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NAMEaddch, waddch, mvaddch, mvwaddch, echochar, wechochar - add a curses character to a window and advance the cursor SYNOPSIS#include <curses.h> int addch(const chtype ch); int waddch(WINDOW *win, const chtype ch); int mvaddch(int y, int x, const chtype ch); int mvwaddch(WINDOW *win, int y, int x, const chtype ch); int echochar(const chtype ch); int wechochar(WINDOW *win, const chtype ch); DESCRIPTIONAdding Characterswaddch puts the character ch at the cursor position of window win, then advances the cursor position, analogously to the standard C library's putchar(3). ncurses(3X) describes the variants of this function. If advancement occurs at the right margin,
If ch is a backspace, carriage return, line feed, or tab, the cursor moves appropriately within the window.
If ch is any other nonprintable character, it is drawn in printable form, using the same convention as unctrl(3X). Calling winch(3X) on the location of a nonprintable character does not return the character itself, but its unctrl(3X) representation. ch may contain rendering and/or color attributes, and others can be combined with the parameter by logically “or”ing with it. (A character with its attributes can be copied from place to place using winch(3X) and waddch.) See curs_attr(3X) for values of predefined video attribute constants that can be usefully “or”ed with characters. Echoing Charactersechochar and wechochar are equivalent to calling (w)addch followed by (w)refresh. curses interprets these functions as a hint that only a single character is being output; for non-control characters, a considerable performance gain may be enjoyed by employing them. Forms-Drawing Characterscurses defines macros starting with ACS_ that can be used with waddch to write line-drawing and other special characters to the screen. ncurses terms these forms-drawing characters. The ACS default listed below is used if the acs_chars (acsc) terminfo capability does not define a terminal-specific replacement for it, or if the terminal and locale configuration requires Unicode to access these characters but the library is unable to use Unicode. The “acsc char” column corresponds to how the characters are specified in the acs_chars string capability, and the characters in it may appear on the screen if the terminal's database entry incorrectly advertises ACS support. The name “ACS” originates in the Alternate Character Set feature of the DEC VT100 terminal.
RETURN VALUEThese functions return OK on success and ERR on failure. In ncurses, waddch returns ERR if it is not possible to add a complete character at the cursor position, as when conversion of a multibyte character to a byte sequence fails, or at least one of the resulting bytes cannot be added to the window. See section “PORTABILITY” below regarding the use of waddch with multibyte characters. waddch can successfully write a character at the bottom right location of the window. However, ncurses returns ERR if scrollok(3X) is not enabled in that event, because it is not possible to wrap to a new line. Functions prefixed with “mv” first perform cursor movement and fail if the position (y, x) is outside the window boundaries. NOTESaddch, mvaddch, mvwaddch, and echochar may be implemented as macros. PORTABILITYX/Open Curses, Issue 4 describes these functions. It specifies no error conditions for them. SVr4 curses describes a successful return value only as “an integer value other than ERR”. The defaults specified for forms-drawing characters apply in the POSIX locale. ACS SymbolsX/Open Curses states that the ACS_ definitions are char constants. Some implementations are problematic.
Some ACS symbols (ACS_S3, ACS_S7, ACS_LEQUAL, ACS_GEQUAL, ACS_PI, ACS_NEQUAL, and ACS_STERLING) were not documented in any publicly released System V. However, many publicly available terminfo entries include acsc strings in which their key characters (pryz{|}) are embedded, and a second-hand list of their character descriptions has come to light. The ncurses developers invented ACS-prefixed names for them. The displayed values of ACS_ constants depend on
In certain cases, the terminal is unable to display forms-drawing characters except by using UTF-8; see the discussion of the NCURSES_NO_UTF8_ACS environment variable in ncurses(3X)). Character SetX/Open Curses assumes that the parameter passed to waddch contains a single character. As discussed in curs_attr(3X), that character may have been more than eight bits wide in an SVr3 or SVr4 implementation, but in the X/Open Curses model, the details are not given. The important distinction between SVr4 curses and X/Open Curses is that the latter separates non-character information (attributes and color) from the character code, which SVr4 packs into a chtype for passage to waddch. In ncurses, chtype holds an eight-bit character. But the library allows a multibyte character to be passed in a succession of calls to waddch. Other implementations do not; a waddch call transmits exactly one character, which may be rendered in one or more screen locations depending on whether it is printable. Depending on the locale settings, ncurses inspects the byte passed in each waddch call, and checks whether the latest call continues a multibyte sequence. When a character is complete, ncurses displays the character and advances the cursor. If the calling application interrupts the succession of bytes in a multibyte character sequence by changing the current location—for example, with wmove(3X)—ncurses discards the incomplete character. For portability to other implementations, do not rely upon this behavior. Check whether a character can be represented as a single byte in the current locale.
TABSIZESVr4 and other versions of curses implement the TABSIZE variable, but X/Open Curses does not specify it (see curs_variables(3X)). SEE ALSOcurs_add_wch(3X) describes comparable functions of the ncurses library in its wide-character configuration (ncursesw). curses(3X), curs_addchstr(3X), curs_addstr(3X), curs_attr(3X), curs_clear(3X), curs_inch(3X), curs_outopts(3X), curs_refresh(3X), curs_variables(3X), putchar(3)
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