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+<!--
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* DO NOT EDIT THIS FILE BY HAND!
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- * Copyright (c) 1998-2018,2019 Free Software Foundation, Inc. *
+ * Copyright 2018-2020,2021 Thomas E. Dickey *
+ * Copyright 1998-2016,2017 Free Software Foundation, Inc. *
* *
* Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a *
* copy of this software and associated documentation files (the *
* sale, use or other dealings in this Software without prior written *
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+ * @Id: terminfo.head,v 1.42 2021/12/25 17:39:16 tom Exp @
* Head of terminfo man page ends here
****************************************************************************
- * Copyright (c) 1998-2018,2019 Free Software Foundation, Inc. *
+ * Copyright 2018-2021,2022 Thomas E. Dickey *
+ * Copyright 1998-2016,2017 Free Software Foundation, Inc. *
* *
* Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a *
* copy of this software and associated documentation files (the *
* sale, use or other dealings in this Software without prior written *
* authorization. *
****************************************************************************
- * @Id: terminfo.tail,v 1.98 2019/11/30 20:54:32 tom Exp @
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<H1 class="no-header">terminfo 5 File Formats</H1>
</PRE><H2><a name="h2-NAME">NAME</a></H2><PRE>
- terminfo - terminal capability data base
+ terminfo - terminal capability database
</PRE><H2><a name="h2-SYNOPSIS">SYNOPSIS</a></H2><PRE>
</PRE><H2><a name="h2-DESCRIPTION">DESCRIPTION</a></H2><PRE>
- <EM>Terminfo</EM> is a data base describing terminals, used by screen-oriented
- programs such as <STRONG>nvi(1)</STRONG>, <STRONG>lynx(1)</STRONG>, <STRONG>mutt(1)</STRONG>, and other curses applica-
- tions, using high-level calls to libraries such as <STRONG><A HREF="ncurses.3x.html">curses(3x)</A></STRONG>. It is
- also used via low-level calls by non-curses applications which may be
- screen-oriented (such as <STRONG><A HREF="clear.1.html">clear(1)</A></STRONG>) or non-screen (such as <STRONG><A HREF="tabs.1.html">tabs(1)</A></STRONG>).
+ <EM>Terminfo</EM> is a database describing terminals, used by screen-oriented
+ programs such as <STRONG>nvi(1)</STRONG>, <STRONG>lynx(1)</STRONG>, <STRONG>mutt(1)</STRONG>, and other curses
+ applications, using high-level calls to libraries such as <STRONG><A HREF="ncurses.3x.html">curses(3x)</A></STRONG>.
+ It is also used via low-level calls by non-curses applications which
+ may be screen-oriented (such as <STRONG><A HREF="clear.1.html">clear(1)</A></STRONG>) or non-screen (such as
+ <STRONG><A HREF="tabs.1.html">tabs(1)</A></STRONG>).
<EM>Terminfo</EM> describes terminals by giving a set of capabilities which they
have, by specifying how to perform screen operations, and by specifying
padding requirements and initialization sequences.
- This manual describes <STRONG>ncurses</STRONG> version 6.1 (patch 20191207).
+ This manual describes <STRONG>ncurses</STRONG> version 6.4 (patch 20230610).
</PRE><H3><a name="h3-Terminfo-Entry-Syntax">Terminfo Entry Syntax</a></H3><PRE>
Entries in <EM>terminfo</EM> consist of a sequence of fields:
- <STRONG>o</STRONG> Each field ends with a comma "," (embedded commas may be escaped
+ <STRONG>o</STRONG> Each field ends with a comma "," (embedded commas may be escaped
with a backslash or written as "\054").
<STRONG>o</STRONG> White space between fields is ignored.
<STRONG>o</STRONG> The first field in a <EM>terminfo</EM> entry begins in the first column.
- <STRONG>o</STRONG> Newlines and leading whitespace (spaces or tabs) may be used for
- formatting entries for readability. These are removed from parsed
+ <STRONG>o</STRONG> Newlines and leading whitespace (spaces or tabs) may be used for
+ formatting entries for readability. These are removed from parsed
entries.
- The <STRONG>infocmp</STRONG> <STRONG>-f</STRONG> and <STRONG>-W</STRONG> options rely on this to format if-then-else
- expressions, or to enforce maximum line-width. The resulting for-
- matted terminal description can be read by <STRONG>tic</STRONG>.
+ The <STRONG>infocmp</STRONG> <STRONG>-f</STRONG> and <STRONG>-W</STRONG> options rely on this to format if-then-else
+ expressions, or to enforce maximum line-width. The resulting
+ formatted terminal description can be read by <STRONG>tic</STRONG>.
- <STRONG>o</STRONG> The first field for each terminal gives the names which are known
+ <STRONG>o</STRONG> The first field for each terminal gives the names which are known
for the terminal, separated by "|" characters.
- The first name given is the most common abbreviation for the termi-
- nal (its primary name), the last name given should be a long name
- fully identifying the terminal (see <STRONG><A HREF="curs_termattrs.3x.html">longname(3x)</A></STRONG>), and all others
- are treated as synonyms (aliases) for the primary terminal name.
+ The first name given is the most common abbreviation for the
+ terminal (its primary name), the last name given should be a long
+ name fully identifying the terminal (see <STRONG><A HREF="curs_termattrs.3x.html">longname(3x)</A></STRONG>), and all
+ others are treated as synonyms (aliases) for the primary terminal
+ name.
X/Open Curses advises that all names but the last should be in
lower case and contain no blanks; the last name may well contain
it allows that to be both an alias and a verbose name (but will
warn about this ambiguity).
- <STRONG>o</STRONG> Lines beginning with a "#" in the first column are treated as com-
- ments.
+ <STRONG>o</STRONG> Lines beginning with a "#" in the first column are treated as
+ comments.
While comment lines are legal at any point, the output of <STRONG>captoinfo</STRONG>
and <STRONG>infotocap</STRONG> (aliases for <STRONG>tic</STRONG>) will move comments so they occur
only between entries.
Terminal names (except for the last, verbose entry) should be chosen
- using the following conventions. The particular piece of hardware mak-
- ing up the terminal should have a root name, thus "hp2621". This name
- should not contain hyphens. Modes that the hardware can be in, or user
- preferences, should be indicated by appending a hyphen and a mode suf-
- fix. Thus, a vt100 in 132-column mode would be vt100-w. The following
- suffixes should be used where possible:
+ using the following conventions. The particular piece of hardware
+ making up the terminal should have a root name, thus "hp2621". This
+ name should not contain hyphens. Modes that the hardware can be in, or
+ user preferences, should be indicated by appending a hyphen and a mode
+ suffix. Thus, a vt100 in 132-column mode would be vt100-w. The
+ following suffixes should be used where possible:
<STRONG>Suffix</STRONG> <STRONG>Meaning</STRONG> <STRONG>Example</STRONG>
-<EM>nn</EM> Number of lines on the screen aaa-60
</PRE><H3><a name="h3-Terminfo-Capabilities-Syntax">Terminfo Capabilities Syntax</a></H3><PRE>
The terminfo entry consists of several <EM>capabilities</EM>, i.e., features
- that the terminal has, or methods for exercising the terminal's fea-
- tures.
+ that the terminal has, or methods for exercising the terminal's
+ features.
After the first field (giving the name(s) of the terminal entry), there
should be one or more <EM>capability</EM> fields. These are boolean, numeric or
</PRE><H3><a name="h3-Similar-Terminals">Similar Terminals</a></H3><PRE>
If there are two very similar terminals, one (the variant) can be
- defined as being just like the other (the base) with certain excep-
- tions. In the definition of the variant, the string capability <STRONG>use</STRONG> can
- be given with the name of the base terminal:
+ defined as being just like the other (the base) with certain
+ exceptions. In the definition of the variant, the string capability
+ <STRONG>use</STRONG> can be given with the name of the base terminal:
<STRONG>o</STRONG> The capabilities given before <STRONG>use</STRONG> override those in the base type
named by <STRONG>use</STRONG>.
<STRONG>o</STRONG> Capabilities given explicitly in the entry override those brought
in by <STRONG>use</STRONG> references.
- A capability can be canceled by placing <STRONG>xx@</STRONG> to the left of the use ref-
- erence that imports it, where <EM>xx</EM> is the capability. For example, the
- entry
+ A capability can be canceled by placing <STRONG>xx@</STRONG> to the left of the use
+ reference that imports it, where <EM>xx</EM> is the capability. For example,
+ the entry
2621-nl, smkx@, rmkx@, use=2621,
used by a person updating the database. Whenever possible, capnames
are chosen to be the same as or similar to the ANSI X3.64-1979 standard
(now superseded by ECMA-48, which uses identical or very similar
- names). Semantics are also intended to match those of the specifica-
- tion.
+ names). Semantics are also intended to match those of the
+ specification.
The termcap code is the old <STRONG>termcap</STRONG> capability name (some capabilities
are new, and have names which termcap did not originate).
(P) indicates that padding may be specified
#[1-9] in the description field indicates that the string is passed
- through tparm with parms as given (#<EM>i</EM>).
+ through <STRONG><A HREF="curs_terminfo.3x.html">tparm(3x)</A></STRONG> with parameters as given (#<EM>i</EM>).
+
+ If no parameters are listed in the description, passing the
+ string through <STRONG><A HREF="curs_terminfo.3x.html">tparm(3x)</A></STRONG> may give unexpected results, e.g., if
+ it contains percent (%%) signs.
(P*) indicates that padding may vary in proportion to the number of
lines affected
<STRONG>Variable</STRONG> <STRONG>Cap-</STRONG> <STRONG>TCap</STRONG> <STRONG>Description</STRONG>
<STRONG>Booleans</STRONG> <STRONG>name</STRONG> <STRONG>Code</STRONG>
- auto_left_margin bw bw cub1 wraps from col-
- umn 0 to last column
- auto_right_margin am am terminal has auto-
- matic margins
- back_color_erase bce ut screen erased with
- background color
+ auto_left_margin bw bw cub1 wraps from
+ column 0 to last
+ column
+ auto_right_margin am am terminal has
+ automatic margins
+ back_color_erase bce ut screen erased with
+ background color
can_change ccc cc terminal can re-
- define existing col-
- ors
+ define existing
+ colors
ceol_standout_glitch xhp xs standout not erased
by overwriting (hp)
col_addr_glitch xhpa YA only positive motion
for hpa/mhpa caps
cpi_changes_res cpix YF changing character
- pitch changes reso-
- lution
+ pitch changes
+ resolution
cr_cancels_micro_mode crxm YB using cr turns off
micro mode
dest_tabs_magic_smso xt xt tabs destructive,
magic so char
(t1061)
eat_newline_glitch xenl xn newline ignored
- after 80 cols (con-
- cept)
- erase_overstrike eo eo can erase over-
- strikes with a blank
+ after 80 cols
+ (concept)
+ erase_overstrike eo eo can erase
+ overstrikes with a
+ blank
generic_type gn gn generic line type
hard_copy hc hc hardcopy terminal
hard_cursor chts HC cursor is hard to
see
has_meta_key km km Has a meta key
(i.e., sets 8th-bit)
- has_print_wheel daisy YC printer needs opera-
- tor to change char-
- acter set
+ has_print_wheel daisy YC printer needs
+ operator to change
+ character set
has_status_line hs hs has extra status
line
hue_lightness_saturation hls hl terminal uses only
HLS color notation
(Tektronix)
- insert_null_glitch in in insert mode distin-
- guishes nulls
+ insert_null_glitch in in insert mode
+ distinguishes nulls
lpi_changes_res lpix YG changing line pitch
changes resolution
memory_above da da display may be
not exist
non_dest_scroll_region ndscr ND scrolling region is
non-destructive
+
non_rev_rmcup nrrmc NR smcup does not
reverse rmcup
- over_strike os os terminal can over-
- strike
+ over_strike os os terminal can
+ overstrike
prtr_silent mc5i 5i printer will not
echo on screen
row_addr_glitch xvpa YD only positive motion
for vpa/mvpa caps
-
semi_auto_right_margin sam YE printing in last
column causes cr
status_line_esc_ok eslok es escape can be used
with SVr4's printer support.
+
<STRONG>Variable</STRONG> <STRONG>Cap-</STRONG> <STRONG>TCap</STRONG> <STRONG>Description</STRONG>
<STRONG>Numeric</STRONG> <STRONG>name</STRONG> <STRONG>Code</STRONG>
bit_image_entwining bitwin Yo number of passes for
each bit-image row
bit_image_type bitype Yp type of bit-image
device
-
-
-
buffer_capacity bufsz Ya numbers of bytes
buffered before
printing
buttons btns BT number of buttons on
mouse
- dot_horz_spacing spinh Yc spacing of dots hor-
- izontally in dots
+ dot_horz_spacing spinh Yc spacing of dots
+ horizontally in dots
+ per inch
+ dot_vert_spacing spinv Yb spacing of pins
+ vertically in pins
per inch
- dot_vert_spacing spinv Yb spacing of pins ver-
- tically in pins per
- inch
max_micro_address maddr Yd maximum value in
micro_..._address
max_micro_jump mjump Ye maximum value in
in micro mode
number_of_pins npins Yh numbers of pins in
print-head
- output_res_char orc Yi horizontal resolu-
- tion in units per
- line
- output_res_horz_inch orhi Yk horizontal resolu-
- tion in units per
- inch
+ output_res_char orc Yi horizontal
+ resolution in units
+ per line
+ output_res_horz_inch orhi Yk horizontal
+ resolution in units
+ per inch
output_res_line orl Yj vertical resolution
in units per line
output_res_vert_inch orvi Yl vertical resolution
in units per inch
- print_rate cps Ym print rate in char-
- acters per second
+ print_rate cps Ym print rate in
+ characters per
+ second
wide_char_size widcs Yn character step size
when in double wide
mode
lines per inch to #1
change_res_horz chr ZC Change horizontal
resolution to #1
- change_res_vert cvr ZD Change vertical res-
- olution to #1
+
+
+ change_res_vert cvr ZD Change vertical
+ resolution to #1
change_scroll_region csr cs change region to
line #1 to line #2
(P)
char_padding rmp rP like ip but when in
insert mode
-
-
clear_all_tabs tbc ct clear all tab stops
(P)
clear_margins mgc MC clear right and left
prototype !?
create_window cwin CW define a window #1
from #2,#3 to #4,#5
- cursor_address cup cm move to row #1 col-
- umns #2
+ cursor_address cup cm move to row #1
+ columns #2
cursor_down cud1 do down one line
cursor_home home ho home cursor (if no
cup)
- cursor_invisible civis vi make cursor invisi-
- ble
+ cursor_invisible civis vi make cursor
+ invisible
cursor_left cub1 le move left one space
- cursor_mem_address mrcup CM memory relative cur-
- sor addressing, move
- to row #1 columns #2
+ cursor_mem_address mrcup CM memory relative
+ cursor addressing,
+ move to row #1
+ columns #2
cursor_normal cnorm ve make cursor appear
normal (undo
civis/cvvis)
character set (P)
enter_am_mode smam SA turn on automatic
margins
+
enter_blink_mode blink mb turn on blinking
enter_bold_mode bold md turn on bold (extra
bright) mode
- enter_ca_mode smcup ti string to start pro-
- grams using cup
+ enter_ca_mode smcup ti string to start
+ programs using cup
enter_delete_mode smdc dm enter delete mode
enter_dim_mode dim mh turn on half-bright
mode
-
enter_doublewide_mode swidm ZF Enter double-wide
mode
enter_draft_quality sdrfq ZG Enter draft-quality
mode
enter_insert_mode smir im enter insert mode
enter_italics_mode sitm ZH Enter italic mode
- enter_leftward_mode slm ZI Start leftward car-
- riage motion
+ enter_leftward_mode slm ZI Start leftward
+ carriage motion
enter_micro_mode smicm ZJ Start micro-motion
mode
enter_near_letter_quality snlq ZK Enter NLQ mode
enter_reverse_mode rev mr turn on reverse
video mode
enter_secure_mode invis mk turn on blank mode
- (characters invisi-
- ble)
+ (characters
+ invisible)
enter_shadow_mode sshm ZM Enter shadow-print
mode
enter_standout_mode smso so begin standout mode
enter_superscript_mode ssupm ZO Enter superscript
mode
enter_underline_mode smul us begin underline mode
- enter_upward_mode sum ZP Start upward car-
- riage motion
+ enter_upward_mode sum ZP Start upward
+ carriage motion
enter_xon_mode smxon SX turn on xon/xoff
handshaking
erase_chars ech ec erase #1 characters
(P)
- exit_alt_charset_mode rmacs ae end alternate char-
- acter set (P)
+ exit_alt_charset_mode rmacs ae end alternate
+ character set (P)
exit_am_mode rmam RA turn off automatic
margins
exit_attribute_mode sgr0 me turn off all
attributes
- exit_ca_mode rmcup te strings to end pro-
- grams using cup
+ exit_ca_mode rmcup te strings to end
+ programs using cup
exit_delete_mode rmdc ed end delete mode
exit_doublewide_mode rwidm ZQ End double-wide mode
exit_insert_mode rmir ei exit insert mode
exit_subscript_mode rsubm ZV End subscript mode
exit_superscript_mode rsupm ZW End superscript mode
exit_underline_mode rmul ue exit underline mode
- exit_upward_mode rum ZX End reverse charac-
- ter motion
+ exit_upward_mode rum ZX End reverse
+ character motion
+
+
exit_xon_mode rmxon RX turn off xon/xoff
handshaking
- fixed_pause pause PA pause for 2-3 sec-
- onds
+ fixed_pause pause PA pause for 2-3
+ seconds
flash_hook hook fh flash switch hook
flash_screen flash vb visible bell (may
not move cursor)
form_feed ff ff hardcopy terminal
page eject (P*)
-
from_status_line fsl fs return from status
line
goto_window wingo WG go to window #1
string
init_3string is3 i3 initialization
string
- init_file if if name of initializa-
- tion file
+ init_file if if name of
+ initialization file
init_prog iprog iP path name of program
for initialization
initialize_color initc Ic initialize color #1
insert_padding ip ip insert padding after
inserted character
key_a1 ka1 K1 upper left of keypad
- key_a3 ka3 K3 upper right of key-
- pad
+ key_a3 ka3 K3 upper right of
+ keypad
key_b2 kb2 K2 center of keypad
key_backspace kbs kb backspace key
key_beg kbeg @1 begin key
key_btab kcbt kB back-tab key
key_c1 kc1 K4 lower left of keypad
- key_c3 kc3 K5 lower right of key-
- pad
+ key_c3 kc3 K5 lower right of
+ keypad
key_cancel kcan @2 cancel key
key_catab ktbc ka clear-all-tabs key
key_clear kclr kC clear-screen or
screen key
key_exit kext @9 exit key
key_f0 kf0 k0 F0 function key
+
key_f1 kf1 k1 F1 function key
key_f10 kf10 k; F10 function key
key_f11 kf11 F1 F11 function key
key_f15 kf15 F5 F15 function key
key_f16 kf16 F6 F16 function key
key_f17 kf17 F7 F17 function key
-
key_f18 kf18 F8 F18 function key
key_f19 kf19 F9 F19 function key
key_f2 kf2 k2 F2 function key
key_f9 kf9 k9 F9 function key
key_find kfnd @0 find key
key_help khlp %1 help key
+
key_home khome kh home key
key_ic kich1 kI insert-character key
key_il kil1 kA insert-line key
key_mark kmrk %2 mark key
key_message kmsg %3 message key
key_move kmov %4 move key
-
key_next knxt %5 next key
key_npage knp kN next-page key
key_open kopn %6 open key
key_scommand kCMD *1 shifted command key
key_scopy kCPY *2 shifted copy key
key_screate kCRT *3 shifted create key
- key_sdc kDC *4 shifted delete-char-
- acter key
+ key_sdc kDC *4 shifted delete-
+ character key
key_sdl kDL *5 shifted delete-line
key
key_select kslt *6 select key
key_sfind kFND *0 shifted find key
key_shelp kHLP #1 shifted help key
key_shome kHOM #2 shifted home key
- key_sic kIC #3 shifted insert-char-
- acter key
+ key_sic kIC #3 shifted insert-
+ character key
key_sleft kLFT #4 shifted left-arrow
key
key_smessage kMSG %a shifted message key
key_suspend kspd &7 suspend key
key_undo kund &8 undo key
key_up kcuu1 ku up-arrow key
- keypad_local rmkx ke leave 'key-
- board_transmit' mode
- keypad_xmit smkx ks enter 'key-
- board_transmit' mode
+
+ keypad_local rmkx ke leave
+ 'keyboard_transmit'
+ mode
+ keypad_xmit smkx ks enter
+ 'keyboard_transmit'
+ mode
lab_f0 lf0 l0 label on function
key f0 if not f0
lab_f1 lf1 l1 label on function
key f1 if not f1
-
-
lab_f10 lf10 la label on function
key f10 if not f10
lab_f2 lf2 l2 label on function
(P*)
parm_delete_line dl DL delete #1 lines (P*)
parm_down_cursor cud DO down #1 lines (P*)
- parm_down_micro mcud Zf Like parm_down_cur-
- sor in micro mode
+ parm_down_micro mcud Zf Like
+ parm_down_cursor in
+ micro mode
parm_ich ich IC insert #1 characters
(P*)
+
parm_index indn SF scroll forward #1
lines (P)
parm_insert_line il AL insert #1 lines (P*)
parm_left_cursor cub LE move #1 characters
to the left (P)
- parm_left_micro mcub Zg Like parm_left_cur-
- sor in micro mode
+ parm_left_micro mcub Zg Like
+ parm_left_cursor in
+ micro mode
parm_right_cursor cuf RI move #1 characters
to the right (P*)
- parm_right_micro mcuf Zh Like parm_right_cur-
- sor in micro mode
-
+ parm_right_micro mcuf Zh Like
+ parm_right_cursor in
+ micro mode
parm_rindex rin SR scroll back #1 lines
(P)
parm_up_cursor cuu UP up #1 lines (P*)
prtr_off mc4 pf turn off printer
prtr_on mc5 po turn on printer
pulse pulse PU select pulse dialing
- quick_dial qdial QD dial number #1 with-
- out checking
+ quick_dial qdial QD dial number #1
+ without checking
remove_clock rmclk RC remove clock
repeat_char rep rp repeat char #1 #2
times (P*)
#1
set_bottom_margin smgb Zk Set bottom margin at
current line
+
+
set_bottom_margin_parm smgbp Zl Set bottom margin at
line #1 or (if smgtp
is not given) #2
pair to #1
set_foreground setf Sf Set foreground color
#1
-
-
-
-
-
set_left_margin smgl ML set left soft margin
- at current col-
- umn. See smgl.
- (ML is not in BSD
- termcap).
+ at current
+ column. (ML is
+ not in BSD termcap).
set_left_margin_parm smglp Zm Set left (right)
margin at column #1
- set_right_margin smgr MR set right soft mar-
- gin at current col-
- umn
+ set_right_margin smgr MR set right soft
+ margin at current
+ column
set_right_margin_parm smgrp Zn Set right margin at
column #1
set_tab hts st set a tab in every
image graphics
stop_char_set_def rcsd Zt End definition of
character set #1
- subscript_characters subcs Zu List of subscript-
- able characters
- superscript_characters supcs Zv List of superscript-
- able characters
+ subscript_characters subcs Zu List of
+ subscriptable
+ characters
+ superscript_characters supcs Zv List of
+ superscriptable
+ characters
tab ht ta tab to next 8-space
hardware tab stop
these_cause_cr docr Zw Printing any of
user4 u4 u4 User string #4
user5 u5 u5 User string #5
user6 u6 u6 User string #6
+
user7 u7 u7 User string #7
user8 u8 u8 User string #8
user9 u9 u9 User string #9
wait_tone wait WA wait for dial-tone
xoff_character xoffc XF XOFF character
xon_character xonc XN XON character
- zero_motion zerom Zx No motion for subse-
- quent character
+ zero_motion zerom Zx No motion for
+ subsequent character
- The following string capabilities are present in the SVr4.0 term struc-
- ture, but were originally not documented in the man page.
+ The following string capabilities are present in the SVr4.0 term
+ structure, but were originally not documented in the man page.
<STRONG>Variable</STRONG> <STRONG>Cap-</STRONG> <STRONG>TCap</STRONG> <STRONG>Description</STRONG>
<STRONG>String</STRONG> <STRONG>name</STRONG> <STRONG>Code</STRONG>
alt_scancode_esc scesa S8 Alternate escape
- for scancode emu-
- lation
+ for scancode
+ emulation
bit_image_carriage_return bicr Yv Move to beginning
of same row
bit_image_newline binel Zz Move to next row
bit_image_repeat birep Xy Repeat bit image
cell #1 #2 times
char_set_names csnm Zy Produce #1'th item
- from list of char-
- acter set names
+ from list of
+ character set
+ names
code_set_init csin ci Init sequence for
multiple codesets
color_names colornm Yw Give name for
color #1
define_bit_image_region defbi Yx Define rectangular
bit image region
- device_type devt dv Indicate lan-
- guage/codeset sup-
- port
- display_pc_char dispc S1 Display PC charac-
- ter #1
+ device_type devt dv Indicate
+ language/codeset
+ support
+ display_pc_char dispc S1 Display PC
+ character #1
end_bit_image_region endbi Yy End a bit-image
region
enter_pc_charset_mode smpch S2 Enter PC character
string #3
req_mouse_pos reqmp RQ Request mouse
position
- scancode_escape scesc S7 Escape for scan-
- code emulation
+
+ scancode_escape scesc S7 Escape for
+ scancode emulation
set0_des_seq s0ds s0 Shift to codeset 0
(EUC set 0, ASCII)
set1_des_seq s1ds s1 Shift to codeset 1
set_a_foreground setaf AF Set foreground
color to #1, using
ANSI escape
-
set_color_band setcolor Yz Change to ribbon
color #1
set_lr_margin smglr ML Set both left and
right margins to
#1, #2. (ML is
- not in BSD term-
- cap).
+ not in BSD
+ termcap).
set_page_length slines YZ Set page length to
#1 lines
set_tb_margin smgtb MT Sets both top and
bottom margins to
#1, #2
- The XSI Curses standard added these hardcopy capabilities. They were
- used in some post-4.1 versions of System V curses, e.g., Solaris 2.5
- and IRIX 6.x. Except for <STRONG>YI</STRONG>, the <STRONG>ncurses</STRONG> termcap names for them are
- invented. According to the XSI Curses standard, they have no termcap
- names. If your compiled terminfo entries use these, they may not be
+ The XSI Curses standard added these hardcopy capabilities. They were
+ used in some post-4.1 versions of System V curses, e.g., Solaris 2.5
+ and IRIX 6.x. Except for <STRONG>YI</STRONG>, the <STRONG>ncurses</STRONG> termcap names for them are
+ invented. According to the XSI Curses standard, they have no termcap
+ names. If your compiled terminfo entries use these, they may not be
binary-compatible with System V terminfo entries after SVr4.1; beware!
mode
enter_low_hl_mode elohlm Xo Enter low highlight
mode
- enter_right_hl_mode erhlm Xr Enter right high-
- light mode
+ enter_right_hl_mode erhlm Xr Enter right
+ highlight mode
enter_top_hl_mode ethlm Xt Enter top highlight
mode
- enter_vertical_hl_mode evhlm Xv Enter vertical high-
- light mode
+ enter_vertical_hl_mode evhlm Xv Enter vertical
+ highlight mode
set_a_attributes sgr1 sA Define second set of
video attributes
#1-#6
set_pglen_inch slength YI Set page length to
#1 hundredth of an
- inch (some implemen-
- tations use sL for
- termcap).
+ inch (some
+ implementations use
+ sL for termcap).
</PRE><H3><a name="h3-User-Defined-Capabilities">User-Defined Capabilities</a></H3><PRE>
- The preceding section listed the <EM>predefined</EM> capabilities. They deal
- with some special features for terminals no longer (or possibly never)
- produced. Occasionally there are special features of newer terminals
- which are awkward or impossible to represent by reusing the predefined
+ The preceding section listed the <EM>predefined</EM> capabilities. They deal
+ with some special features for terminals no longer (or possibly never)
+ produced. Occasionally there are special features of newer terminals
+ which are awkward or impossible to represent by reusing the predefined
capabilities.
- <STRONG>ncurses</STRONG> addresses this limitation by allowing user-defined capabili-
- ties. The <STRONG>tic</STRONG> and <STRONG>infocmp</STRONG> programs provide the <STRONG>-x</STRONG> option for this pur-
- pose. When <STRONG>-x</STRONG> is set, <STRONG>tic</STRONG> treats unknown capabilities as user-defined.
- That is, if <STRONG>tic</STRONG> encounters a capability name which it does not recog-
- nize, it infers its type (boolean, number or string) from the syntax
- and makes an extended table entry for that capability. The
- <STRONG><A HREF="curs_extend.3x.html">use_extended_names(3x)</A></STRONG> function makes this information conditionally
- available to applications. The ncurses library provides the data leav-
- ing most of the behavior to applications:
-
- <STRONG>o</STRONG> User-defined capability strings whose name begins with "k" are
+ <STRONG>ncurses</STRONG> addresses this limitation by allowing user-defined
+ capabilities. The <STRONG>tic</STRONG> and <STRONG>infocmp</STRONG> programs provide the <STRONG>-x</STRONG> option for
+ this purpose. When <STRONG>-x</STRONG> is set, <STRONG>tic</STRONG> treats unknown capabilities as user-
+ defined. That is, if <STRONG>tic</STRONG> encounters a capability name which it does
+ not recognize, it infers its type (boolean, number or string) from the
+ syntax and makes an extended table entry for that capability. The
+ <STRONG><A HREF="curs_extend.3x.html">use_extended_names(3x)</A></STRONG> function makes this information conditionally
+ available to applications. The ncurses library provides the data
+ leaving most of the behavior to applications:
+
+ <STRONG>o</STRONG> User-defined capability strings whose name begins with "k" are
treated as function keys.
- <STRONG>o</STRONG> The types (boolean, number, string) determined by <STRONG>tic</STRONG> can be
+ <STRONG>o</STRONG> The types (boolean, number, string) determined by <STRONG>tic</STRONG> can be
inferred by successful calls on <STRONG>tigetflag</STRONG>, etc.
<STRONG>o</STRONG> If the capability name happens to be two characters, the capability
is also available through the termcap interface.
- While termcap is said to be extensible because it does not use a prede-
- fined set of capabilities, in practice it has been limited to the capa-
- bilities defined by terminfo implementations. As a rule, user-defined
- capabilities intended for use by termcap applications should be limited
- to booleans and numbers to avoid running past the 1023 byte limit
- assumed by termcap implementations and their applications. In particu-
- lar, providing extended sets of function keys (past the 60 numbered
- keys and the handful of special named keys) is best done using the
- longer names available using terminfo.
+ While termcap is said to be extensible because it does not use a
+ predefined set of capabilities, in practice it has been limited to the
+ capabilities defined by terminfo implementations. As a rule, user-
+ defined capabilities intended for use by termcap applications should be
+ limited to booleans and numbers to avoid running past the 1023 byte
+ limit assumed by termcap implementations and their applications. In
+ particular, providing extended sets of function keys (past the 60
+ numbered keys and the handful of special named keys) is best done using
+ the longer names available using terminfo.
</PRE><H3><a name="h3-A-Sample-Entry">A Sample Entry</a></H3><PRE>
- The following entry, describing an ANSI-standard terminal, is represen-
- tative of what a <STRONG>terminfo</STRONG> entry for a modern terminal typically looks
- like.
+ The following entry, describing an ANSI-standard terminal, is
+ representative of what a <STRONG>terminfo</STRONG> entry for a modern terminal typically
+ looks like.
ansi|ansi/pc-term compatible with color,
am, mc5i, mir, msgr,
smul=\E[4m, tbc=\E[3g, u6=\E[%i%d;%dR, u7=\E[6n,
u8=\E[?%[;0123456789]c, u9=\E[c, vpa=\E[%i%p1%dd,
- Entries may continue onto multiple lines by placing white space at the
- beginning of each line except the first. Comments may be included on
+ Entries may continue onto multiple lines by placing white space at the
+ beginning of each line except the first. Comments may be included on
lines beginning with "#". Capabilities in <EM>terminfo</EM> are of three types:
- <STRONG>o</STRONG> Boolean capabilities which indicate that the terminal has some par-
- ticular feature,
+ <STRONG>o</STRONG> Boolean capabilities which indicate that the terminal has some
+ particular feature,
<STRONG>o</STRONG> numeric capabilities giving the size of the terminal or the size of
particular delays, and
- <STRONG>o</STRONG> string capabilities, which give a sequence which can be used to
+ <STRONG>o</STRONG> string capabilities, which give a sequence which can be used to
perform particular terminal operations.
</PRE><H3><a name="h3-Types-of-Capabilities">Types of Capabilities</a></H3><PRE>
All capabilities have names. For instance, the fact that ANSI-standard
- terminals have <EM>automatic</EM> <EM>margins</EM> (i.e., an automatic return and line-
- feed when the end of a line is reached) is indicated by the capability
- <STRONG>am</STRONG>. Hence the description of ansi includes <STRONG>am</STRONG>. Numeric capabilities
- are followed by the character "#" and then a positive value. Thus
+ terminals have <EM>automatic</EM> <EM>margins</EM> (i.e., an automatic return and line-
+ feed when the end of a line is reached) is indicated by the capability
+ <STRONG>am</STRONG>. Hence the description of ansi includes <STRONG>am</STRONG>. Numeric capabilities
+ are followed by the character "#" and then a positive value. Thus
<STRONG>cols</STRONG>, which indicates the number of columns the terminal has, gives the
- value "80" for ansi. Values for numeric capabilities may be specified
- in decimal, octal or hexadecimal, using the C programming language con-
- ventions (e.g., 255, 0377 and 0xff or 0xFF).
+ value "80" for ansi. Values for numeric capabilities may be specified
+ in decimal, octal or hexadecimal, using the C programming language
+ conventions (e.g., 255, 0377 and 0xff or 0xFF).
- Finally, string valued capabilities, such as <STRONG>el</STRONG> (clear to end of line
- sequence) are given by the two-character code, an "=", and then a
+ Finally, string valued capabilities, such as <STRONG>el</STRONG> (clear to end of line
+ sequence) are given by the two-character code, an "=", and then a
string ending at the next following ",".
- A number of escape sequences are provided in the string valued capabil-
- ities for easy encoding of characters there:
+ A number of escape sequences are provided in the string valued
+ capabilities for easy encoding of characters there:
<STRONG>o</STRONG> Both <STRONG>\E</STRONG> and <STRONG>\e</STRONG> map to an ESCAPE character,
respectively.
X/Open Curses does not say what "appropriate <EM>x</EM>" might be. In practice,
- that is a printable ASCII graphic character. The special case "^?" is
- interpreted as DEL (127). In all other cases, the character value is
- AND'd with 0x1f, mapping to ASCII control codes in the range 0 through
+ that is a printable ASCII graphic character. The special case "^?" is
+ interpreted as DEL (127). In all other cases, the character value is
+ AND'd with 0x1f, mapping to ASCII control codes in the range 0 through
31.
Other escapes include
<STRONG>o</STRONG> and <STRONG>\0</STRONG> for null.
<STRONG>\0</STRONG> will produce \200, which does not terminate a string but behaves
- as a null character on most terminals, providing CS7 is specified.
+ as a null character on most terminals, providing CS7 is specified.
See <STRONG>stty(1)</STRONG>.
- The reason for this quirk is to maintain binary compatibility of
- the compiled terminfo files with other implementations, e.g., the
- SVr4 systems, which document this. Compiled terminfo files use
- null-terminated strings, with no lengths. Modifying this would
- require a new binary format, which would not work with other imple-
- mentations.
+ The reason for this quirk is to maintain binary compatibility of
+ the compiled terminfo files with other implementations, e.g., the
+ SVr4 systems, which document this. Compiled terminfo files use
+ null-terminated strings, with no lengths. Modifying this would
+ require a new binary format, which would not work with other
+ implementations.
Finally, characters may be given as three octal digits after a <STRONG>\</STRONG>.
- A delay in milliseconds may appear anywhere in a string capability,
- enclosed in $<..> brackets, as in <STRONG>el</STRONG>=\EK$<5>, and padding characters
+ A delay in milliseconds may appear anywhere in a string capability,
+ enclosed in $<..> brackets, as in <STRONG>el</STRONG>=\EK$<5>, and padding characters
are supplied by <STRONG><A HREF="curs_terminfo.3x.html">tputs(3x)</A></STRONG> to provide this delay.
- <STRONG>o</STRONG> The delay must be a number with at most one decimal place of preci-
- sion; it may be followed by suffixes "*" or "/" or both.
+ <STRONG>o</STRONG> The delay must be a number with at most one decimal place of
+ precision; it may be followed by suffixes "*" or "/" or both.
- <STRONG>o</STRONG> A "*" indicates that the padding required is proportional to the
- number of lines affected by the operation, and the amount given is
- the per-affected-unit padding required. (In the case of insert
+ <STRONG>o</STRONG> A "*" indicates that the padding required is proportional to the
+ number of lines affected by the operation, and the amount given is
+ the per-affected-unit padding required. (In the case of insert
character, the factor is still the number of <EM>lines</EM> affected.)
Normally, padding is advisory if the device has the <STRONG>xon</STRONG> capability;
it is used for cost computation but does not trigger delays.
- <STRONG>o</STRONG> A "/" suffix indicates that the padding is mandatory and forces a
+ <STRONG>o</STRONG> A "/" suffix indicates that the padding is mandatory and forces a
delay of the given number of milliseconds even on devices for which
<STRONG>xon</STRONG> is present to indicate flow control.
- Sometimes individual capabilities must be commented out. To do this,
- put a period before the capability name. For example, see the second
+ Sometimes individual capabilities must be commented out. To do this,
+ put a period before the capability name. For example, see the second
<STRONG>ind</STRONG> in the example above.
</PRE><H3><a name="h3-Fetching-Compiled-Descriptions">Fetching Compiled Descriptions</a></H3><PRE>
- The <STRONG>ncurses</STRONG> library searches for terminal descriptions in several
- places. It uses only the first description found. The library has a
- compiled-in list of places to search which can be overridden by envi-
- ronment variables. Before starting to search, <STRONG>ncurses</STRONG> eliminates
+ The <STRONG>ncurses</STRONG> library searches for terminal descriptions in several
+ places. It uses only the first description found. The library has a
+ compiled-in list of places to search which can be overridden by
+ environment variables. Before starting to search, <STRONG>ncurses</STRONG> eliminates
duplicates in its search list.
- <STRONG>o</STRONG> If the environment variable TERMINFO is set, it is interpreted as
+ <STRONG>o</STRONG> If the environment variable TERMINFO is set, it is interpreted as
the pathname of a directory containing the compiled description you
are working on. Only that directory is searched.
- <STRONG>o</STRONG> If TERMINFO is not set, <STRONG>ncurses</STRONG> will instead look in the directory
+ <STRONG>o</STRONG> If TERMINFO is not set, <STRONG>ncurses</STRONG> will instead look in the directory
<STRONG>$HOME/.terminfo</STRONG> for a compiled description.
- <STRONG>o</STRONG> Next, if the environment variable TERMINFO_DIRS is set, <STRONG>ncurses</STRONG>
- will interpret the contents of that variable as a list of colon-
+ <STRONG>o</STRONG> Next, if the environment variable TERMINFO_DIRS is set, <STRONG>ncurses</STRONG>
+ will interpret the contents of that variable as a list of colon-
separated directories (or database files) to be searched.
- An empty directory name (i.e., if the variable begins or ends with
- a colon, or contains adjacent colons) is interpreted as the system
+ An empty directory name (i.e., if the variable begins or ends with
+ a colon, or contains adjacent colons) is interpreted as the system
location <EM>/usr/share/terminfo</EM>.
<STRONG>o</STRONG> Finally, <STRONG>ncurses</STRONG> searches these compiled-in locations:
- <STRONG>o</STRONG> a list of directories (/usr/local/ncurses/share/ter-
- minfo:/usr/share/terminfo), and
+ <STRONG>o</STRONG> a list of directories (no default value), and
- <STRONG>o</STRONG> the system terminfo directory, <EM>/usr/share/terminfo</EM> (the com-
- piled-in default).
+ <STRONG>o</STRONG> the system terminfo directory, <EM>/usr/share/terminfo</EM> (the
+ compiled-in default).
</PRE><H3><a name="h3-Preparing-Descriptions">Preparing Descriptions</a></H3><PRE>
wraps around to the beginning of the next line when it reaches the
right margin, then it should have the <STRONG>am</STRONG> capability. If the terminal
can clear its screen, leaving the cursor in the home position, then
- this is given by the <STRONG>clear</STRONG> string capability. If the terminal over-
- strikes (rather than clearing a position when a character is struck
+ this is given by the <STRONG>clear</STRONG> string capability. If the terminal
+ overstrikes (rather than clearing a position when a character is struck
over) then it should have the <STRONG>os</STRONG> capability. If the terminal is a
printing terminal, with no soft copy unit, give it both <STRONG>hc</STRONG> and <STRONG>os</STRONG>. (<STRONG>os</STRONG>
applies to storage scope terminals, such as TEKTRONIX 4010 series, as
well as hard copy and APL terminals.) If there is a code to move the
cursor to the left edge of the current row, give this as <STRONG>cr</STRONG>. (Normally
- this will be carriage return, control/M.) If there is a code to pro-
- duce an audible signal (bell, beep, etc) give this as <STRONG>bel</STRONG>.
+ this will be carriage return, control/M.) If there is a code to
+ produce an audible signal (bell, beep, etc) give this as <STRONG>bel</STRONG>.
If there is a code to move the cursor one position to the left (such as
backspace) that capability should be given as <STRONG>cub1</STRONG>. Similarly, codes
the effect is undefined. This is useful for drawing a box around the
edge of the screen, for example. If the terminal has switch selectable
automatic margins, the <EM>terminfo</EM> file usually assumes that this is on;
- i.e., <STRONG>am</STRONG>. If the terminal has a command which moves to the first col-
- umn of the next line, that command can be given as <STRONG>nel</STRONG> (newline). It
- does not matter if the command clears the remainder of the current
+ i.e., <STRONG>am</STRONG>. If the terminal has a command which moves to the first
+ column of the next line, that command can be given as <STRONG>nel</STRONG> (newline).
+ It does not matter if the command clears the remainder of the current
line, so if the terminal has no <STRONG>cr</STRONG> and <STRONG>lf</STRONG> it may still be possible to
craft a working <STRONG>nel</STRONG> out of one or both of them.
- These capabilities suffice to describe hard-copy and "glass-tty" termi-
- nals. Thus the model 33 teletype is described as
+ These capabilities suffice to describe hard-copy and "glass-tty"
+ terminals. Thus the model 33 teletype is described as
33|tty33|tty|model 33 teletype,
bel=^G, cols#72, cr=^M, cud1=^J, hc, ind=^J, os,
</PRE><H3><a name="h3-Parameterized-Strings">Parameterized Strings</a></H3><PRE>
- Cursor addressing and other strings requiring parameters in the termi-
- nal are described by a parameterized string capability, with <EM>printf</EM>-
- like escapes such as <EM>%x</EM> in it. For example, to address the cursor, the
- <STRONG>cup</STRONG> capability is given, using two parameters: the row and column to
- address to. (Rows and columns are numbered from zero and refer to the
- physical screen visible to the user, not to any unseen memory.) If the
- terminal has memory relative cursor addressing, that can be indicated
- by <STRONG>mrcup</STRONG>.
+ Cursor addressing and other strings requiring parameters in the
+ terminal are described by a parameterized string capability, with
+ <EM>printf</EM>-like escapes such as <EM>%x</EM> in it. For example, to address the
+ cursor, the <STRONG>cup</STRONG> capability is given, using two parameters: the row and
+ column to address to. (Rows and columns are numbered from zero and
+ refer to the physical screen visible to the user, not to any unseen
+ memory.) If the terminal has memory relative cursor addressing, that
+ can be indicated by <STRONG>mrcup</STRONG>.
The parameter mechanism uses a stack and special <STRONG>%</STRONG> codes to manipulate
it. Typically a sequence will push one of the parameters onto the
- stack and then print it in some format. Print (e.g., "%d") is a spe-
- cial case. Other operations, including "%t" pop their operand from the
- stack. It is noted that more complex operations are often necessary,
- e.g., in the <STRONG>sgr</STRONG> string.
+ stack and then print it in some format. Print (e.g., "%d") is a
+ special case. Other operations, including "%t" pop their operand from
+ the stack. It is noted that more complex operations are often
+ necessary, e.g., in the <STRONG>sgr</STRONG> string.
The <STRONG>%</STRONG> encodings have the following meanings:
<STRONG>%P</STRONG><EM>[a-z]</EM>
set dynamic variable <EM>[a-z]</EM> to <EM>pop()</EM>
- <STRONG>%g</STRONG><EM>[a-z]/</EM>
+ <STRONG>%g</STRONG><EM>[a-z]</EM>
get dynamic variable <EM>[a-z]</EM> and push it
<STRONG>%P</STRONG><EM>[A-Z]</EM>
these are simply two different sets of variables, whose values are
not reset between calls to <STRONG><A HREF="curs_terminfo.3x.html">tparm(3x)</A></STRONG>. However, that fact is not
documented in other implementations. Relying on it will adversely
- impact portability to other implementations.
+ impact portability to other implementations:
+
+ <STRONG>o</STRONG> SVr2 curses supported <EM>dynamic</EM> variables. Those are set only
+ by a <STRONG>%P</STRONG> operator. A <STRONG>%g</STRONG> for a given variable without first
+ setting it with <STRONG>%P</STRONG> will give unpredictable results, because
+ dynamic variables are an uninitialized local array on the
+ stack in the <STRONG>tparm</STRONG> function.
+
+ <STRONG>o</STRONG> SVr3.2 curses supported <EM>static</EM> variables. Those are an array
+ in the <STRONG>TERMINAL</STRONG> structure (declared in <STRONG>term.h</STRONG>), and are zeroed
+ automatically when the <STRONG>setupterm</STRONG> function allocates the data.
+
+ <STRONG>o</STRONG> SVr4 curses made no further improvements to the <EM>dynamic/static</EM>
+ variable feature.
+
+ <STRONG>o</STRONG> Solaris XPG4 curses does not distinguish between <EM>dynamic</EM> and
+ <EM>static</EM> variables. They are the same. Like SVr4 curses, XPG4
+ curses does not initialize these explicitly.
+
+ <STRONG>o</STRONG> Before version 6.3, ncurses stores both <EM>dynamic</EM> and <EM>static</EM>
+ variables in persistent storage, initialized to zeros.
+
+ <STRONG>o</STRONG> Beginning with version 6.3, ncurses stores <EM>static</EM> and <EM>dynamic</EM>
+ variables in the same manner as SVr4.
+
+ <STRONG>o</STRONG> Unlike other implementations, ncurses zeros dynamic
+ variables before the first <STRONG>%g</STRONG> or <STRONG>%P</STRONG> operator.
+
+ <STRONG>o</STRONG> Like SVr2, the scope of dynamic variables in ncurses is
+ within the current call to <STRONG>tparm</STRONG>. Use static variables if
+ persistent storage is needed.
<STRONG>%'</STRONG><EM>c</EM><STRONG>'</STRONG> char constant <EM>c</EM>
with the parts indented.
Binary operations are in postfix form with the operands in the usual
- order. That is, to get x-5 one would use "%gx%{5}%-". <STRONG>%P</STRONG> and <STRONG>%g</STRONG> vari-
- ables are persistent across escape-string evaluations.
+ order. That is, to get x-5 one would use "%gx%{5}%-". <STRONG>%P</STRONG> and <STRONG>%g</STRONG>
+ variables are persistent across escape-string evaluations.
Consider the HP2645, which, to get to row 3 and column 12, needs to be
sent \E&a12c03Y padded for 6 milliseconds. Note that the order of the
involve going up with <STRONG>cuu1</STRONG> from the home position, but a program should
never do this itself (unless <STRONG>ll</STRONG> does) because it can make no assumption
about the effect of moving up from the home position. Note that the
- home position is the same as addressing to (0,0): to the top left cor-
- ner of the screen, not of memory. (Thus, the \EH sequence on HP termi-
- nals cannot be used for <STRONG>home</STRONG>.)
+ home position is the same as addressing to (0,0): to the top left
+ corner of the screen, not of memory. (Thus, the \EH sequence on HP
+ terminals cannot be used for <STRONG>home</STRONG>.)
If the terminal has row or column absolute cursor addressing, these can
be given as single parameter capabilities <STRONG>hpa</STRONG> (horizontal position
absolute) and <STRONG>vpa</STRONG> (vertical position absolute). Sometimes these are
shorter than the more general two parameter sequence (as with the
- hp2645) and can be used in preference to <STRONG>cup</STRONG>. If there are parameter-
- ized local motions (e.g., move <EM>n</EM> spaces to the right) these can be
- given as <STRONG>cud</STRONG>, <STRONG>cub</STRONG>, <STRONG>cuf</STRONG>, and <STRONG>cuu</STRONG> with a single parameter indicating how
- many spaces to move. These are primarily useful if the terminal does
- not have <STRONG>cup</STRONG>, such as the TEKTRONIX 4025.
+ hp2645) and can be used in preference to <STRONG>cup</STRONG>. If there are
+ parameterized local motions (e.g., move <EM>n</EM> spaces to the right) these
+ can be given as <STRONG>cud</STRONG>, <STRONG>cub</STRONG>, <STRONG>cuf</STRONG>, and <STRONG>cuu</STRONG> with a single parameter
+ indicating how many spaces to move. These are primarily useful if the
+ terminal does not have <STRONG>cup</STRONG>, such as the TEKTRONIX 4025.
If the terminal needs to be in a special mode when running a program
that uses these capabilities, the codes to enter and exit this mode can
be given as <STRONG>smcup</STRONG> and <STRONG>rmcup</STRONG>. This arises, for example, from terminals
like the Concept with more than one page of memory. If the terminal
- has only memory relative cursor addressing and not screen relative cur-
- sor addressing, a one screen-sized window must be fixed into the termi-
- nal for cursor addressing to work properly. This is also used for the
- TEKTRONIX 4025, where <STRONG>smcup</STRONG> sets the command character to be the one
- used by terminfo. If the <STRONG>smcup</STRONG> sequence will not restore the screen
- after an <STRONG>rmcup</STRONG> sequence is output (to the state prior to outputting
- <STRONG>rmcup</STRONG>), specify <STRONG>nrrmc</STRONG>.
+ has only memory relative cursor addressing and not screen relative
+ cursor addressing, a one screen-sized window must be fixed into the
+ terminal for cursor addressing to work properly. This is also used for
+ the TEKTRONIX 4025, where <STRONG>smcup</STRONG> sets the command character to be the
+ one used by terminfo. If the <STRONG>smcup</STRONG> sequence will not restore the
+ screen after an <STRONG>rmcup</STRONG> sequence is output (to the state prior to
+ outputting <STRONG>rmcup</STRONG>), specify <STRONG>nrrmc</STRONG>.
+
+
+</PRE><H3><a name="h3-Margins">Margins</a></H3><PRE>
+ SVr4 (and X/Open Curses) list several string capabilities for setting
+ margins. Two were intended for use with terminals, and another six
+ were intended for use with printers.
+
+ <STRONG>o</STRONG> The two terminal capabilities assume that the terminal may have the
+ capability of setting the left and/or right margin at the current
+ cursor column position.
+
+ <STRONG>o</STRONG> The printer capabilities assume that the printer may have two types
+ of capability:
+
+ <STRONG>o</STRONG> the ability to set a top and/or bottom margin using the current
+ line position, and
+
+ <STRONG>o</STRONG> parameterized capabilities for setting the top, bottom, left,
+ right margins given the number of rows or columns.
+
+ In practice, the categorization into "terminal" and "printer" is not
+ suitable:
+
+ <STRONG>o</STRONG> The AT&T SVr4 terminal database uses <STRONG>smgl</STRONG> four times, for AT&T
+ hardware.
+
+ Three of the four are printers. They lack the ability to set
+ left/right margins by specifying the column.
+
+ <STRONG>o</STRONG> Other (non-AT&T) terminals may support margins but using different
+ assumptions from AT&T.
+
+ For instance, the DEC VT420 supports left/right margins, but only
+ using a column parameter. As an added complication, the VT420 uses
+ two settings to fully enable left/right margins (left/right margin
+ mode, and origin mode). The former enables the margins, which
+ causes printed text to wrap within margins, but the latter is
+ needed to prevent cursor-addressing outside those margins.
+
+ <STRONG>o</STRONG> Both DEC VT420 left/right margins are set with a single control
+ sequence. If either is omitted, the corresponding margin is set to
+ the left or right edge of the display (rather than leaving the
+ margin unmodified).
+
+ These are the margin-related capabilities:
+
+ <STRONG>Name</STRONG> <STRONG>Description</STRONG>
+ ------------------------------------------------------
+ smgl Set left margin at current column
+ smgr Set right margin at current column
+ smgb Set bottom margin at current line
+ smgt Set top margin at current line
+ smgbp Set bottom margin at line <EM>N</EM>
+ smglp Set left margin at column <EM>N</EM>
+ smgrp Set right margin at column <EM>N</EM>
+ smgtp Set top margin at line <EM>N</EM>
+ smglr Set both left and right margins to <EM>L</EM> and <EM>R</EM>
+ smgtb Set both top and bottom margins to <EM>T</EM> and <EM>B</EM>
+
+ When writing an application that uses these string capabilities, the
+ pairs should be first checked to see if each capability in the pair is
+ set or only one is set:
+
+ <STRONG>o</STRONG> If both <STRONG>smglp</STRONG> and <STRONG>smgrp</STRONG> are set, each is used with a single
+ argument, <EM>N</EM>, that gives the column number of the left and right
+ margin, respectively.
+
+ <STRONG>o</STRONG> If both <STRONG>smgtp</STRONG> and <STRONG>smgbp</STRONG> are set, each is used to set the top and
+ bottom margin, respectively:
+
+ <STRONG>o</STRONG> <STRONG>smgtp</STRONG> is used with a single argument, <EM>N</EM>, the line number of the
+ top margin.
+
+ <STRONG>o</STRONG> <STRONG>smgbp</STRONG> is used with two arguments, <EM>N</EM> and <EM>M</EM>, that give the line
+ number of the bottom margin, the first counting from the top of
+ the page and the second counting from the bottom. This
+ accommodates the two styles of specifying the bottom margin in
+ different manufacturers' printers.
+
+ When designing a terminfo entry for a printer that has a settable
+ bottom margin, only the first or second argument should be used,
+ depending on the printer. When developing an application that uses
+ <STRONG>smgbp</STRONG> to set the bottom margin, both arguments must be given.
+
+ Conversely, when only one capability in the pair is set:
+
+ <STRONG>o</STRONG> If only one of <STRONG>smglp</STRONG> and <STRONG>smgrp</STRONG> is set, then it is used with two
+ arguments, the column number of the left and right margins, in that
+ order.
+
+ <STRONG>o</STRONG> Likewise, if only one of <STRONG>smgtp</STRONG> and <STRONG>smgbp</STRONG> is set, then it is used
+ with two arguments that give the top and bottom margins, in that
+ order, counting from the top of the page.
+
+ When designing a terminfo entry for a printer that requires setting
+ both left and right or top and bottom margins simultaneously, only
+ one capability in the pairs <STRONG>smglp</STRONG> and <STRONG>smgrp</STRONG> or <STRONG>smgtp</STRONG> and <STRONG>smgbp</STRONG>
+ should be defined, leaving the other unset.
+
+ Except for very old terminal descriptions, e.g., those developed for
+ SVr4, the scheme just described should be considered obsolete. An
+ improved set of capabilities was added late in the SVr4 releases (<STRONG>smglr</STRONG>
+ and <STRONG>smgtb</STRONG>), which explicitly use two parameters for setting the
+ left/right or top/bottom margins.
+
+ When setting margins, the line- and column-values are zero-based.
+
+ The <STRONG>mgc</STRONG> string capability should be defined. Applications such as
+ <STRONG><A HREF="tabs.1.html">tabs(1)</A></STRONG> rely upon this to reset all margins.
</PRE><H3><a name="h3-Area-Clears">Area Clears</a></H3><PRE>
given as <STRONG>el1</STRONG>. If the terminal can clear from the current position to
the end of the display, then this should be given as <STRONG>ed</STRONG>. <STRONG>Ed</STRONG> is only
defined from the first column of a line. (Thus, it can be simulated by
- a request to delete a large number of lines, if a true <STRONG>ed</STRONG> is not avail-
- able.)
+ a request to delete a large number of lines, if a true <STRONG>ed</STRONG> is not
+ available.)
</PRE><H3><a name="h3-Insert_delete-line-and-vertical-motions">Insert/delete line and vertical motions</a></H3><PRE>
The cursor position is, alas, undefined after using this command.
It is possible to get the effect of insert or delete line using <STRONG>csr</STRONG> on
- a properly chosen region; the <STRONG>sc</STRONG> and <STRONG>rc</STRONG> (save and restore cursor) com-
- mands may be useful for ensuring that your synthesized insert/delete
+ a properly chosen region; the <STRONG>sc</STRONG> and <STRONG>rc</STRONG> (save and restore cursor)
+ commands may be useful for ensuring that your synthesized insert/delete
string does not move the cursor. (Note that the <STRONG><A HREF="ncurses.3x.html">ncurses(3x)</A></STRONG> library
does this synthesis automatically, so you need not compose
insert/delete strings for an entry with <STRONG>csr</STRONG>).
- Yet another way to construct insert and delete might be to use a combi-
- nation of index with the memory-lock feature found on some terminals
- (like the HP-700/90 series, which however also has insert/delete).
+ Yet another way to construct insert and delete might be to use a
+ combination of index with the memory-lock feature found on some
+ terminals (like the HP-700/90 series, which however also has
+ insert/delete).
- Inserting lines at the top or bottom of the screen can also be done
- using <STRONG>ri</STRONG> or <STRONG>ind</STRONG> on many terminals without a true insert/delete line,
+ Inserting lines at the top or bottom of the screen can also be done
+ using <STRONG>ri</STRONG> or <STRONG>ind</STRONG> on many terminals without a true insert/delete line,
and is often faster even on terminals with those features.
- The boolean <STRONG>non_dest_scroll_region</STRONG> should be set if each scrolling win-
- dow is effectively a view port on a screen-sized canvas. To test for
- this capability, create a scrolling region in the middle of the screen,
- write something to the bottom line, move the cursor to the top of the
- region, and do <STRONG>ri</STRONG> followed by <STRONG>dl1</STRONG> or <STRONG>ind</STRONG>. If the data scrolled off the
- bottom of the region by the <STRONG>ri</STRONG> re-appears, then scrolling is non-
- destructive. System V and XSI Curses expect that <STRONG>ind</STRONG>, <STRONG>ri</STRONG>, <STRONG>indn</STRONG>, and
- <STRONG>rin</STRONG> will simulate destructive scrolling; their documentation cautions
- you not to define <STRONG>csr</STRONG> unless this is true. This <STRONG>curses</STRONG> implementation
- is more liberal and will do explicit erases after scrolling if <STRONG>ndsrc</STRONG> is
- defined.
-
- If the terminal has the ability to define a window as part of memory,
- which all commands affect, it should be given as the parameterized
- string <STRONG>wind</STRONG>. The four parameters are the starting and ending lines in
+ The boolean <STRONG>non_dest_scroll_region</STRONG> should be set if each scrolling
+ window is effectively a view port on a screen-sized canvas. To test
+ for this capability, create a scrolling region in the middle of the
+ screen, write something to the bottom line, move the cursor to the top
+ of the region, and do <STRONG>ri</STRONG> followed by <STRONG>dl1</STRONG> or <STRONG>ind</STRONG>. If the data scrolled
+ off the bottom of the region by the <STRONG>ri</STRONG> re-appears, then scrolling is
+ non-destructive. System V and XSI Curses expect that <STRONG>ind</STRONG>, <STRONG>ri</STRONG>, <STRONG>indn</STRONG>,
+ and <STRONG>rin</STRONG> will simulate destructive scrolling; their documentation
+ cautions you not to define <STRONG>csr</STRONG> unless this is true. This <STRONG>curses</STRONG>
+ implementation is more liberal and will do explicit erases after
+ scrolling if <STRONG>ndsrc</STRONG> is defined.
+
+ If the terminal has the ability to define a window as part of memory,
+ which all commands affect, it should be given as the parameterized
+ string <STRONG>wind</STRONG>. The four parameters are the starting and ending lines in
memory and the starting and ending columns in memory, in that order.
If the terminal can retain display memory above, then the <STRONG>da</STRONG> capability
- should be given; if display memory can be retained below, then <STRONG>db</STRONG>
- should be given. These indicate that deleting a line or scrolling may
- bring non-blank lines up from below or that scrolling back with <STRONG>ri</STRONG> may
+ should be given; if display memory can be retained below, then <STRONG>db</STRONG>
+ should be given. These indicate that deleting a line or scrolling may
+ bring non-blank lines up from below or that scrolling back with <STRONG>ri</STRONG> may
bring down non-blank lines.
</PRE><H3><a name="h3-Insert_Delete-Character">Insert/Delete Character</a></H3><PRE>
- There are two basic kinds of intelligent terminals with respect to
- insert/delete character which can be described using <EM>terminfo.</EM> The
- most common insert/delete character operations affect only the charac-
- ters on the current line and shift characters off the end of the line
- rigidly. Other terminals, such as the Concept 100 and the Perkin Elmer
- Owl, make a distinction between typed and untyped blanks on the screen,
- shifting upon an insert or delete only to an untyped blank on the
- screen which is either eliminated, or expanded to two untyped blanks.
+ There are two basic kinds of intelligent terminals with respect to
+ insert/delete character which can be described using <EM>terminfo.</EM> The
+ most common insert/delete character operations affect only the
+ characters on the current line and shift characters off the end of the
+ line rigidly. Other terminals, such as the Concept 100 and the Perkin
+ Elmer Owl, make a distinction between typed and untyped blanks on the
+ screen, shifting upon an insert or delete only to an untyped blank on
+ the screen which is either eliminated, or expanded to two untyped
+ blanks.
You can determine the kind of terminal you have by clearing the screen
and then typing text separated by cursor motions. Type "abc def"
shift rigidly and characters to fall off the end, then your terminal
does not distinguish between blanks and untyped positions. If the
"abc" shifts over to the "def" which then move together around the end
- of the current line and onto the next as you insert, you have the sec-
- ond type of terminal, and should give the capability <STRONG>in</STRONG>, which stands
- for "insert null".
+ of the current line and onto the next as you insert, you have the
+ second type of terminal, and should give the capability <STRONG>in</STRONG>, which
+ stands for "insert null".
While these are two logically separate attributes (one line versus
multi-line insert mode, and special treatment of untyped spaces) we
parameter is either 0 or nonzero, as the corresponding attribute is on
or off. The 9 parameters are, in order: standout, underline, reverse,
blink, dim, bold, blank, protect, alternate character set. Not all
- modes need be supported by <STRONG>sgr</STRONG>, only those for which corresponding sep-
- arate attribute commands exist.
+ modes need be supported by <STRONG>sgr</STRONG>, only those for which corresponding
+ separate attribute commands exist.
For example, the DEC vt220 supports most of the modes:
We begin each escape sequence by turning off any existing modes, since
there is no quick way to determine whether they are active. Standout
- is set up to be the combination of reverse and bold. The vt220 termi-
- nal has a protect mode, though it is not commonly used in sgr because
- it protects characters on the screen from the host's erasures. The
- altcharset mode also is different in that it is either ^O or ^N,
+ is set up to be the combination of reverse and bold. The vt220
+ terminal has a protect mode, though it is not commonly used in sgr
+ because it protects characters on the screen from the host's erasures.
+ The altcharset mode also is different in that it is either ^O or ^N,
depending on whether it is off or on. If all modes are turned on, the
resulting sequence is \E[0;1;4;5;7;8m^N.
- Some sequences are common to different modes. For example, ;7 is out-
- put when either p1 or p3 is true, that is, if either standout or
+ Some sequences are common to different modes. For example, ;7 is
+ output when either p1 or p3 is true, that is, if either standout or
reverse modes are turned on.
Writing out the above sequences, along with their dependencies yields
%?%p1%p3%|%t;7%;%?%p7%t;8%;m%?%p9%t\016%e\017%;,
Remember that if you specify sgr, you must also specify sgr0. Also,
- some implementations rely on sgr being given if sgr0 is, Not all ter-
- minfo entries necessarily have an sgr string, however. Many terminfo
- entries are derived from termcap entries which have no sgr string. The
- only drawback to adding an sgr string is that termcap also assumes that
- sgr0 does not exit alternate character set mode.
-
- Terminals with the "magic cookie" glitch (<STRONG>xmc</STRONG>) deposit special "cook-
- ies" when they receive mode-setting sequences, which affect the display
- algorithm rather than having extra bits for each character. Some ter-
- minals, such as the HP 2621, automatically leave standout mode when
- they move to a new line or the cursor is addressed. Programs using
- standout mode should exit standout mode before moving the cursor or
- sending a newline, unless the <STRONG>msgr</STRONG> capability, asserting that it is
+ some implementations rely on sgr being given if sgr0 is, Not all
+ terminfo entries necessarily have an sgr string, however. Many
+ terminfo entries are derived from termcap entries which have no sgr
+ string. The only drawback to adding an sgr string is that termcap also
+ assumes that sgr0 does not exit alternate character set mode.
+
+ Terminals with the "magic cookie" glitch (<STRONG>xmc</STRONG>) deposit special
+ "cookies" when they receive mode-setting sequences, which affect the
+ display algorithm rather than having extra bits for each character.
+ Some terminals, such as the HP 2621, automatically leave standout mode
+ when they move to a new line or the cursor is addressed. Programs
+ using standout mode should exit standout mode before moving the cursor
+ or sending a newline, unless the <STRONG>msgr</STRONG> capability, asserting that it is
safe to move in standout mode, is present.
If the terminal has a way of flashing the screen to indicate an error
pressed, this information can be given. Note that it is not possible
to handle terminals where the keypad only works in local (this applies,
for example, to the unshifted HP 2621 keys). If the keypad can be set
- to transmit or not transmit, give these codes as <STRONG>smkx</STRONG> and <STRONG>rmkx</STRONG>. Other-
- wise the keypad is assumed to always transmit.
+ to transmit or not transmit, give these codes as <STRONG>smkx</STRONG> and <STRONG>rmkx</STRONG>.
+ Otherwise the keypad is assumed to always transmit.
The codes sent by the left arrow, right arrow, up arrow, down arrow,
and home keys can be given as <STRONG>kcub1,</STRONG> <STRONG>kcuf1,</STRONG> <STRONG>kcuu1,</STRONG> <STRONG>kcud1,</STRONG> and <STRONG>khome</STRONG>
The capabilities <STRONG>nlab</STRONG>, <STRONG>lw</STRONG> and <STRONG>lh</STRONG> define the number of programmable
screen labels and their width and height. If there are commands to
- turn the labels on and off, give them in <STRONG>smln</STRONG> and <STRONG>rmln</STRONG>. <STRONG>smln</STRONG> is nor-
- mally output after one or more pln sequences to make sure that the
+ turn the labels on and off, give them in <STRONG>smln</STRONG> and <STRONG>rmln</STRONG>. <STRONG>smln</STRONG> is
+ normally output after one or more pln sequences to make sure that the
change becomes visible.
<STRONG>o</STRONG> <STRONG>is1</STRONG>, <STRONG>is2</STRONG>, and <STRONG>is3</STRONG>, initialization strings for the terminal,
- <STRONG>o</STRONG> <STRONG>iprog</STRONG>, the path name of a program to be run to initialize the ter-
- minal,
+ <STRONG>o</STRONG> <STRONG>iprog</STRONG>, the path name of a program to be run to initialize the
+ terminal,
<STRONG>o</STRONG> and <STRONG>if</STRONG>, the name of a file containing long initialization strings.
The <STRONG>reset</STRONG> program writes strings including <STRONG>iprog</STRONG>, etc., in the same
order as the <EM>init</EM> program, using <STRONG>rs1</STRONG>, etc., instead of <STRONG>is1</STRONG>, etc. If
any of <STRONG>rs1</STRONG>, <STRONG>rs2</STRONG>, <STRONG>rs3</STRONG>, or <STRONG>rf</STRONG> reset capability strings are missing, the
- <STRONG>reset</STRONG> program falls back upon the corresponding initialization capabil-
- ity string.
+ <STRONG>reset</STRONG> program falls back upon the corresponding initialization
+ capability string.
If there are commands to set and clear tab stops, they can be given as
<STRONG>tbc</STRONG> (clear all tab stops) and <STRONG>hts</STRONG> (set a tab stop in the current column
command, although the two programs (<STRONG>tput</STRONG> and <STRONG>reset</STRONG>) provide different
command-line options.
- In practice, these terminfo capabilities are not often used in initial-
- ization of tabs (though they are required for the <STRONG>tabs</STRONG> program):
+ In practice, these terminfo capabilities are not often used in
+ initialization of tabs (though they are required for the <STRONG>tabs</STRONG> program):
<STRONG>o</STRONG> Almost all hardware terminals (at least those which supported tabs)
initialized those to every <EM>eight</EM> columns:
The only exception was the AT&T 2300 series, which set tabs to
every <EM>five</EM> columns.
- <STRONG>o</STRONG> In particular, developers of the hardware terminals which are com-
- monly used as models for modern terminal emulators provided docu-
- mentation demonstrating that <EM>eight</EM> columns were the standard.
+ <STRONG>o</STRONG> In particular, developers of the hardware terminals which are
+ commonly used as models for modern terminal emulators provided
+ documentation demonstrating that <EM>eight</EM> columns were the standard.
<STRONG>o</STRONG> Because of this, the terminal initialization programs <STRONG>tput</STRONG> and <STRONG>tset</STRONG>
use the <STRONG>tbc</STRONG> (<STRONG>clear_all_tabs</STRONG>) and <STRONG>hts</STRONG> (<STRONG>set_tab</STRONG>) capabilities
</PRE><H3><a name="h3-Delays-and-Padding">Delays and Padding</a></H3><PRE>
Many older and slower terminals do not support either XON/XOFF or DTR
handshaking, including hard copy terminals and some very archaic CRTs
- (including, for example, DEC VT100s). These may require padding char-
- acters after certain cursor motions and screen changes.
+ (including, for example, DEC VT100s). These may require padding
+ characters after certain cursor motions and screen changes.
If the terminal uses xon/xoff handshaking for flow control (that is, it
automatically emits ^S back to the host when its input buffers are
close to full), set <STRONG>xon</STRONG>. This capability suppresses the emission of
- padding. You can also set it for memory-mapped console devices effec-
- tively that do not have a speed limit. Padding information should
- still be included so that routines can make better decisions about rel-
- ative costs, but actual pad characters will not be transmitted.
+ padding. You can also set it for memory-mapped console devices
+ effectively that do not have a speed limit. Padding information should
+ still be included so that routines can make better decisions about
+ relative costs, but actual pad characters will not be transmitted.
If <STRONG>pb</STRONG> (padding baud rate) is given, padding is suppressed at baud rates
below the value of <STRONG>pb</STRONG>. If the entry has no padding baud rate, then
Some terminals with status lines need special sequences to access the
status line. These may be expressed as a string with single parameter
<STRONG>tsl</STRONG> which takes the cursor to a given zero-origin column on the status
- line. The capability <STRONG>fsl</STRONG> must return to the main-screen cursor posi-
- tions before the last <STRONG>tsl</STRONG>. You may need to embed the string values of
- <STRONG>sc</STRONG> (save cursor) and <STRONG>rc</STRONG> (restore cursor) in <STRONG>tsl</STRONG> and <STRONG>fsl</STRONG> to accomplish
- this.
+ line. The capability <STRONG>fsl</STRONG> must return to the main-screen cursor
+ positions before the last <STRONG>tsl</STRONG>. You may need to embed the string values
+ of <STRONG>sc</STRONG> (save cursor) and <STRONG>rc</STRONG> (restore cursor) in <STRONG>tsl</STRONG> and <STRONG>fsl</STRONG> to
+ accomplish this.
The status line is normally assumed to be the same width as the width
of the terminal. If this is untrue, you can specify it with the
</PRE><H3><a name="h3-Line-Graphics">Line Graphics</a></H3><PRE>
Many terminals have alternate character sets useful for forms-drawing.
- Terminfo and <STRONG>curses</STRONG> have built-in support for most of the drawing char-
- acters supported by the VT100, with some characters from the AT&T
+ Terminfo and <STRONG>curses</STRONG> have built-in support for most of the drawing
+ characters supported by the VT100, with some characters from the AT&T
4410v1 added. This alternate character set may be specified by the
<STRONG>acsc</STRONG> capability.
--------------------------------------------------------------------
arrow pointing right ACS_RARROW > + 0x2b
arrow pointing left ACS_LARROW < , 0x2c
+
arrow pointing up ACS_UARROW ^ - 0x2d
arrow pointing down ACS_DARROW v . 0x2e
solid square block ACS_BLOCK # 0 0x30
<STRONG>o</STRONG> The DEC VT100 implemented graphics using the alternate character
set feature, temporarily switching <EM>modes</EM> and sending characters in
- the range 0x60 (96) to 0x7e (126) (the <STRONG>acsc</STRONG> <STRONG>Value</STRONG> column in the ta-
- ble).
+ the range 0x60 (96) to 0x7e (126) (the <STRONG>acsc</STRONG> <STRONG>Value</STRONG> column in the
+ table).
<STRONG>o</STRONG> The AT&T terminal added graphics characters outside that range.
is usually 8), and can set character-cell foreground and background
characters independently, mixing them into <EM>N</EM> * <EM>N</EM> color-pairs.
- <STRONG>o</STRONG> On HP-like terminals, the user must set each color pair up sepa-
- rately (foreground and background are not independently settable).
- Up to <EM>M</EM> color-pairs may be set up from 2*<EM>M</EM> different colors. ANSI-
- compatible terminals are Tektronix-like.
+ <STRONG>o</STRONG> On HP-like terminals, the user must set each color pair up
+ separately (foreground and background are not independently
+ settable). Up to <EM>M</EM> color-pairs may be set up from 2*<EM>M</EM> different
+ colors. ANSI-compatible terminals are Tektronix-like.
Some basic color capabilities are independent of the color method. The
numeric capabilities <STRONG>colors</STRONG> and <STRONG>pairs</STRONG> specify the maximum numbers of
(original pair) string resets foreground and background colors to their
default values for the terminal. The <STRONG>oc</STRONG> string resets all colors or
color-pairs to their default values for the terminal. Some terminals
- (including many PC terminal emulators) erase screen areas with the cur-
- rent background color rather than the power-up default background;
+ (including many PC terminal emulators) erase screen areas with the
+ current background color rather than the power-up default background;
these should have the boolean capability <STRONG>bce</STRONG>.
- While the curses library works with <EM>color</EM> <EM>pairs</EM> (reflecting the inabil-
- ity of some devices to set foreground and background colors indepen-
- dently), there are separate capabilities for setting these features:
-
- <STRONG>o</STRONG> To change the current foreground or background color on a Tek-
- tronix-type terminal, use <STRONG>setaf</STRONG> (set ANSI foreground) and <STRONG>setab</STRONG>
- (set ANSI background) or <STRONG>setf</STRONG> (set foreground) and <STRONG>setb</STRONG> (set back-
- ground). These take one parameter, the color number. The SVr4
- documentation describes only <STRONG>setaf</STRONG>/<STRONG>setab</STRONG>; the XPG4 draft says that
- "If the terminal supports ANSI escape sequences to set background
- and foreground, they should be coded as <STRONG>setaf</STRONG> and <STRONG>setab</STRONG>, respec-
- tively.
-
- <STRONG>o</STRONG> If the terminal supports other escape sequences to set background
- and foreground, they should be coded as <STRONG>setf</STRONG> and <STRONG>setb</STRONG>, respec-
- tively. The <STRONG>vidputs</STRONG> and the <STRONG><A HREF="curs_refresh.3x.html">refresh(3x)</A></STRONG> functions use the <STRONG>setaf</STRONG>
- and <STRONG>setab</STRONG> capabilities if they are defined.
-
- The <STRONG>setaf</STRONG>/<STRONG>setab</STRONG> and <STRONG>setf</STRONG>/<STRONG>setb</STRONG> capabilities take a single numeric argu-
- ment each. Argument values 0-7 of <STRONG>setaf</STRONG>/<STRONG>setab</STRONG> are portably defined as
- follows (the middle column is the symbolic #define available in the
- header for the <STRONG>curses</STRONG> or <STRONG>ncurses</STRONG> libraries). The terminal hardware is
- free to map these as it likes, but the RGB values indicate normal loca-
- tions in color space.
+ While the curses library works with <EM>color</EM> <EM>pairs</EM> (reflecting the
+ inability of some devices to set foreground and background colors
+ independently), there are separate capabilities for setting these
+ features:
+
+ <STRONG>o</STRONG> To change the current foreground or background color on a
+ Tektronix-type terminal, use <STRONG>setaf</STRONG> (set ANSI foreground) and <STRONG>setab</STRONG>
+ (set ANSI background) or <STRONG>setf</STRONG> (set foreground) and <STRONG>setb</STRONG> (set
+ background). These take one parameter, the color number. The SVr4
+ documentation describes only <STRONG>setaf</STRONG>/<STRONG>setab</STRONG>; the XPG4 draft says that
+ "If the terminal supports ANSI escape sequences to set background
+ and foreground, they should be coded as <STRONG>setaf</STRONG> and <STRONG>setab</STRONG>,
+ respectively.
+
+ <STRONG>o</STRONG> If the terminal supports other escape sequences to set background
+ and foreground, they should be coded as <STRONG>setf</STRONG> and <STRONG>setb</STRONG>,
+ respectively. The <STRONG>vidputs</STRONG> and the <STRONG><A HREF="curs_refresh.3x.html">refresh(3x)</A></STRONG> functions use the
+ <STRONG>setaf</STRONG> and <STRONG>setab</STRONG> capabilities if they are defined.
+
+ The <STRONG>setaf</STRONG>/<STRONG>setab</STRONG> and <STRONG>setf</STRONG>/<STRONG>setb</STRONG> capabilities take a single numeric
+ argument each. Argument values 0-7 of <STRONG>setaf</STRONG>/<STRONG>setab</STRONG> are portably defined
+ as follows (the middle column is the symbolic #define available in the
+ header for the <STRONG>curses</STRONG> or <STRONG>ncurses</STRONG> libraries). The terminal hardware is
+ free to map these as it likes, but the RGB values indicate normal
+ locations in color space.
<STRONG>Color</STRONG> <STRONG>#define</STRONG> <STRONG>Value</STRONG> <STRONG>RGB</STRONG>
black <STRONG>COLOR_BLACK</STRONG> 0 0, 0, 0
yellow <STRONG>COLOR_YELLOW</STRONG> 6 max,max,0
white <STRONG>COLOR_WHITE</STRONG> 7 max,max,max
- It is important to not confuse the two sets of color capabilities; oth-
- erwise red/blue will be interchanged on the display.
+ It is important to not confuse the two sets of color capabilities;
+ otherwise red/blue will be interchanged on the display.
- On an HP-like terminal, use <STRONG>scp</STRONG> with a color-pair number parameter to
+ On an HP-like terminal, use <STRONG>scp</STRONG> with a color-pair number parameter to
set which color pair is current.
Some terminals allow the <EM>color</EM> <EM>values</EM> to be modified:
- <STRONG>o</STRONG> On a Tektronix-like terminal, the capability <STRONG>ccc</STRONG> may be present to
- indicate that colors can be modified. If so, the <STRONG>initc</STRONG> capability
+ <STRONG>o</STRONG> On a Tektronix-like terminal, the capability <STRONG>ccc</STRONG> may be present to
+ indicate that colors can be modified. If so, the <STRONG>initc</STRONG> capability
will take a color number (0 to <STRONG>colors</STRONG> - 1)and three more parameters
- which describe the color. These three parameters default to being
- interpreted as RGB (Red, Green, Blue) values. If the boolean capa-
- bility <STRONG>hls</STRONG> is present, they are instead as HLS (Hue, Lightness,
+ which describe the color. These three parameters default to being
+ interpreted as RGB (Red, Green, Blue) values. If the boolean
+ capability <STRONG>hls</STRONG> is present, they are instead as HLS (Hue, Lightness,
Saturation) indices. The ranges are terminal-dependent.
- <STRONG>o</STRONG> On an HP-like terminal, <STRONG>initp</STRONG> may give a capability for changing a
- color-pair value. It will take seven parameters; a color-pair num-
- ber (0 to <STRONG>max_pairs</STRONG> - 1), and two triples describing first back-
- ground and then foreground colors. These parameters must be (Red,
- Green, Blue) or (Hue, Lightness, Saturation) depending on <STRONG>hls</STRONG>.
+ <STRONG>o</STRONG> On an HP-like terminal, <STRONG>initp</STRONG> may give a capability for changing a
+ color-pair value. It will take seven parameters; a color-pair
+ number (0 to <STRONG>max_pairs</STRONG> - 1), and two triples describing first
+ background and then foreground colors. These parameters must be
+ (Red, Green, Blue) or (Hue, Lightness, Saturation) depending on
+ <STRONG>hls</STRONG>.
- On some color terminals, colors collide with highlights. You can reg-
- ister these collisions with the <STRONG>ncv</STRONG> capability. This is a bit-mask of
- attributes not to be used when colors are enabled. The correspondence
- with the attributes understood by <STRONG>curses</STRONG> is as follows:
+ On some color terminals, colors collide with highlights. You can
+ register these collisions with the <STRONG>ncv</STRONG> capability. This is a bit-mask
+ of attributes not to be used when colors are enabled. The
+ correspondence with the attributes understood by <STRONG>curses</STRONG> is as follows:
<STRONG>Attribute</STRONG> <STRONG>Bit</STRONG> <STRONG>Decimal</STRONG> <STRONG>Set</STRONG> <STRONG>by</STRONG>
A_STANDOUT 0 1 sgr
A_BOLD 5 32 sgr
A_INVIS 6 64 sgr
A_PROTECT 7 128 sgr
-
A_ALTCHARSET 8 256 sgr
A_HORIZONTAL 9 512 sgr1
A_LEFT 10 1024 sgr1
pad character.
If the terminal can move up or down half a line, this can be indicated
- with <STRONG>hu</STRONG> (half-line up) and <STRONG>hd</STRONG> (half-line down). This is primarily use-
- ful for superscripts and subscripts on hard-copy terminals. If a hard-
- copy terminal can eject to the next page (form feed), give this as <STRONG>ff</STRONG>
- (usually control/L).
+ with <STRONG>hu</STRONG> (half-line up) and <STRONG>hd</STRONG> (half-line down). This is primarily
+ useful for superscripts and subscripts on hard-copy terminals. If a
+ hard-copy terminal can eject to the next page (form feed), give this as
+ <STRONG>ff</STRONG> (usually control/L).
If there is a command to repeat a given character a given number of
- times (to save time transmitting a large number of identical charac-
- ters) this can be indicated with the parameterized string <STRONG>rep</STRONG>. The
- first parameter is the character to be repeated and the second is the
- number of times to repeat it. Thus, tparm(repeat_char, 'x', 10) is the
- same as "xxxxxxxxxx".
+ times (to save time transmitting a large number of identical
+ characters) this can be indicated with the parameterized string <STRONG>rep</STRONG>.
+ The first parameter is the character to be repeated and the second is
+ the number of times to repeat it. Thus, tparm(repeat_char, 'x', 10) is
+ the same as "xxxxxxxxxx".
If the terminal has a settable command character, such as the TEKTRONIX
4025, this can be indicated with <STRONG>cmdch</STRONG>. A prototype command character
is on, all text sent to the terminal will be sent to the printer. It
is undefined whether the text is also displayed on the terminal screen
when the printer is on. A variation <STRONG>mc5p</STRONG> takes one parameter, and
- leaves the printer on for as many characters as the value of the param-
- eter, then turns the printer off. The parameter should not exceed 255.
- All text, including <STRONG>mc4</STRONG>, is transparently passed to the printer while
- an <STRONG>mc5p</STRONG> is in effect.
+ leaves the printer on for as many characters as the value of the
+ parameter, then turns the printer off. The parameter should not exceed
+ 255. All text, including <STRONG>mc4</STRONG>, is transparently passed to the printer
+ while an <STRONG>mc5p</STRONG> is in effect.
</PRE><H3><a name="h3-Glitches-and-Braindamage">Glitches and Braindamage</a></H3><PRE>
Teleray terminals, where tabs turn all characters moved over to blanks,
should indicate <STRONG>xt</STRONG> (destructive tabs). Note: the variable indicating
- this is now "dest_tabs_magic_smso"; in older versions, it was tel-
- eray_glitch. This glitch is also taken to mean that it is not possible
- to position the cursor on top of a "magic cookie", that to erase stand-
- out mode it is instead necessary to use delete and insert line. The
- ncurses implementation ignores this glitch.
+ this is now "dest_tabs_magic_smso"; in older versions, it was
+ teleray_glitch. This glitch is also taken to mean that it is not
+ possible to position the cursor on top of a "magic cookie", that to
+ erase standout mode it is instead necessary to use delete and insert
+ line. The ncurses implementation ignores this glitch.
The Beehive Superbee, which is unable to correctly transmit the escape
or control/C characters, has <STRONG>xsb</STRONG>, indicating that the f1 key is used
problem, depending on the ROM.) Note that in older terminfo versions,
this capability was called "beehive_glitch"; it is now "no_esc_ctl_c".
- Other specific terminal problems may be corrected by adding more capa-
- bilities of the form <STRONG>x</STRONG><EM>x</EM>.
+ Other specific terminal problems may be corrected by adding more
+ capabilities of the form <STRONG>x</STRONG><EM>x</EM>.
</PRE><H3><a name="h3-Pitfalls-of-Long-Entries">Pitfalls of Long Entries</a></H3><PRE>
Long terminfo entries are unlikely to be a problem; to date, no entry
- has even approached terminfo's 4096-byte string-table maximum. Unfor-
- tunately, the termcap translations are much more strictly limited (to
- 1023 bytes), thus termcap translations of long terminfo entries can
+ has even approached terminfo's 4096-byte string-table maximum.
+ Unfortunately, the termcap translations are much more strictly limited
+ (to 1023 bytes), thus termcap translations of long terminfo entries can
cause problems.
The man pages for 4.3BSD and older versions of <STRONG>tgetent</STRONG> instruct the
the whole termcap file).
Then <STRONG>tgetent</STRONG> will overwrite memory, perhaps its stack, and probably
- core dump the program. Programs like telnet are particularly vulnera-
- ble; modern telnets pass along values like the terminal type automati-
- cally. The results are almost as undesirable with a termcap library,
- like SunOS 4.1.3 and Ultrix 4.4, that prints warning messages when it
- reads an overly long termcap entry. If a termcap library truncates
- long entries, like OSF/1 3.0, it is immune to dying here but will
- return incorrect data for the terminal.
+ core dump the program. Programs like telnet are particularly
+ vulnerable; modern telnets pass along values like the terminal type
+ automatically. The results are almost as undesirable with a termcap
+ library, like SunOS 4.1.3 and Ultrix 4.4, that prints warning messages
+ when it reads an overly long termcap entry. If a termcap library
+ truncates long entries, like OSF/1 3.0, it is immune to dying here but
+ will return incorrect data for the terminal.
The "after tc expansion" length will have a similar effect to the
above, but only for people who actually set TERM to that terminal type,
It is not wise to count on portability of binary terminfo entries
between commercial UNIX versions. The problem is that there are at
least two versions of terminfo (under HP-UX and AIX) which diverged
- from System V terminfo after SVr1, and have added extension capabili-
- ties to the string table that (in the binary format) collide with Sys-
- tem V and XSI Curses extensions.
+ from System V terminfo after SVr1, and have added extension
+ capabilities to the string table that (in the binary format) collide
+ with System V and XSI Curses extensions.
</PRE><H2><a name="h2-EXTENSIONS">EXTENSIONS</a></H2><PRE>
- Searching for terminal descriptions in <STRONG>$HOME/.terminfo</STRONG> and TER-
- MINFO_DIRS is not supported by older implementations.
+ Searching for terminal descriptions in <STRONG>$HOME/.terminfo</STRONG> and
+ TERMINFO_DIRS is not supported by older implementations.
Some SVr4 <STRONG>curses</STRONG> implementations, and all previous to SVr4, do not
interpret the %A and %O operators in parameter strings.
alternate-character-set mode (such modes may, among other things, map
CR and NL to characters that do not trigger local motions). The
<STRONG>ncurses</STRONG> implementation ignores <STRONG>msgr</STRONG> in <STRONG>ALTCHARSET</STRONG> mode. This raises
- the possibility that an XPG4 implementation making the opposite inter-
- pretation may need terminfo entries made for <STRONG>ncurses</STRONG> to have <STRONG>msgr</STRONG>
+ the possibility that an XPG4 implementation making the opposite
+ interpretation may need terminfo entries made for <STRONG>ncurses</STRONG> to have <STRONG>msgr</STRONG>
turned off.
The <STRONG>ncurses</STRONG> library handles insert-character and insert-character modes
specified, even if it is zero.
Different commercial ports of terminfo and curses support different
- subsets of the XSI Curses standard and (in some cases) different exten-
- sion sets. Here is a summary, accurate as of October 1995:
+ subsets of the XSI Curses standard and (in some cases) different
+ extension sets. Here is a summary, accurate as of October 1995:
<STRONG>o</STRONG> <STRONG>SVR4,</STRONG> <STRONG>Solaris,</STRONG> <STRONG>ncurses</STRONG> -- These support all SVr4 capabilities.
<STRONG>o</STRONG> <STRONG>SGI</STRONG> -- Supports the SVr4 set, adds one undocumented extended string
capability (<STRONG>set_pglen</STRONG>).
- <STRONG>o</STRONG> <STRONG>SVr1,</STRONG> <STRONG>Ultrix</STRONG> -- These support a restricted subset of terminfo capa-
- bilities. The booleans end with <STRONG>xon_xoff</STRONG>; the numerics with
+ <STRONG>o</STRONG> <STRONG>SVr1,</STRONG> <STRONG>Ultrix</STRONG> -- These support a restricted subset of terminfo
+ capabilities. The booleans end with <STRONG>xon_xoff</STRONG>; the numerics with
<STRONG>width_status_line</STRONG>; and the strings with <STRONG>prtr_non</STRONG>.
<STRONG>o</STRONG> <STRONG>HP/UX</STRONG> -- Supports the SVr1 subset, plus the SVr[234] numerics
</PRE><H2><a name="h2-SEE-ALSO">SEE ALSO</a></H2><PRE>
- <STRONG><A HREF="tabs.1.html">tabs(1)</A></STRONG>, <STRONG><A HREF="tic.1m.html">tic(1m)</A></STRONG>, <STRONG><A HREF="infocmp.1m.html">infocmp(1m)</A></STRONG>, <STRONG><A HREF="ncurses.3x.html">curses(3x)</A></STRONG>, <STRONG><A HREF="curs_color.3x.html">curs_color(3x)</A></STRONG>, <STRONG>curs_vari-</STRONG>
- <STRONG><A HREF="curs_variables.3x.html">ables(3x)</A></STRONG>, <STRONG>printf(3)</STRONG>, <STRONG><A HREF="term.5.html">term(5)</A></STRONG>. <STRONG><A HREF="term_variables.3x.html">term_variables(3x)</A></STRONG>. <STRONG><A HREF="user_caps.5.html">user_caps(5)</A></STRONG>.
+ <STRONG><A HREF="infocmp.1m.html">infocmp(1m)</A></STRONG>, <STRONG><A HREF="tabs.1.html">tabs(1)</A></STRONG>, <STRONG><A HREF="tic.1m.html">tic(1m)</A></STRONG>, <STRONG><A HREF="ncurses.3x.html">curses(3x)</A></STRONG>, <STRONG><A HREF="curs_color.3x.html">curs_color(3x)</A></STRONG>,
+ <STRONG><A HREF="curs_variables.3x.html">curs_variables(3x)</A></STRONG>, <STRONG>printf(3)</STRONG>, <STRONG><A HREF="term_variables.3x.html">term_variables(3x)</A></STRONG>. <STRONG><A HREF="term.5.html">term(5)</A></STRONG>.
+ <STRONG><A HREF="user_caps.5.html">user_caps(5)</A></STRONG>.
</PRE><H2><a name="h2-AUTHORS">AUTHORS</a></H2><PRE>
- Zeyd M. Ben-Halim, Eric S. Raymond, Thomas E. Dickey. Based on pcurses
+ Zeyd M. Ben-Halim, Eric S. Raymond, Thomas E. Dickey. Based on <EM>pcurses</EM>
by Pavel Curtis.
<li><a href="#h3-Basic-Capabilities">Basic Capabilities</a></li>
<li><a href="#h3-Parameterized-Strings">Parameterized Strings</a></li>
<li><a href="#h3-Cursor-Motions">Cursor Motions</a></li>
+<li><a href="#h3-Margins">Margins</a></li>
<li><a href="#h3-Area-Clears">Area Clears</a></li>
<li><a href="#h3-Insert_delete-line-and-vertical-motions">Insert/delete line and vertical motions</a></li>
<li><a href="#h3-Insert_Delete-Character">Insert/Delete Character</a></li>