curs_initscr, initscr, newterm, endwin, isendwin,
set_term, delscreen - Curses routines for screen initialization
and manipulation
#include <curses.h>
WINDOW *initscr(
void ); int endwin(
void ); int isendwin(
void ); SCREEN *newterm(
char *type,
FILE *outfd,
FILE *infd ); SCREEN *set_term(
SCREEN *new ); void delscreen(
SCREEN *sp );
Curses Library (libcurses)
Interfaces documented on this reference page conform to
industry standards as follows:
delscreen, initscr, endwin, isendwin, newterm,
set_term: XCURSES4.2
Refer to the standards(5) reference page for more information
about industry standards and associated tags.
The initscr routine is almost always the first routine
that applications call. (The exceptions are slk_init, filter,
ripoffline, use_env and, for multiple-terminal applications,
newterm). The initscr routine determines the
terminal type and initializes all Curses data structures.
The routine also causes the first call to refresh to clear
the screen. If errors occur, initscr writes an appropriate
error message to standard error and then exits; otherwise,
the routine returns a pointer to stdscr. If the program
needs an indication of error conditions, newterm should be
used instead of initscr; initscr should only be called
once per application.
A program that outputs to more than one terminal should
use the newterm routine for each terminal instead of
initscr. A program that needs an indication of error conditions,
so it can continue to run in a line-oriented mode
if the terminal cannot support a screen-oriented program,
would also use newterm. An application calls newterm once
for each terminal. The routine returns a variable of type
SCREEN * that should be saved as a reference to that terminal.
The routine's arguments are the type of the terminal
to be used in place of $TERM, a file pointer for output
to the terminal, and another file pointer for input
from the terminal. (If type is NULL, $TERM is used).
Before exiting Curses, the program must also call endwin
for each terminal being used. If the program calls newterm
more than once for the same terminal, the first terminal
referred to must be the last one for which endwin is
called.
A program should always call endwin before exiting or
escaping from Curses mode temporarily. This routine
restores tty modes, moves the cursor to the lower lefthand
corner of the screen, and resets the terminal into
the proper nonvisual mode. Calling refresh or doupdate
after a temporary escape causes the program to resume
visual mode.
The isendwin routine returns TRUE if endwin has been
called without any subsequent calls to wrefresh; otherwise,
the routine returns FALSE.
The set_term routine switches between different terminals.
The screen reference new becomes the new current terminal.
The routine returns the previous terminal. This is the
only routine that manipulates SCREEN pointers; all other
routines affect only the current terminal.
The delscreen routine frees storage associated with the
SCREEN data structure. The endwin routine does not perform
this operation, so applications should call delscreen
after endwin if a particular SCREEN is no longer needed.
Applications must also close file pointers passed to
newterm.
The header file <curses.h> automatically includes the
header file <stdio.h>.
The endwin routine returns the integer ERR upon failure
and OK upon successful completion.
Routines that return pointers always return NULL on error.
Functions: curses(3), curs_kernel(3), curs_refresh(3),
curs_slk(3), curs_util(3)
Others: standards(5)
curs_initscr(3)
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