1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
|
<HTML>
<BODY>
<PRE>
<!-- Manpage converted by man2html 3.0.1 -->
</PRE>
<H2>NAME</H2><PRE>
<B>clearok</B>, <B>idlok</B>, <B>idcok</B> <B>immedok</B>, <B>leaveok</B>, <B>setscrreg</B>,
<B>wsetscrreg</B>, <B>scrollok</B>, <B>nl</B>, <B>nonl</B> - <B>curses</B> output options
</PRE>
<H2>SYNOPSIS</H2><PRE>
<B>#include</B> <B><curses.h></B>
<B>int</B> <B>clearok(WINDOW</B> <B>*win,</B> <B>bool</B> <B>bf);</B>
<B>int</B> <B>idlok(WINDOW</B> <B>*win,</B> <B>bool</B> <B>bf);</B>
<B>void</B> <B>idcok(WINDOW</B> <B>*win,</B> <B>bool</B> <B>bf);</B>
<B>void</B> <B>immedok(WINDOW</B> <B>*win,</B> <B>bool</B> <B>bf);</B>
<B>int</B> <B>leaveok(WINDOW</B> <B>*win,</B> <B>bool</B> <B>bf);</B>
<B>int</B> <B>setscrreg(int</B> <B>top,</B> <B>int</B> <B>bot);</B>
<B>int</B> <B>wsetscrreg(WINDOW</B> <B>*win,</B> <B>int</B> <B>top,</B> <B>int</B> <B>bot);</B>
<B>int</B> <B>scrollok(WINDOW</B> <B>*win,</B> <B>bool</B> <B>bf);</B>
<B>int</B> <B>nl(void);</B>
<B>int</B> <B>nonl(void);</B>
</PRE>
<H2>DESCRIPTION</H2><PRE>
These routines set options that change the style of output
within <B>curses</B>. All options are initially <B>FALSE</B>, unless
otherwise stated. It is not necessary to turn these
options off before calling <B>endwin</B>.
If <B>clearok</B> is called with <B>TRUE</B> as argument, the next call
to <B>wrefresh</B> with this window will clear the screen com-
pletely and redraw the entire screen from scratch. This
is useful when the contents of the screen are uncertain,
or in some cases for a more pleasing visual effect. If
the <I>win</I> argument to <B>clearok</B> is the global variable <B>curscr</B>,
the next call to <B>wrefresh</B> with any window causes the
screen to be cleared and repainted from scratch.
If <B>idlok</B> is called with <B>TRUE</B> as second argument, <B>curses</B>
considers using the hardware insert/delete line feature of
terminals so equipped. Calling <B>idlok</B> with <B>FALSE</B> as second
argument disables use of line insertion and deletion.
This option should be enabled only if the application
needs insert/delete line, for example, for a screen edi-
tor. It is disabled by default because insert/delete line
tends to be visually annoying when used in applications
where it isn't really needed. If insert/delete line can-
not be used, <B>curses</B> redraws the changed portions of all
lines.
If <B>idcok</B> is called with <B>FALSE</B> as second argument, <B>curses</B>
no longer considers using the hardware insert/delete char-
acter feature of terminals so equipped. Use of character
insert/delete is enabled by default. Calling <B>idcok</B> with
<B>TRUE</B> as second argument re-enables use of character inser-
tion and deletion.
If <B>immedok</B> is called with <B>TRUE</B> <B>as</B> <B>argument</B>, any change in
the window image, such as the ones caused by <B>waddch,</B>
<B>wclrtobot,</B> <B>wscrl</B>, <I>etc</I>., automatically cause a call to <B>wre-</B>
<B>fresh</B>. However, it may degrade performance considerably,
due to repeated calls to <B>wrefresh</B>. It is disabled by
default.
Normally, the hardware cursor is left at the location of
the window cursor being refreshed. The <B>leaveok</B> option
allows the cursor to be left wherever the update happens
to leave it. It is useful for applications where the cur-
sor is not used, since it reduces the need for cursor
motions. If possible, the cursor is made invisible when
this option is enabled.
The <B>setscrreg</B> and <B>wsetscrreg</B> routines allow the applica-
tion programmer to set a software scrolling region in a
window. <I>top</I> and <I>bot</I> are the line numbers of the top and
bottom margin of the scrolling region. (Line 0 is the top
line of the window.) If this option and <B>scrollok</B> are
enabled, an attempt to move off the bottom margin line
causes all lines in the scrolling region to scroll one
line in the direction of the first line. Only the text of
the window is scrolled. (Note that this has nothing to do
with the use of a physical scrolling region capability in
the terminal, like that in the VT100. If <B>idlok</B> is enabled
and the terminal has either a scrolling region or
insert/delete line capability, they will probably be used
by the output routines.)
The <B>scrollok</B> option controls what happens when the cursor
of a window is moved off the edge of the window or
scrolling region, either as a result of a newline action
on the bottom line, or typing the last character of the
last line. If disabled, (<I>bf</I> is <B>FALSE</B>), the cursor is left
on the bottom line. If enabled, (<I>bf</I> is <B>TRUE</B>), the window
is scrolled up one line (Note that in order to get the
physical scrolling effect on the terminal, it is also nec-
essary to call <B>idlok</B>).
The <B>nl</B> and <B>nonl</B> routines control whether the underlying
display device translates the return key into newline on
input, and whether it translates newline into return and
line-feed on output (in either case, the call <B>addch('\n')</B>
does the equivalent of return and line feed on the virtual
screen). Initially, these translations do occur. If you
disable them using <B>nonl</B>, <B>curses</B> will be able to make bet-
ter use of the line-feed capability, resulting in faster
cursor motion. Also, <B>curses</B> will then be able to detect
the return key.
</PRE>
<H2>RETURN VALUE</H2><PRE>
The functions <B>setscrreg</B> and <B>wsetscrreg</B> return <B>OK</B> upon suc-
cess and <B>ERR</B> upon failure. All other routines that return
an integer always return <B>OK</B>.
</PRE>
<H2>PORTABILITY</H2><PRE>
These functions are described in the XSI Curses standard,
Issue 4.
The XSI Curses standard is ambiguous on the question of
whether <B>raw</B>() should disable the CRLF translations con-
trolled by <B>nl</B>() and <B>nonl</B>(). BSD curses did turn off these
translations; AT&T curses (at least as late as SVr1) did
not. We choose to do so, on the theory that a programmer
requesting raw input wants a clean (ideally 8-bit clean)
connection that the operating system does not mess with.
Some historic curses implementations had, as an undocu-
mented feature, the ability to do the equivalent of
<B>clearok(...,</B> <B>1)</B> by saying <B>touchwin(stdscr)</B> or <B>clear(std-</B>
<B>scr)</B>. This will not work under ncurses.
Earlier System V curses implementations specified that
with <B>scrollok</B> enabled, any window modification triggering
a scroll also forced a physical refresh. XSI Curses does
not require this, and <B>ncurses</B> avoids doing it in order to
perform better vertical-motion optimization at <B>wrefresh</B>
time.
The XSI Curses standard does not mention that the cursor
should be made invisible as a side-effect of <B>leaveok</B>.
SVr4 curses documentation does this, but the code does
not. Use <B>curs_set</B> to make the cursor invisible.
</PRE>
<H2>NOTES</H2><PRE>
Note that <B>clearok</B>, <B>leaveok</B>, <B>scrollok</B>, <B>idcok</B>, <B>nl</B>, <B>nonl</B> and
<B>setscrreg</B> may be macros.
The <B>immedok</B> routine is useful for windows that are used as
terminal emulators.
</PRE>
<H2>SEE ALSO</H2><PRE>
<B><A HREF="ncurses.3x.html">curses(3x)</A></B>, <B><A HREF="curs_addch.3x.html">curs_addch(3x)</A></B>, <B><A HREF="curs_clear.3x.html">curs_clear(3x)</A></B>,
<B><A HREF="curs_initscr.3x.html">curs_initscr(3x)</A></B>, <B><A HREF="curs_scroll.3x.html">curs_scroll(3x)</A></B>, <B><A HREF="curs_refresh.3x.html">curs_refresh(3x)</A></B>
</PRE>
<HR>
<ADDRESS>
Man(1) output converted with
<a href="http://www.oac.uci.edu/indiv/ehood/man2html.html">man2html</a>
</ADDRESS>
</BODY>
</HTML>
|