initscr, newterm, endwin, isendwin, set_term, delscreen -
curses screen initialization and manipulation routines
#include <curses.h>
WINDOW *initscr(void);
int endwin(void);
bool isendwin(void);
SCREEN *newterm(const char *type, FILE *outfd, FILE
*infd);
SCREEN *set_term(SCREEN *new);
void delscreen(SCREEN* sp);
initscr is normally the first curses routine to call when
initializing a program. A few special routines sometimes
need to be called before it; these are slk_init, filter,
ripoffline, use_env. For multiple-terminal applications,
newterm may be called before initscr.
The initscr code determines the terminal type and initializes
all curses data structures. initscr also causes the
first call to refresh to clear the screen. If errors
occur, initscr writes an appropriate error message to
standard error and exits; otherwise, a pointer is returned
to stdscr.
A program that outputs to more than one terminal should
use the newterm routine for each terminal instead of
initscr. A program that needs to inspect capabilities, so
it can continue to run in a line-oriented mode if the terminal
cannot support a screen-oriented program, would also
use newterm. The routine newterm should be called once
for each terminal. It returns a variable of type SCREEN *
which should be saved as a reference to that terminal.
The 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 will be used). The program must also
call endwin for each terminal being used before exiting
from curses. If newterm is called 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 non-visual 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, and FALSE
otherwise.
The set_term routine is used to switch between different
terminals. The screen reference new becomes the new current
terminal. The previous terminal is returned by the
routine. This is the only routine which 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 do
this, so delscreen should be called after endwin if a particular
SCREEN is no longer needed.
endwin returns the integer ERR upon failure and OK upon
successful completion.
Routines that return pointers always return NULL on error.
Note that initscr and newterm may be macros.
These functions are described in the XSI Curses standard,
Issue 4. It specifies that portable applications must not
call initscr more than once.
Old versions of curses, e.g., BSD 4.4, may have returned a
null pointer from initscr when an error is detected,
rather than exiting. It is safe but redundant to check
the return value of initscr in XSI Curses.
curses(3), curs_kernel(3), curs_refresh(3), curs_slk(3),
curs_util(3)
[ Back ] |