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curs_variables(3)               Library calls              curs_variables(3)


NAME

       bool, chtype, cchar_t, attr_t, SCREEN, WINDOW, TRUE, FALSE, ERR, OK,
       curscr, newscr, stdscr, COLORS, COLOR_PAIRS, COLS, LINES, ESCDELAY,
       TABSIZE - curses data types, constants, and global variables


SYNOPSIS

       #include <curses.h>

       /* data types */
       typedef /* ... */ bool;
       typedef /* ... */ chtype;
       typedef /* ... */ cchar_t;
       typedef /* ... */ attr_t;
       typedef /* ... */ SCREEN;
       typedef /* ... */ WINDOW;

       /* constants */
       const bool TRUE;
       const bool FALSE;

       const /* ... */ ERR;
       const /* ... */ OK;

       /* variables */
       int COLORS;
       int COLOR_PAIRS;
       int COLS;
       int LINES;
       WINDOW * curscr;
       WINDOW * stdscr;

       /* extensions */
       int ESCDELAY;
       int TABSIZE;
       WINDOW * newscr;


DESCRIPTION

       This page summarizes data types, constants, and variables provided by
       the curses library.  Locate further discussion in curses(3X).

       Depending on ncurses's build-time configuration, the variables may
       instead be macros (see curs_threads(3X) and curs_opaque(3X)) that
       provide read-only access to the library's state.  In either case,
       applications should treat them as read-only to avoid confusing the
       library.


CONSTANTS

   TRUE, FALSE
       The curses library defines TRUE and FALSE to represent the values of
       the Boolean data type.

   ERR, OK
       curses and terminfo routines frequently return these constant integral
       values indicating failure and success, respectively.


PREDEFINED TYPES

   bool
       X/Open Issue 4 curses (1996) preceded the ISO C99 and ISO C++98
       standards, each of which also defined a Boolean data type.  The curses
       library requires an integral type bool.

       ncurses' configure script attempts to discover the data type used by
       the system's C and C++ compilers, to reuse for the curses bool.

   chtype
       The chtype integral type combines a ("narrow", 8-bit) character with
       attributes encoding the character's rendition, such as the styling of
       its typeface and/or foreground and background colors.  See, for
       example, addch(3X), attron(3X), and inch(3X).

   cchar_t, attr_t
       chtype is too small for the standard C library's wide-character type,
       wchar_t.  cchar_t is a type that can accommodate an attr_t and enough
       wide characters to store what Unicode terms a grapheme cluster (a
       "user-perceived character" [UAX #29], which may nevertheless require
       several character encoding units to represent).  attr_t is an integral
       type storing "wide" attributes that apply to cchar_ts.  See, for
       example, add_wch(3X), attr_on(3X), and in_wch(3X).

   SCREEN
       curses manages a terminal device with this structure type; see
       initscr(3X).

   WINDOW
       curses represents rectangular portions of the terminal screen with the
       WINDOW structure type; see subsection "Overview" of ncurses(3X).


VARIABLES

   curscr, stdscr, newscr
       The library records updates to the terminal screen in a window named
       curscr.  This object is referred to as the "physical screen" in
       curs_refresh(3X) and curs_outopts(3X).

       ncurses collects pending updates to the terminal screen in a window
       named newscr.  This object is referred to as the "virtual screen" in
       the curs_kernel(3X), curs_refresh(3X), and curs_outopts(3X).  When the
       screen is refreshed, curses determines a minimal set of updates using
       the terminal's capabilities to make curscr look like newscr.

       Once curses is initialized, it creates a window named stdscr.  It is
       the same size as the terminal screen and is the default window used by
       routines that do not take a parameter identifying one.  Many curses
       functions use this window.

   COLORS
       Once curses is initialized, COLORS contains the number of colors
       supported by the terminal; see curs_color(3X).

   COLOR_PAIRS
       Once curses is initialized, COLOR_PAIRS contains the number of color
       pairs supported by the terminal; see curs_color(3X).

   COLS, LINES
       Once curses is initialized, COLS and LINES contain the screen's width
       and height in character cells, respectively; that is, the number of
       columns and lines.

   ESCDELAY
       For curses to distinguish the ESC character resulting from a user's
       press of the "Escape" key on the input device from one beginning an
       escape sequence (as commonly produced by function keys), it waits after
       the escape character to see if further characters are available on the
       input stream within a short interval.  ESCDELAY stores this interval in
       milliseconds.

       If keypad(3X) is disabled for the curses window receiving input, a
       program must disambiguate escape sequences itself.

   TABSIZE
       The curses library converts a tab character to this number of spaces as
       it adds a tab to a window; see curs_addch(3X).


NOTES

       Either initscr(3X) or newterm(3X) initializes curses.

       If ncurses is configured to provide separate curses and tinfo
       libraries, most of these variables reside in the former.


PORTABILITY

       The X/Open Curses standard documents all of the foregoing types and
       symbols except for newscr, TABSIZE, and ESCDELAY.

       X/Open Curses describes curscr only as "an internal data structure";
       SVr4 gave more details, noting its use "for certain low-level
       operations like clearing and redrawing a screen containing garbage".
       Neither specified its interaction with the rest of the interface beyond
       use as an argument to clearok(3X) and wrefresh(3X).

       newscr is a feature of SVr4 curses.  When refreshing the screen, it is
       used as a working area for combining the standard window stdscr with
       any others the application may have created with newwin(3X).  When the
       update of newscr is complete, curses modifies curscr to match newscr.

       TABSIZE is a feature of SVr4 curses.

       o   SVr4 initially sets TABSIZE from the terminal description's
           init_tabs capability.  After that, it can be altered by
           applications using SVr4 curses.

       o   SVr4 curses uses the value of TABSIZE to compute the position of
           tab stops when updating both the virtual screen with addch(3X) and
           the physical screen with mvcur(3X).

       o   ncurses uses the value of TABSIZE only to update the virtual
           screen.  It uses the terminal description's "it" (init_tabs)
           capability for computing hardware tabs (that is, tab stops on the
           physical screen).

       o   Other implementations differ.  For instance, NetBSD curses allows
           TABSIZE to be set through an environment variable.  ncurses does
           not.

           NetBSD curses does not support hardware tabs; it uses the init_tabs
           capability and the TABSIZE variable only for updating the virtual
           screen.

       ESCDELAY is a feature of AIX curses.

       o   In AIX, the units for ESCDELAY are fifths of milliseconds.

       o   The default value for AIX's ESCDELAY equals 0.1 seconds.

       o   AIX also enforces a limit of 10,000 seconds for ESCDELAY; ncurses
           does not enforce any upper limit.

       ncurses has long used ESCDELAY with units of milliseconds, making it
       impossible to be completely compatible with AIX.  Consequently, most
       users have decided either to override the value, or to rely upon its
       default.


SEE ALSO

       curses(3X), curs_color(3X), curs_opaque(3X), curs_terminfo(3X),
       curs_threads(3X), term_variables(3X), terminfo(5)

       [UAX #29] "Unicode Standard Annex #29: Unicode Text Segmentation";
       <https://unicode.org/reports/tr29/>

ncurses 6.5                       2024-04-13                curs_variables(3)

ncurses 6.5 - Generated Thu May 2 15:49:40 CDT 2024
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