X-Git-Url: http://ncurses.scripts.mit.edu/?p=ncurses.git;a=blobdiff_plain;f=doc%2Fhtml%2Fman%2Ftput.1.html;h=03ec120e995a43a87b934d3460c235429cb6ee82;hp=10993495a9306e2a345efb404bfba899f0982cd8;hb=HEAD;hpb=74137fec04e130a88ef25618cf730af988a4f51a diff --git a/doc/html/man/tput.1.html b/doc/html/man/tput.1.html index 10993495..2292ec3d 100644 --- a/doc/html/man/tput.1.html +++ b/doc/html/man/tput.1.html @@ -1,7 +1,8 @@ - -tput 1 - - +tput 1 2024-04-20 ncurses 6.4 User commands + + -

tput 1

+

tput 1 2024-04-20 ncurses 6.4 User commands

-tput(1)                     General Commands Manual                    tput(1)
+tput(1)                          User commands                         tput(1)
 
 
 
 
 

NAME

-       tput, reset - initialize a terminal or query terminfo database
+       tput - initialize a terminal, exercise its capabilities, or query term-
+       info database
 
 
 

SYNOPSIS

-       tput [-Ttype] capname [parameters]
-       tput [-Ttype] [-x] clear
-       tput [-Ttype] init
-       tput [-Ttype] reset
-       tput [-Ttype] longname
-       tput -S  <<
-       tput -V
+       tput [-T terminal-type] {cap-code [parameter ...]} ...
 
+       tput [-T terminal-type] [-x] clear
 
-

DESCRIPTION

-       The  tput utility uses the terminfo database to make the values of ter-
-       minal-dependent capabilities and information  available  to  the  shell
-       (see  sh(1)),  to  initialize or reset the terminal, or return the long
-       name of the requested terminal type.  The result depends upon the capa-
-       bility's type:
+       tput [-T terminal-type] init
 
-          string
-               tput  writes  the  string  to the standard output.  No trailing
-               newline is supplied.
+       tput [-T terminal-type] reset
 
-          integer
-               tput writes the decimal value to the standard  output,  with  a
-               trailing newline.
+       tput [-T terminal-type] longname
 
-          boolean
-               tput  simply sets the exit code (0 for TRUE if the terminal has
-               the capability, 1 for FALSE if it does not), and writes nothing
-               to the standard output.
+       tput -S
 
-       Before  using  a value returned on the standard output, the application
-       should test the exit code (e.g., $?, see sh(1)) to be  sure  it  is  0.
-       (See  the EXIT CODES and DIAGNOSTICS sections.)  For a complete list of
-       capabilities and the capname associated with each, see terminfo(5).
+       tput -V
+
+
+

DESCRIPTION

+       tput uses the terminfo library and database to  make  terminal-specific
+       capabilities  and  information available to the shell, to initialize or
+       reset the terminal, or to report  a  description  of  the  current  (or
+       specified)  terminal  type.  Terminal capabilities are accessed by cap-
+       code.
+
+       terminfo(5) discusses terminal capabilities at length  and  presents  a
+       complete list of cap-codes.
 
+       When   retrieving  capability  values,  the  result  depends  upon  the
+       capability's type.
 
-

Options

-       -S     allows more than one capability per  invocation  of  tput.   The
-              capabilities  must  be  passed  to  tput from the standard input
-              instead of from the command line (see example).  Only  one  cap-
-              name  is allowed per line.  The -S option changes the meaning of
-              the 0 and 1 boolean and string exit codes (see  the  EXIT  CODES
-              section).
+       Boolean  tput sets its exit status to 0 if the terminal possesses  cap-
+                code, and 1 if it does not.
 
-              Because  some capabilities may use string parameters rather than
-              numbers, tput uses a table and the presence of parameters in its
-              input  to  decide whether to use tparm(3x), and how to interpret
-              the parameters.
+       numeric  tput  writes  cap-code's  decimal value to the standard output
+                stream if defined (-1 if it is not) followed by a newline.
 
-       -Ttype indicates the type of terminal.  Normally this option is  unnec-
-              essary,  because the default is taken from the environment vari-
-              able TERM.  If -T is specified, then the shell  variables  LINES
-              and COLUMNS will also be ignored.
+       string   tput writes cap-code's value to the standard output stream  if
+                defined, without a trailing newline.
+
+       Before  using  a value returned on the standard output, the application
+       should test tput's exit status to be sure it is 0;  see  section  "EXIT
+       STATUS" below.
 
-       -V     reports  the  version of ncurses which was used in this program,
-              and exits.
 
-       -x     do not attempt to clear the terminal's scrollback  buffer  using
-              the extended "E3" capability.
+

Operands

+       Generally,  an  operand  is  a  cap-code,  a  capability  code from the
+       terminal database, or a parameter thereto.  Three others are  specially
+       recognized by tput: init, reset, and longname.  Although these resemble
+       capability codes, they in fact receive special handling; we  term  them
+       "pseudo-capabilities".
 
+       cap-code   indicates a capability from the terminal database.
 
-

Commands

-       A few commands (init, reset and longname) are special; they are defined
-       by the tput program.  The others are the names of capabilities from the
-       terminal  database  (see  terminfo(5)  for  a list).  Although init and
-       reset resemble capability names, tput uses several capabilities to per-
-       form these special functions.
+                  If  cap-code  is  of  string type and takes parameters, tput
+                  interprets arguments following cap-code as  the  parameters,
+                  up to the (fixed) quantity the capability requires.
 
-       capname
-              indicates the capability from the terminal database.
+                  Most   parameters   are   numeric.    Only  a  few  terminal
+                  capabilities require string parameters; tput uses a table to
+                  decide  which  to  pass  as  strings.   Normally  tput  uses
+                  tparm(3x) to perform the substitution.  If no parameters are
+                  given  for  the  capability,  tput writes the string without
+                  performing the substitution.
 
-              If  the  capability is a string that takes parameters, the argu-
-              ments following the capability will be used  as  parameters  for
-              the string.
+       init       initializes the  terminal.   If  the  terminal  database  is
+                  present  and  an  entry for the user's terminal type exists,
+                  the following occur.
 
-              Most  parameters  are numbers.  Only a few terminal capabilities
-              require string parameters; tput uses a table to decide which  to
-              pass  as  strings.   Normally tput uses tparm(3x) to perform the
-              substitution.  If no parameters are given  for  the  capability,
-              tput writes the string without performing the substitution.
+                  (1)  tput  retrieves  the  terminal's  mode  settings.    It
+                       successively  tests  the file descriptors corresponding
+                       to
 
-       init   If  the terminal database is present and an entry for the user's
-              terminal exists (see -Ttype, above), the following will occur:
+                       o   the standard error stream,
 
-              (1)  first, tput retrieves the current  terminal  mode  settings
-                   for your terminal.  It does this by successively testing
+                       o   the standard output stream,
 
-                   o   the standard error,
+                       o   the standard input stream, and
 
-                   o   standard output,
+                       o   /dev/tty
 
-                   o   standard input and
+                       to obtain terminal settings.   Having  retrieved  them,
+                       tput  remembers  which  descriptor  to  use for further
+                       updates.
 
-                   o   ultimately "/dev/tty"
+                  (2)  If the terminal dimensions cannot be obtained from  the
+                       operating  system, but the environment or terminal type
+                       database  entry  describes  them,  tput   updates   the
+                       operating system's notion of them.
 
-                   to  obtain  terminal settings.  Having retrieved these set-
-                   tings, tput remembers which file  descriptor  to  use  when
-                   updating settings.
+                  (3)  tput updates the terminal modes.
 
-              (2)  if  the  window  size cannot be obtained from the operating
-                   system, but the terminal description (or environment, e.g.,
-                   LINES and COLUMNS variables specify this), update the oper-
-                   ating system's notion of the window size.
+                       o   Any  delays  specified  in  the entry (for example,
+                           when a newline is sent) are  set  in  the  terminal
+                           driver.
 
-              (3)  the terminal modes will be updated:
+                       o   Tab   expansion   is  turned  on  or  off  per  the
+                           specification in the entry, and
 
-                   o   any delays (e.g., newline) specified in the entry  will
-                       be set in the tty driver,
+                       o   if tabs are not expanded, standard  tabs  (every  8
+                           spaces) are set.
 
-                   o   tabs  expansion  will  be turned on or off according to
-                       the specification in the entry, and
+                  (4)  If  initialization capabilities, detailed in subsection
+                       "Tabs and Initialization" of terminfo(5), are  present,
+                       tput writes them to the standard output stream.
 
-                   o   if tabs are not expanded, standard  tabs  will  be  set
-                       (every 8 spaces).
+                  (5)  tput flushes the standard output stream.
 
-              (4)  if  present,  the terminal's initialization strings will be
-                   output as detailed in the terminfo(5) section on  Tabs  and
-                   Initialization,
+                  If  an  entry  lacks  the information needed for an activity
+                  above, that activity is silently skipped.
 
-              (5)  output is flushed.
+       reset      re-initializes  the  terminal.    A   reset   differs   from
+                  initialization in two ways.
 
-              If  an  entry does not contain the information needed for any of
-              these activities, that activity will silently be skipped.
+                  (1)  tput sets the the terminal modes to a "sane" state,
 
-       reset  This is similar to init, with two differences:
+                       o   enabling cooked and echo modes,
 
-              (1)  before any other initialization, the terminal modes will be
-                   reset to a "sane" state:
+                       o   disabling cbreak and raw modes,
 
-                   o   set cooked and echo modes,
+                       o   enabling newline translation, and
 
-                   o   turn off cbreak and raw modes,
+                       o   setting  any  unset  special  characters  to  their
+                           default values.
 
-                   o   turn on newline translation and
+                  (2)  If any reset capabilities are defined for the  terminal
+                       type,   tput   writes   them   to  the  output  stream.
+                       Otherwise,  tput  uses   any   defined   initialization
+                       capabilities.    Reset  capabilities  are  detailed  in
+                       subsection "Tabs and Initialization" of terminfo(5).
 
-                   o   reset  any  unset  special  characters to their default
-                       values
+       longname   A terminfo entry begins with one or more names by  which  an
+                  application  can  refer  to  the  entry,  before the list of
+                  terminal capabilities.   The  names  are  separated  by  "|"
+                  characters.   X/Open  Curses  terms  the last name the "long
+                  name", and indicates that it may include blanks.
 
-              (2)  Instead of putting out initialization strings,  the  termi-
-                   nal's  reset  strings  will be output if present (rs1, rs2,
-                   rs3, rf).  If the reset strings are not present,  but  ini-
-                   tialization strings are, the initialization strings will be
-                   output.
+                  tic warns if the last  name  does  not  include  blanks,  to
+                  accommodate  old terminfo entries that treated the long name
+                  as an optional feature.  The long name is often referred  to
+                  as the description field.
 
-              Otherwise, reset acts identically to init.
+                  If  the  terminal  database  is present and an entry for the
+                  user's terminal type exists, tput reports its description to
+                  the standard output stream, without a trailing newline.  See
+                  terminfo(5).
 
-       longname
-              If the terminal database is present and an entry for the  user's
-              terminal  exists  (see  -Ttype above), then the long name of the
-              terminal will be put out.  The long name is the last name in the
-              first  line  of the terminal's description in the terminfo data-
-              base [see term(5)].
+       Note: Redirecting the output of "tput init" or "tput reset" to  a  file
+       will capture only part of their actions.  Changes to the terminal modes
+       are not affected by file descriptor  redirection,  since  the  terminal
+       modes are altered via ioctl(2).
 
 
 

Aliases

-       tput handles the clear, init and reset commands  specially:  it  allows
-       for the possibility that it is invoked by a link with those names.
+       If  tput  is  invoked  via  link  with any of the names clear, init, or
+       reset, it operates as if run with the corresponding (pseudo-)capability
+       operand.  For example, executing a link named reset that points to tput
+       has the same effect as "tput reset".
 
-       If  tput  is invoked by a link named reset, this has the same effect as
-       tput reset.  The tset(1) utility also treats a link  named  reset  spe-
-       cially.
+       This feature was introduced by ncurses 5.2 in 2000.  It is rarely used:
 
-       Before ncurses 6.1, the two utilities were different from each other:
+       clear  is a separate program, which is both smaller and more frequently
+              executed.
 
-       o   tset  utility  reset the terminal modes and special characters (not
-           done with tput).
+       init   has the same name as another program in widespread use.
 
-       o   On the other hand, tset's repertoire of terminal  capabilities  for
-           resetting  the terminal was more limited, i.e., only reset_1string,
-           reset_2string and reset_file in contrast to the tab-stops and  mar-
-           gins which are set by this utility.
+       reset  is  provided  by  the  tset(1)  utility  (also  via a link named
+              reset).
 
-       o   The  reset  program  is  usually an alias for tset, because of this
-           difference with resetting terminal modes and special characters.
 
-       With the changes made for ncurses 6.1, the reset  feature  of  the  two
-       programs is (mostly) the same.  A few differences remain:
+

Terminal Size

+       Besides the pseudo-capabilities (such as init), tput treats  the  lines
+       and  cols  cap-codes specially: it may call setupterm(3x) to obtain the
+       terminal size.
 
-       o   The  tset  program waits one second when resetting, in case it hap-
-           pens to be a hardware terminal.
+       o   First, tput attempts to obtain these capabilities from the terminal
+           database.   This generally fails for terminal emulators, which lack
+           a fixed window size and thus omit the capabilities.
 
-       o   The two programs write the terminal initialization strings to  dif-
-           ferent streams (i.e.,. the standard error for tset and the standard
-           output for tput).
+       o   It then asks the operating system for the  terminal's  size,  which
+           generally  works,  unless  the connection is via a serial line that
+           does not support "NAWS": negotiations about window size.
 
-           Note: although these programs write to different streams, redirect-
-           ing their output to a file will capture only part of their actions.
-           The changes to the terminal modes are not affected  by  redirecting
-           the output.
+       o   Finally, it inspects the environment variables LINES  and  COLUMNS,
+           which may override the terminal size.
 
-       If  tput  is  invoked by a link named init, this has the same effect as
-       tput init.  Again, you are less likely to use that link because another
-       program named init has a more well-established use.
+       If  the  -T  option is given, tput ignores the environment variables by
+       calling  use_tioctl(TRUE),  relying  upon  the  operating  system  (or,
+       ultimately, the terminal database).
 
 
-

EXAMPLES

-       tput init
-            Initialize  the  terminal according to the type of terminal in the
-            environmental variable TERM.  This command should be  included  in
-            everyone's .profile after the environmental variable TERM has been
-            exported, as illustrated on the profile(5) manual page.
+

OPTIONS

+       -S       retrieves  more  than  one  capability per invocation of tput.
+                The capabilities must be passed  to  tput  from  the  standard
+                input  stream  instead  of  from the command line (see section
+                "EXAMPLES" below).  Only one cap-code  is  allowed  per  line.
+                The  -S  option  changes  the  meanings  of  the  0 and 1 exit
+                statuses (see section "EXIT STATUS" below).
 
-       tput -T5620 reset
-            Reset an AT&T 5620 terminal, overriding the type  of  terminal  in
-            the environmental variable TERM.
+                Some capabilities use string parameters  rather  than  numeric
+                ones.   tput  employs  a  built-in  table  and the presence of
+                parameters in its input to decide how to interpret  them,  and
+                whether to use tparm(3x).
 
-       tput cup 0 0
-            Send the sequence to move the cursor to row 0, column 0 (the upper
-            left corner of the screen, usually  known  as  the  "home"  cursor
-            position).
+       -T type  indicates  the  terminal's  type.   Normally  this  option  is
+                unnecessary,  because  a  default  is  taken  from  the   TERM
+                environment variable.  If specified, the environment variables
+                LINES and COLUMNS are also ignored.
 
-       tput clear
-            Echo the clear-screen sequence for the current terminal.
+       -V       reports the version of ncurses associated with tput, and exits
+                with a successful status.
 
-       tput cols
-            Print the number of columns for the current terminal.
+       -x       prevents  "tput clear" from attempting to clear the scrollback
+                buffer.
 
-       tput -T450 cols
-            Print the number of columns for the 450 terminal.
 
-       bold=`tput smso` offbold=`tput rmso`
-            Set  the  shell  variables bold, to begin stand-out mode sequence,
-            and offbold, to end standout mode sequence, for the current termi-
-            nal.  This might be followed by a prompt: echo "${bold}Please type
-            in your name: ${offbold}\c"
+

EXIT STATUS

+       Normally, one should interpret tput's exit statuses as follows.
 
-       tput hc
-            Set exit code to indicate if the current terminal is a  hard  copy
-            terminal.
+       Status   Meaning When -S Not Specified
+       ------------------------------------------------------------------------
+       0        Boolean or string capability present
+       1        Boolean or numeric capability absent
+       2        usage error or no terminal type specified
+       3        unrecognized terminal type
+       4        unrecognized capability code
+       >4       system error (4 + errno)
 
-       tput cup 23 4
-            Send the sequence to move the cursor to row 23, column 4.
+       When the -S option is used, some statuses change meanings.
 
-       tput cup
-            Send  the  terminfo string for cursor-movement, with no parameters
-            substituted.
+       Status   Meaning When -S Specified
+       ------------------------------------------------------------------------
+       0        all operands interpreted
+       1        unused
+       4        some operands not interpreted
 
-       tput longname
-            Print the long name from the terminfo database  for  the  type  of
-            terminal specified in the environmental variable TERM.
 
-            tput -S <<!
-            > clear
-            > cup 10 10
-            > bold
-            > !
+

ENVIRONMENT

+       tput reads one environment variable.
 
-            This  example  shows  tput  processing several capabilities in one
-            invocation.  It clears the screen, moves the  cursor  to  position
-            10,  10 and turns on bold (extra bright) mode.  The list is termi-
-            nated by an exclamation mark (!) on a line by itself.
+       TERM    denotes the terminal type.  Each  terminal  type  is  distinct,
+               though many are similar.  The -T option overrides its value.
 
 
 

FILES

-       /usr/share/terminfo
-              compiled terminal description database
+       /usr/share/tabset
+              tab stop initialization database
 
-       /usr/share/tabset/*
-              tab settings for some terminals, in a format appropriate  to  be
-              output  to  the  terminal (escape sequences that set margins and
-              tabs); for more information, see the  Tabs  and  Initialization,
-              section of terminfo(5)
+       /usr/share/terminfo
+              compiled terminal description database
 
 
-

EXIT CODES

-       If the -S option is used, tput checks for errors from each line, and if
-       any errors are found, will set the exit code to 4 plus  the  number  of
-       lines  with  errors.   If  no errors are found, the exit code is 0.  No
-       indication of which line failed can be given so exit code 1 will  never
-       appear.   Exit codes 2, 3, and 4 retain their usual interpretation.  If
-       the -S option is not used, the exit code depends on the  type  of  cap-
-       name:
+

PORTABILITY

+       Over  time  ncurses  tput  has  differed  from  that of System V in two
+       important respects, one now mostly historical.
+
+       o   "tput cap-code" writes to the standard output, which need not be  a
+           terminal  device.   However,  the operands that manipulate terminal
+           modes might not use the standard output.
+
+           System V tput's init and reset  operands  use  logic  from  4.1cBSD
+           tset,  manipulating  terminal  modes.   It  checks  the  same  file
+           descriptors (and /dev/tty) for association with a  terminal  device
+           as  ncurses  now does, and if none are, finally assumes a 1200 baud
+           terminal.  When updating terminal modes, it ignores errors.
+
+           Until ncurses 6.1 (see  section  "HISTORY"  below),  tput  did  not
+           modify  terminal  modes.   It  now  employs  a  scheme  similar  to
+           System V, using functions shared with tset (and ultimately based on
+           4.4BSD  tset).  If it is not able to open a terminal (for instance,
+           when run by cron(1)), tput exits with an error status.
+
+       o   System V tput assumes that  the  type  of  a  cap-code  operand  is
+           numeric  if all the characters of its value are decimal numbers; if
+           they are not, it treats cap-code as a string capability.
+
+           Most implementations that provide support for cap-code operands use
+           the  tparm(3x)  function  to  expand its parameters.  That function
+           expects a mixture of numeric and string parameters, requiring  tput
+           to know which type to use.
 
-          boolean
-                 a value of 0 is set for TRUE and 1 for FALSE.
+           ncurses  tput uses a table to determine the parameter types for the
+           standard cap-code operands, and an  internal  function  to  analyze
+           nonstandard cap-code operands.
+
+           While  more reliable than System V's utility, a portability problem
+           is introduced by this analysis.  An OpenBSD developer  adapted  the
+           internal  library  function  from ncurses to port NetBSD's termcap-
+           based tput to terminfo, and modified it to interpret multiple  cap-
+           codes  (and parameters) on the command line.  Portable applications
+           should not rely upon this feature; ncurses  offers  it  to  support
+           applications written specifically for OpenBSD.
+
+       This  implementation,  unlike others, accepts both termcap and terminfo
+       cap-codes if termcap support is compiled in.  In  that  case,  however,
+       the predefined termcap and terminfo codes have two ambiguities; ncurses
+       assumes the terminfo code.
+
+       o   The cap-code dl means delete_line to termcap  but  parm_delete_line
+           to terminfo.  termcap uses the code DL for parm_delete_line.  term-
+           info uses the code dl1 for delete_line.
+
+       o   The cap-code ed means exit_delete_mode to termcap  but  clr_eos  to
+           terminfo.  termcap uses the code cd for clr_eos.  terminfo uses the
+           code rmdc for exit_delete_mode.
+
+       The  longname  operand,  -S  option,  and  the   parameter-substitution
+       features  used in the cup example below, were not supported in AT&T/USL
+       curses before SVr4 (1989).  Later, 4.3BSD-Reno (1990) added support for
+       longname,  and  in  1994,  NetBSD  added  support  for  the  parameter-
+       substitution features.
+
+       IEEE  Std  1003.1/The  Open   Group   Base   Specifications   Issue   7
+       (POSIX.1-2008)  documents  only the clear, init, and reset operands.  A
+       few observations of interest arise from that selection.
+
+       o   ncurses supports clear as it does any other standard cap-code.  The
+           others   (init   and   longname)  do  not  correspond  to  terminal
+           capabilities.
+
+       o   The tput on SVr4-based systems such as Solaris, IRIX64, and  HP-UX,
+           as well as others such as AIX and Tru64, also support standard cap-
+           code operands.
+
+       o   A few platforms such as FreeBSD recognize termcap codes rather than
+           terminfo capability codes in their respective tput commands.  Since
+           2010, NetBSD's tput uses terminfo codes.   Before  that,  it  (like
+           FreeBSD) recognized termcap codes.
+
+           Beginning  in  2021, FreeBSD uses ncurses tput, configured for both
+           terminfo (tested first) and termcap (as a fallback).
+
+       Because (apparently) all certified Unix systems support the full set of
+       capability  codes,  the  reason  for  documenting only a few may not be
+       apparent.
+
+       o   X/Open Curses Issue 7 documents tput differently, with cap-code and
+           the other features used in this implementation.
 
-          string a value of 0 is set if the capname is defined for this termi-
-                 nal type (the value of capname is returned on  standard  out-
-                 put);  a value of 1 is set if capname is not defined for this
-                 terminal type (nothing is written to standard output).
+       o   That  is,  there  are  two standards for tput: POSIX (a subset) and
+           X/Open Curses (the full implementation).  POSIX documents a  subset
+           to  avoid  the  complication  of  including  X/Open  Curses and the
+           terminal capability database.
 
-          integer
-                 a value of 0 is always set, whether or not capname is defined
-                 for  this  terminal type.  To determine if capname is defined
-                 for this terminal type, the user must test the value  written
-                 to  standard output.  A value of -1 means that capname is not
-                 defined for this terminal type.
+       o   While it is certainly possible to  write  a  tput  program  without
+           using  curses,  no  system  with a curses implementation provides a
+           tput utility that does not also support standard cap-codes.
 
-          other  reset or init may fail to find their  respective  files.   In
-                 that case, the exit code is set to 4 + errno.
+       X/Open  Curses  Issue  7  (2009)  is  the  first  version  to  document
+       utilities.  However that part of X/Open Curses does not follow existing
+       practice (that is, System V curses behavior).
 
-       Any other exit code indicates an error; see the DIAGNOSTICS section.
+       o   It assigns exit status 4 to "invalid operand", which may  have  the
+           same  meaning  as  "unknown  capability".  For instance, the source
+           code for Solaris xcurses uses the term "invalid" in this case.
 
+       o   It assigns exit status 255  to  a  numeric  variable  that  is  not
+           specified in the terminfo database.  That likely is a documentation
+           error, mistaking  the  "-1"  written  to  the  standard  output  to
+           indicate   an   absent  or  cancelled  numeric  capability  for  an
+           (unsigned) exit status.
 
-

DIAGNOSTICS

-       tput  prints  the  following  error messages and sets the corresponding
-       exit codes.
+       The various System V implementations (AIX, HP-UX, Solaris) use the same
+       exit statuses as ncurses.
 
-       exit code   error message
-       ---------------------------------------------------------------------
-       0           (capname is a numeric variable that is not specified  in
-                   the  terminfo(5)  database  for this terminal type, e.g.
-                   tput -T450 lines and tput -T2621 xmc)
-       1           no error message is printed, see the EXIT CODES section.
-       2           usage error
-       3           unknown terminal type or no terminfo database
-       4           unknown terminfo capability capname
-       >4          error occurred in -S
-       ---------------------------------------------------------------------
+       NetBSD  curses  documents  exit  statuses  that  correspond  to neither
+       ncurses nor X/Open Curses.
 
 
 

HISTORY

-       The tput command was begun by Bill Joy in 1980.   The  initial  version
-       only cleared the screen.
-
-       AT&T  System  V provided a different tput command, whose init and reset
-       subcommands (more than half the program)  were  incorporated  from  the
-       reset feature of BSD tset written by Eric Allman.
-
-       Keith Bostic replaced the BSD tput command in 1989 with a new implemen-
-       tation based on the AT&T System V program tput.  Like the AT&T program,
-       Bostic's  version accepted some parameters named for terminfo capabili-
-       ties (clear, init, longname and reset).  However (because he  had  only
-       termcap  available),  it accepted termcap names for other capabilities.
-       Also, Bostic's BSD tput did not modify the terminal I/O  modes  as  the
-       earlier BSD tset had done.
-
-       At the same time, Bostic added a shell script named "clear", which used
-       tput to clear the screen.
-
-       Both of these appeared in 4.4BSD, becoming the "modern" BSD implementa-
-       tion of tput.
-
-       This  implementation of tput began from a different source than AT&T or
-       BSD: Ross Ridge's mytinfo package, published  on  comp.sources.unix  in
-       December 1992.  Ridge's program made more sophisticated use of the ter-
-       minal capabilities than the BSD program.  Eric Raymond  used  the  tput
-       program  (and  other  parts of mytinfo) in ncurses in June 1995.  Using
-       the portions dealing with terminal capabilities almost without  change,
-       Raymond  made  improvements to the way the command-line parameters were
+       Bill Joy wrote a tput command during development  of  4BSD  in  October
+       1980.   This  initial version only cleared the screen, and did not ship
+       with official distributions.
+
+       System V developed a different tput command.
+
+       o   SVr2 (1984) provided a rudimentary tput that checked the  parameter
+           against  each  predefined capability and returned the corresponding
+           value.   This  version  of  tput  did   not   use   tparm(3x)   for
+           parameterized capabilities.
+
+       o   SVr3  (1987)  replaced  that  with  a  more extensive program whose
+           support for init and reset operands (more than  half  the  program)
+           incorporated the reset feature of BSD tset written by Eric Allman.
+
+       o   SVr4  (1989)  added  color  initialization by using the orig_colors
+           (oc) and orig_pair (op) capabilities in its init logic.
+
+       Keith Bostic refactored BSD tput for shipment in  4.3BSD-Tahoe  (1988),
+       then  replaced  it  the  next  year  with a new implementation based on
+       System V tput.  Bostic's version  similarly  accepted  some  parameters
+       named  for  terminfo  (pseudo-)capabilities: clear, init, longname, and
+       reset.  However, because he had only  termcap  available,  it  accepted
+       termcap  codes for other capabilities.  Also, Bostic's BSD tput did not
+       modify the terminal modes as the earlier BSD tset had done.
+
+       At the same time, Bostic added a shell script named "clear"  that  used
+       tput  to  clear the screen.  Both of these appeared in 4.4BSD, becoming
+       the "modern" BSD implementation of tput.
+
+       The origin of ncurses tput lies outside both System V and BSD, in  Ross
+       Ridge's  mytinfo  package,  published  on comp.sources.unix in December
+       1992.  Ridge's program made more  sophisticated  use  of  the  terminal
+       capabilities than the BSD program.  Eric Raymond used that tput program
+       (and other parts of mytinfo) in ncurses in  June  1995.   Incorporating
+       the  portions dealing with terminal capabilities almost without change,
+       Raymond made improvements  to  the  way  command-line  parameters  were
        handled.
 
+       Before ncurses 6.1 (2018), its tset and tput utilities differed.
 
-

PORTABILITY

-       This implementation of tput differs from AT&T  tput  in  two  important
-       areas:
-
-       o   tput  capname  writes  to  the standard output.  That need not be a
-           regular terminal.  However, the subcommands which manipulate termi-
-           nal modes may not use the standard output.
-
-           The  AT&T  implementation's  init  and  reset  commands use the BSD
-           (4.1c) tset source, which manipulates terminal modes.   It  succes-
-           sively tries standard output, standard error, standard input before
-           falling back to "/dev/tty" and finally just assumes a 1200Bd termi-
-           nal.  When updating terminal modes, it ignores errors.
-
-           Until  changes made after ncurses 6.0, tput did not modify terminal
-           modes.  tput now uses a similar scheme, using functions shared with
-           tset  (and ultimately based on the 4.4BSD tset).  If it is not able
-           to open a terminal, e.g., when running in cron, tput will return an
-           error.
-
-       o   AT&T tput guesses the type of its capname operands by seeing if all
-           of the characters are numeric, or not.
-
-           Most implementations which provide support for capname operands use
-           the  tparm  function  to  expand  parameters  in it.  That function
-           expects a mixture of numeric and string parameters, requiring  tput
-           to know which type to use.
+       o   tset  was  more effective, resetting the terminal modes and special
+           characters.
 
-           This  implementation  uses a table to determine the parameter types
-           for the standard capname operands, and an internal library function
-           to analyze nonstandard capname operands.
+       o   On the other hand, tset's repertoire of terminal  capabilities  for
+           resetting the terminal was more limited; it had only equivalents of
+           reset_1string (rs1), reset_2string (rs2), and reset_file (rf),  and
+           not the tab stop and margin update features of tput.
 
-       This  implementation  (unlike  others) can accept both termcap and ter-
-       minfo names for the capname feature, if termcap support is compiled in.
-       However, the predefined termcap and terminfo names have two ambiguities
-       in this case (and the terminfo name is assumed):
+       The reset program is traditionally an alias for tset due to its ability
+       to reset terminal modes and special characters.
 
-       o   The termcap name dl corresponds to the terminfo  name  dl1  (delete
-           one line).
-           The  terminfo  name dl corresponds to the termcap name DL (delete a
-           given number of lines).
+       As of ncurses 6.1,  the  "reset"  features  of  the  two  programs  are
+       (mostly) the same.  Two minor differences remain.
 
-       o   The termcap name ed corresponds to  the  terminfo  name  rmdc  (end
-           delete mode).
-           The  terminfo  name ed corresponds to the termcap name cd (clear to
-           end of screen).
+       o   The  tset  program  waits  one  second  when resetting, in case the
+           terminal happens to be a hardware device.
 
-       The longname and -S options, and  the  parameter-substitution  features
-       used  in  the  cup  example,  were  not  supported in BSD curses before
-       4.3reno (1989) or in AT&T/USL curses before SVr4 (1988).
+       o   The two programs  write  the  terminal  initialization  strings  to
+           different  streams;  that  is, standard error for tset and standard
+           output for tput.
 
-       IEEE  Std  1003.1/The  Open  Group    Base   Specifications   Issue   7
-       (POSIX.1-2008)  documents  only the operands for clear, init and reset.
-       There are a few interesting observations to make regarding that:
 
-       o   In this implementation, clear is part of the capname support.   The
-           others  (init and longname) do not correspond to terminal capabili-
-           ties.
+

EXAMPLES

+       tput init
+              Initialize the terminal according to the type of terminal in the
+              TERM  environment  variable.   If  the  system does not reliably
+              initialize the terminal upon login, this command can be included
+              in $HOME/.profile after exporting the TERM environment variable.
 
-       o   Other  implementations  of  tput  on  SVr4-based  systems  such  as
-           Solaris,  IRIX64  and  HPUX as well as others such as AIX and Tru64
-           provide support for capname operands.
+       tput -T5620 reset
+              Reset an AT&T 5620 terminal, overriding the terminal type in the
+              TERM environment variable.
 
-       o   A few platforms such as FreeBSD recognize termcap names rather than
-           terminfo capability names in their respective tput commands.  Since
-           2010, NetBSD's tput uses terminfo names.   Before  that,  it  (like
-           FreeBSD) recognized termcap names.
+       tput cnorm
+              Set cursor to normal visibility.
 
-       Because (apparently) all of the certified Unix systems support the full
-       set of capability names, the reasoning for documenting only a  few  may
-       not be apparent.
+       tput home
+              Move the cursor to row 0, column 0: the upper left corner of the
+              screen, usually known as the "home" cursor position.
 
-       o   X/Open  Curses Issue 7 documents tput differently, with capname and
-           the other features used in this implementation.
+       tput clear
+              Clear  the  screen: write the clear_screen capability's value to
+              the standard output stream.
+
+       tput cols
+              Report the number of columns used by the current terminal type.
 
-       o   That is, there are two standards for tput:  POSIX  (a  subset)  and
-           X/Open  Curses (the full implementation).  POSIX documents a subset
-           to avoid the complication of including X/Open Curses and the termi-
-           nal capabilities database.
+       tput -Tadm3a cols
+              Report the number of columns used by an ADM-3A terminal.
 
-       o   While  it  is  certainly  possible  to write a tput program without
-           using curses, none of the systems which have a  curses  implementa-
-           tion provide a tput utility which does not provide the capname fea-
-           ture.
+       strong=`tput smso` normal=`tput rmso`
+              Set shell variables to capability values: strong and normal,  to
+              begin  and  end,  respectively, stand-out mode for the terminal.
+              One might use these to present a prompt.
 
+                     printf "${strong}Username:${normal} "
 
-

SEE ALSO

-       clear(1), stty(1), tabs(1), tset(1), terminfo(5), curs_termcap(3x).
+       tput hc
+              Indicate via exit status whether the terminal  is  a  hard  copy
+              device.
+
+       tput cup 23 4
+              Move the cursor to row 23, column 4.
 
-       This describes ncurses version 6.1 (patch 20180331).
+       tput cup
+              Report  the  value  of the cursor_address (cup) capability (used
+              for cursor movement), with no parameters substituted.
+
+       tput longname
+              Report the terminfo database's description of the terminal  type
+              specified in the TERM environment variable.
+
+       tput -S
+              Process  multiple capabilities.  The -S option can be profitably
+              used with a shell "here document".
+
+              $ tput -S <<!
+              > clear
+              > cup 10 10
+              > bold
+              > !
+
+              The foregoing clears the screen, moves the  cursor  to  position
+              (10, 10) and turns on bold (extra bright) mode.
+
+       tput clear cup 10 10 bold
+              Perform the same actions as the foregoing "tput -S" example.
 
 
+

SEE ALSO

+       clear(1), stty(1), tabs(1), tset(1), curs_termcap(3x), terminfo(5)
+
 
-                                                                       tput(1)
+
+ncurses 6.4                       2024-04-20                           tput(1)