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curs_pad
Section: Library calls (3X)Updated: 202-0-23
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NAME
newpad, subpad, prefresh, pnoutrefresh, pechochar, pecho_wchar - create and display curses padsSYNOPSIS
#include <curses.h> WINDOW *newpad(int nlines, int ncols); WINDOW *subpad(WINDOW *parent, int nlines, int ncols, int begin_y, int begin_x); int prefresh(WINDOW *pad, int pminrow, int pmincol, int sminrow, int smincol, int smaxrow, int smaxcol); int pnoutrefresh(WINDOW *pad, int pminrow, int pmincol, int sminrow, int smincol, int smaxrow, int smaxcol); int pechochar(WINDOW *pad, chtype ch); int pecho_wchar(WINDOW *pad, const cchar_t *wch);
DESCRIPTION
A curses pad is like a window, except that it is not restricted by the screen size, and is not necessarily associated with a particular part of the screen. Pads can be used when a large window is needed, only part of which is to be visible on the screen. Pads are not automatically refreshed by scrolling or inpu-echoing operations.Pads cannot be refreshed with wrefresh(3X); use prefresh or pnoutrefresh instead.
newpad
newpad creates and returns a pointer to a new pad data structure with the given number of lines, nlines, and columns, ncols.subpad
subpad creates and returns a pointer to a subwindow within a pad with the given number of lines, nlines, and columns, ncols. Unlike subwin(3X), which uses screen coordinates, the new pad is placed at position (begin_y, begin_x) relative to its parent. Thus, changes made to one pad can affect both. When operating on a subpad, it is often necessary to call touchwin(3X) or touchline(3X) on parent before calling prefresh.prefresh, pnoutrefresh
prefresh and pnoutrefresh are analogous to wrefresh(3X) and wnoutrefresh(3X) except that they operate on pads rather than windows. They require additional parameters are needed to indicate what portions of the pad and screen are involved..IP * 4 pminrow and pmincol specify the upper lef-hand corner of a rectangular view of the pad.
.IP * 4 sminrow, smincol, smaxrow, and smaxcol specify the vertices of the rectangle to be displayed on the screen.
The lower righ-hand corner of the rectangle to be displayed in the pad is calculated from the screen coordinates, since the rectangles must be the same size. Both rectangles must be entirely contained within their respective structures. curses treats negative values of any of these parameters as zero.
pechochar
pechochar is functionally equivalent to calling waddch(3X) followed by prefresh. It suggests to the curses optimizer that only a single character is being output; a considerable performance benefit may be thus enjoyed. The location of the character ch written to the pad is used to populate the arguments to prefresh.pecho_wchar
pecho_wchar is functionally equivalent to calling wadd_wch(3X) followed by prefresh. It suggests to the curses optimizer that only a single wide character is being output; a considerable performance benefit may be thus enjoyed. The location of the character wch written to the pad is used to populate the arguments to prefresh.RETURN VALUE
Functions that return an integer return ERR upon failure and OK upon successful completion.Functions that return pointers return a null pointer on failure, and set errno to ENOMEM.
In this implementation
-
- prefresh and pnoutrefresh
- return ERR if the window pointer is null, or if the window is not really a pad or if the area to refresh extends of-screen or if the minimum coordinates are greater than the maximum.
- pechochar
- returns ERR if the window is not really a pad, and the associated call to wechochar returns ERR.
- pecho_wchar
- returns ERR if the window is not really a pad, and the associated call to wecho_wchar returns ERR.
NOTES
pechochar may be implemented as a macro.
curses
documentation is traditionally averse to motivating the term
"pad".
The Apollo Aegis workstation operating system
(circa
1981)
supported a graphical pad feature.
.IP * 4
These graphical pads could be much larger than the computer's display.
.IP * 4
The rea-only output from a command could be scrolled back to inspect
and select text from the pad.
PORTABILITY
X/Open Curses Issue 4 describes these functions. It specifies no error conditions for them.SVr4 describes a successful return value only as "an integer value other than ERR".
The behavior of
subpad
if the parent window is not a pad is undocumented,
and is not checked by the vendor Unix implementations.
.IP * 4
SVr4
curses's
newpad
sets a flag in the
WINDOW
structure indicating that the window is a pad.
-
However,
it uses this information only in
waddch
(to decide if it should call
wrefresh)
and
wscrl
(to avoid scrolling a pad);
its
wrefresh
does not check it to ensure that a pad is properly updated.
.IP * 4 Solaris xcurses checks whether a window is a pad in its wnoutrefresh, returning ERR in that case. - However, it sets the flag on subwindows only if the parent window is a pad. Its newpad does not set this information. Consequently, the check never fails.
-
It makes no comparable check in
pnoutrefresh
- though interestingly enough,
a comment in the source code states that the lack of a check
was an MKS extension.
.IP * 4 NetBSD 7 curses sets a flag in the WINDOW structure for newpad and subpad, aiding itself to distinguish between wnoutrefresh and pnoutrefresh. - It does not check for the case where a subwindow is created in a pad using subwin or derwin.
- Its dupwin returns a regular window when duplicating a pad. Likewise, its getwin always returns a window, even if the saved data was from a pad.
ncurses:
.IP * 4
sets a flag in the
WINDOW
structure for
newpad
and
subpad,
.IP * 4
allows a
subwin
or
derwin
call to succeed having a pad parent
by forcing the subwindow to be a pad,
.IP * 4
checks in both
wnoutrefresh
and
pnoutrefresh
to ensure that pads and windows are handled distinctly,
and
.IP * 4
ensures that
dupwin
and
getwin
treat pads versus windows consistently.
HISTORY
SVr2 (1984) introduced newpad, prefresh, and pnoutrefresh, documenting them in a single line each.SVr3 (1987) added subpad and pechochar, and provided more extensive documentation.
The System V Interface Definition, Version 4 (1995), specified a function named pechowchar. This was a later addition to SVr4.x, not appearing in the first SVr4 (1989). It differs from X/Open's later pecho_wchar in that its wstr parameter was a chtype instead of a wchar_t, and was not const-qualified.
SEE ALSO
curses(3X), curs_addch(3X), curs_refresh(3X), curs_touch(3X)