as  if
+            the  terminal did not send characters rapidly enough.
             The library will still see a timeout.
 
-            Note  that xterm mouse events are built up from char-
-            acter sequences received from  the  xterm.   If  your
+            Note that xterm mouse events are built up from  char-
+            acter  sequences  received  from  the xterm.  If your
             application makes heavy use of multiple-clicking, you
-            may wish to lengthen this default value  because  the
-            timeout  applies to the composed multi-click event as
+            may  wish  to lengthen this default value because the
+            timeout applies to the composed multi-click event  as
             well as the individual clicks.
 
-            In addition to the environment variable, this  imple-
-            mentation  provides  a  global variable with the same
+            In  addition to the environment variable, this imple-
+            mentation provides a global variable  with  the  same
             name.  Portable applications should not rely upon the
-            presence  of ESCDELAY in either form, but setting the
-            environment variable rather than the global  variable
-            does  not  create problems when compiling an applica-
+            presence of ESCDELAY in either form, but setting  the
+            environment  variable rather than the global variable
+            does not create problems when compiling  an  applica-
             tion.
 
-       HOME Tells ncurses where your home directory is.  That  is
+       HOME Tells  ncurses where your home directory is.  That is
             where  it  may  read  and  write  auxiliary  terminal
             descriptions:
 
@@ -860,8 +863,8 @@
             $HOME/.terminfo
 
        LINES
-            Like COLUMNS, specify the height  of  the  screen  in
-            characters.   See COLUMNS for a detailed description.
+            Like  COLUMNS,  specify  the  height of the screen in
+            characters.  See COLUMNS for a detailed description.
 
        MOUSE_BUTTONS_123
             This applies only to the OS/2 EMX port.  It specifies
@@ -872,10 +875,10 @@
             2 = right
             3 = middle.
 
-            This symbol lets you customize the mouse.  The symbol
-            must  be three numeric digits 1-3 in any order, e.g.,
-            123 or 321.  If it is  not  specified,  ncurses  uses
-            132.
+            This variable lets  you  customize  the  mouse.   The
+            variable  must  be  three  numeric  digits 1-3 in any
+            order, e.g., 123 or 321.  If  it  is  not  specified,
+            ncurses uses 132.
 
        NCURSES_ASSUMED_COLORS
             Override  the  compiled-in assumption that the termi-
@@ -913,8 +916,8 @@
             Some  terminals  use  a  magic-cookie  feature  which
             requires  special  handling  to make highlighting and
             other video attributes  display  properly.   You  can
-            suppress   the   highlighting   entirely   for  these
-            terminals by setting this environment variable.
+            suppress  the  highlighting entirely for these termi-
+            nals by setting this environment variable.
 
        NCURSES_NO_PADDING
             Most of the terminal  descriptions  in  the  terminfo
@@ -939,19 +942,41 @@
             to  use  these  descriptions, but not want to pay the
             performance penalty.
 
-            Set the NCURSES_NO_PADDING symbol to disable all  but
-            mandatory  padding.   Mandatory  padding is used as a
-            part of special control sequences such as flash.
+            Set the NCURSES_NO_PADDING  environment  variable  to
+            disable all but mandatory padding.  Mandatory padding
+            is used as a part of special control  sequences  such
+            as flash.
 
        NCURSES_NO_SETBUF
-            Normally ncurses enables buffered output during  ter-
-            minal  initialization.   This  is  done  (as  in SVr4
-            curses) for performance reasons.   For  testing  pur-
-            poses, both of ncurses and certain applications, this
-            feature    is    made    optional.     Setting    the
-            NCURSES_NO_SETBUF variable disables output buffering,
-            leaving the output  in  the  original  (usually  line
-            buffered) mode.
+            This setting is obsolete.  Before changes
+
+            o   started with 5.9 patch 20120825 and
+
+            o   continued though 5.9 patch 20130126
+
+            ncurses  enabled buffered output during terminal ini-
+            tialization.  This was done (as in SVr4  curses)  for
+            performance  reasons.   For testing purposes, both of
+            ncurses and certain applications,  this  feature  was
+            made  optional.   Setting the NCURSES_NO_SETBUF vari-
+            able disabled output buffering, leaving the output in
+            the original (usually line buffered) mode.
+
+            In  the  current implementation, ncurses performs its
+            own buffering and does not require  this  workaround.
+            It does not modify the buffering of the standard out-
+            put.
+
+            The reason for the change was to  make  the  behavior
+            for  interrupts  and  other signals more robust.  One
+            drawback is  that  certain  nonconventional  programs
+            would mix ordinary stdio calls with ncurses calls and
+            (usually) work.  This is  no  longer  possible  since
+            ncurses is not using the buffered standard output but
+            its own output (to the same file descriptor).   As  a
+            special  case, the low-level calls such as putp still
+            use the standard output.  But high-level curses calls
+            do not.
 
        NCURSES_NO_UTF8_ACS
             During initialization, the ncurses library checks for
@@ -981,11 +1006,11 @@
             # linux console, if patched to provide working
             # VT100 shift-in/shift-out, with corresponding font.
             linux-vt100|linux console with VT100 line-graphics,
-                                 U8#0, use=linux,
+                    U8#0, use=linux,
 
             # uxterm with vt100Graphics resource set to false
             xterm-utf8|xterm relying on UTF-8 line-graphics,
-                                 U8#1, use=xterm,
+                    U8#1, use=xterm,
 
             The name "U8" is chosen to be two characters, to per-
             mit it to be used by applications that  use  ncurses'
@@ -993,9 +1018,9 @@
 
        NCURSES_TRACE
             During  initialization, the ncurses debugging library
-            checks the NCURSES_TRACE symbol.  If it  is  defined,
-            to a numeric value, ncurses calls the trace function,
-            using that value as the argument.
+            checks the NCURSES_TRACE environment variable.  If it
+            is  defined,  to  a  numeric value, ncurses calls the
+            trace function, using that value as the argument.
 
             The argument values, which are defined  in  curses.h,
             provide  several  types of information.  When running
@@ -1011,12 +1036,12 @@
             description in termcap form if it is not available in
             the terminfo database.
 
-            The   TERMCAP   symbol  contains  either  a  terminal
-            description (with newlines stripped out), or  a  file
-            name  telling  where  the  information denoted by the
-            TERM symbol  exists.   In  either  case,  setting  it
-            directs  ncurses  to  ignore the usual place for this
-            information, e.g., /etc/termcap.
+            The  TERMCAP  environment  variable contains either a
+            terminal description (with newlines stripped out), or
+            a  file name telling where the information denoted by
+            the TERM  environment  variable  exists.   In  either
+            case,  setting it directs ncurses to ignore the usual
+            place for this information, e.g., /etc/termcap.
 
        TERMINFO
             Overrides the directory in which ncurses searches for
@@ -1027,23 +1052,33 @@
             o   the  last  directory  to  which ncurses wrote, if
                 any, is searched first
 
-            o   the directory specified by the TERMINFO symbol
+            o   the directory specified by the TERMINFO  environ-
+                ment variable
 
             o   $HOME/.terminfo
 
-            o   directories listed in the TERMINFO_DIRS symbol
+            o   directories  listed in the TERMINFO_DIRS environ-
+                ment variable
 
             o   one or more directories whose names  are  config-
-                ured and compiled into the ncurses library, e.g.,
-                /usr/share/terminfo
+                ured and compiled into the ncurses library, i.e.,
+
+                o   /usr/local/ncurses/share/ter-
+                    minfo:/usr/share/terminfo  (corresponding  to
+                    the TERMINFO_DIRS variable)
+
+                o   /usr/share/terminfo   (corresponding  to  the
+                    TERMINFO variable)
 
        TERMINFO_DIRS
             Specifies a list of directories to search for  termi-
             nal  descriptions.   The  list is separated by colons
-            (i.e., ":") on Unix, semicolons on OS/2 EMX.  All  of
-            the terminal descriptions are in terminfo form, which
-            makes a subdirectory named for the  first  letter  of
-            the terminal names therein.
+            (i.e., ":") on Unix, semicolons on OS/2 EMX.
+
+            All of the  terminal  descriptions  are  in  terminfo
+            form.  Normally these are stored in a directory tree,
+            using subdirectories named by the first letter of the
+            terminal names therein.
 
             If ncurses is built with a hashed database, then each
             entry in this list can also be the path of the corre-
@@ -1055,17 +1090,21 @@
 
        TERMPATH
             If  TERMCAP  does  not  hold a file name then ncurses
-            checks the TERMPATH symbol.  This is a list of  file-
-            names  separated  by  spaces or colons (i.e., ":") on
-            Unix, semicolons on OS/2 EMX.  If the TERMPATH symbol
-            is  not set, ncurses looks in the files /etc/termcap,
+            checks the TERMPATH environment variable.  This is  a
+            list  of  filenames  separated  by  spaces  or colons
+            (i.e., ":") on Unix, semicolons on OS/2 EMX.
+
+            If the TERMPATH  environment  variable  is  not  set,
+            ncurses    looks    in    the   files   /etc/termcap,
             /usr/share/misc/termcap and $HOME/.termcap,  in  that
             order.
 
        The  library  may be configured to disregard the following
        variables when the current user is the  superuser  (root),
-       or  if  the application uses setuid or setgid permissions:
-       $TERMINFO, $TERMINFO_DIRS, $TERMPATH, as well as $HOME.
+       or if the application uses setuid or setgid permissions:
+
+              $TERMINFO,  $TERMINFO_DIRS,  $TERMPATH,  as well as
+              $HOME.
 
 
 
@@ -1126,10 +1165,10 @@ --with-profile The shared and normal (static) library names differ - by their suffixes, e.g., libncurses.so and - libncurses.a. The debug and profiling libraries add - a "_g" and a "_p" to the root names respectively, - e.g., libncurses_g.a and libncurses_p.a. + by their suffixes, e.g., libncurses.so and libn- + curses.a. The debug and profiling libraries add a + "_g" and a "_p" to the root names respectively, e.g., + libncurses_g.a and libncurses_p.a. --with-trace The trace function normally resides in the debug @@ -1247,31 +1286,31 @@ o This implementation can also be configured to provide a set of functions which improve the ability to manage - multiple screens. See curs_sp_funcs(3x) for details. + multiple screens. See curs_sp_funcs(3x) for details. - In historic curses versions, delays embedded in the capa- + In historic curses versions, delays embedded in the capa- bilities cr, ind, cub1, ff and tab activated corresponding - delay bits in the UNIX tty driver. In this implementa- - tion, all padding is done by sending NUL bytes. This - method is slightly more expensive, but narrows the inter- - face to the UNIX kernel significantly and increases the + delay bits in the UNIX tty driver. In this implementa- + tion, all padding is done by sending NUL bytes. This + method is slightly more expensive, but narrows the inter- + face to the UNIX kernel significantly and increases the package's portability correspondingly.

NOTES

-       The header  file  <curses.h>  automatically  includes  the
+       The  header  file  <curses.h>  automatically  includes the
        header files <stdio.h> and <unctrl.h>.
 
-       If  standard  output from a ncurses program is re-directed
-       to something which is not a tty, screen  updates  will  be
+       If standard output from a ncurses program  is  re-directed
+       to  something  which  is not a tty, screen updates will be
        directed to standard error.  This was an undocumented fea-
        ture of AT&T System V Release 3 curses.
 
 
 

AUTHORS

-       Zeyd M. Ben-Halim, Eric  S.  Raymond,  Thomas  E.  Dickey.
+       Zeyd  M.  Ben-Halim,  Eric  S.  Raymond, Thomas E. Dickey.
        Based on pcurses by Pavel Curtis.