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CDIALOG()			 User commands			     CDIALOG()

NAME
       dialog -	display	dialog boxes from shell	scripts

SYNOPSIS
       cdialog --clear
       cdialog --create-rc file
       cdialog --print-maxsize
       cdialog common-options box-options

DESCRIPTION
       Cdialog	is  a program that will	let you	present	a variety of questions
       or display messages using dialog	boxes  from  a	shell  script.	 These
       types  of  dialog boxes are implemented (though not all are necessarily
       compiled	into cdialog):

	      buildlist, calendar, checklist, dselect, editbox,	form, fselect,
	      gauge, infobox, inputbox,	inputmenu, menu, mixedform,
	      mixedgauge, msgbox (message), passwordbox, passwordform, pause,
	      prgbox, programbox, progressbox, radiolist, rangebox, tailbox,
	      tailboxbg, textbox, timebox, treeview, and yesno (yes/no).

       You can put more	than one dialog	box into a script:

          Use the "--and-widget" token	to force cdialog  to  proceed  to  the
	   next	dialog unless you have pressed ESC to cancel, or

          Simply  add	the  tokens  for  the next dialog box, making a	chain.
	   Cdialog stops chaining when	the  return  code  from	 a  dialog  is
	   nonzero, e.g., Cancel or No (see DIAGNOSTICS).

       Some  widgets,  e.g.,  checklist,  will write text to cdialog's output.
       Normally	that is	the standard error, but	there are options for changing
       this: "--output-fd", "--stderr" and "--stdout".	No text	is written  if
       the  Cancel  button  (or	 ESC) is pressed; cdialog exits	immediately in
       that case.

OPTIONS
       All options begin with "--" (two	ASCII  hyphens,	 for  the  benefit  of
       those using systems with	deranged locale	support).

       A  "--"	by  itself  is	used as	an escape, i.e., the next token	on the
       command-line is not treated as  an  option.   This  is  different  from
       getopt(1),  which  uses	that  token  to	 treat the remaining tokens as
       parameters rather than options.

	      cdialog --title -- --Not an option
	      cdialog --title This -- --title is not an	option

       Cdialog uses no parameters, and uses its	own options parser.

       When a common (e.g., non-widget)	option is repeated, the	last found  is
       the  one	 that  is used.	 Boolean options are handled specially so they
       can be cancelled, by adding (or omitting) a  "no"  modifier  after  the
       leading	"--".	For  instance,	--no-shadow  is	 documented  here, but
       --shadow	also is	accepted.

       The "--args" option tells cdialog to list the  command-line  parameters
       to  the	standard error.	 This is useful	when debugging complex scripts
       using the "--" and "--file", since the command-line may be rewritten as
       these are expanded.

       The "--file" option tells cdialog to  read  parameters  from  the  file
       named as	its value.
	      cdialog --file parameterfile

       Blanks not within double-quotes are discarded (use backslashes to quote
       single  characters).   The  result  is  inserted	into the command-line,
       replacing  "--file"  and	 its  option  value.   Interpretation  of  the
       command-line  resumes  from  that  point.  If parameterfile begins with
       "&", cdialog interprets the following text as a file descriptor	number
       rather than a filename.

       Most  widgets  accept height and	width parameters, which	can be used to
       automatically size the widget to	accommodate multi-line message	prompt
       values:

          If the parameter is negative, cdialog uses the screen's size.

          If  the parameter is	zero, cdialog uses minimum size	for the	widget
	   to display the prompt and data.

          Otherwise, cdialog uses the given size for the widget.

   Common Options
       Most of the common options are reset before processing each widget.

       --ascii-lines
	      Rather than draw graphics	lines around boxes, draw ASCII "+" and
	      "-" in the same place.  See also "--no-lines".

       --aspect	ratio
	      This gives you some control over the box dimensions  when	 using
	      auto  sizing (specifying 0 for height and	width).	 It represents
	      width / height.  The default is 9, which means 9 characters wide
	      to every 1 line high.

       --backtitle backtitle
	      Specifies	a backtitle string to be displayed on the backdrop, at
	      the top of the screen.

       --begin y x
	      Specify the position of the upper	left corner of a dialog	box on
	      the screen.

       --cancel-label string
	      Override the label used for "Cancel" buttons.

       --clear
	      Clears  the  widget  screen,  keeping  only   the	  screen_color
	      background.    Use   this	  when	 you   combine	 widgets  with
	      "--and-widget" to	erase the contents of a	previous widget	on the
	      screen, so it won't be seen under	the contents  of  a  following
	      widget.	Understand  this as the	complement of "--keep-window".
	      To compare the effects, use these:

	      All three	widgets	visible, staircase effect, ordered 1,2,3:

	      cdialog \
					     --begin 2 2 --yesno "" 0 0	\
		  --and-widget		     --begin 4 4 --yesno "" 0 0	\
		  --and-widget		     --begin 6 6 --yesno "" 0 0

	      Only the last widget is left visible:

	      cdialog \
			       --clear	     --begin 2 2 --yesno "" 0 0	\
		  --and-widget --clear	     --begin 4 4 --yesno "" 0 0	\
		  --and-widget		     --begin 6 6 --yesno "" 0 0

	      All three	widgets	visible, staircase effect, ordered 3,2,1:

	      cdialog \
			       --keep-window --begin 2 2 --yesno "" 0 0	\
		  --and-widget --keep-window --begin 4 4 --yesno "" 0 0	\
		  --and-widget		     --begin 6 6 --yesno "" 0 0

	      First and	third widget visible, staircase	effect,	ordered	3,1:

	      cdialog \
			       --keep-window --begin 2 2 --yesno "" 0 0	\
		  --and-widget --clear	     --begin 4 4 --yesno "" 0 0	\
		  --and-widget		     --begin 6 6 --yesno "" 0 0

	      Note, if you want	to restore original console  colors  and  send
	      your  cursor  home  after	the dialog program has exited, use the
	      clear(1) command.	 Conversely, if	you want to clear  the	screen
	      and send your cursor to the lower	left after the cdialog program
	      has exited, use the --erase-on-exit option.

       --color-mode code
	      Extend the --colors option to the	content	of programbox, tailbox
	      and textbox.  Use	code "2" for this feature.

       --colors
	      Interpret	 embedded  "\Z"	 sequences  in	the dialog text	by the
	      following	character, which tells cdialog to set colors or	 video
	      attributes:

	      	  0  through  7	 are  the  ANSI	 color numbers used in curses:
		  black, red, green, yellow, blue,  magenta,  cyan  and	 white
		  respectively.

	      	  Bold is set by 'b', reset by 'B'.

	      	  Reverse is set by 'r', reset by 'R'.

	      	  Underline is set by 'u', reset by 'U'.

	      	  The  settings	 are  cumulative,  e.g.,  "\Zb\Z1"  makes  the
		  following text bold (perhaps bright) red.

	      	  Restore normal settings with "\Zn".

       --column-separator string
	      Tell cdialog to split data for radio/checkboxes and menus	on the
	      occurrences of the given string, and to  align  the  split  data
	      into columns.

       --cr-wrap
	      Interpret	 embedded  newlines in the dialog text as a newline on
	      the screen.  Otherwise,  cdialog	will  only  wrap  lines	 where
	      needed to	fit inside the text box.

	      Even  though you can control line	breaks with this, Cdialog will
	      still wrap any lines that	are too	long for the width of the box.
	      Without cr-wrap, the layout of your text	may  be	 formatted  to
	      look  nice  in  the source code of your script without affecting
	      the way it will look in the dialog.

	      The cr-wrap feature is implemented subject to these conditions:

	      	  the string contains "\n" and the  --no-nl-expand  option  is
		  not used, or

	      	  the --trim option is used.

	      For more information, see	Whitespace Options.

       --create-rc file
	      When  cdialog  supports run-time configuration, this can be used
	      to dump a	sample configuration file to  the  file	 specified  by
	      file.

       --cursor-off-label
	      Place  the  terminal cursor at the end of	a button instead of on
	      the first	character of the button	 label.	  This	is  useful  to
	      reduce  visual  confusion	 when  the cursor coloration interacts
	      poorly with the button-label text	colors.

       --date-format format
	      If the host provides strftime, this option allows	you to specify
	      the format of the	date printed for the --calendar	 widget.   The
	      time of day (hour, minute, second) are the current local time.

       --defaultno
	      Make  the	default	value of the yes/no box	a No.  Likewise, treat
	      the default button of widgets that provide "OK" and "Cancel"  as
	      a	 Cancel.   If "--no-cancel" or "--visit-items" are given those
	      options overrides	this, making the default button	 always	 "Yes"
	      (internally the same as "OK").

       --default-button	string
	      Set   the	  default   (preselected)  button  in  a  widget.   By
	      preselecting a button, a script makes it possible	for  the  user
	      to  simply  press	Enter to proceed through a dialog with minimum
	      interaction.

	      The option's value is the	name of	the button: ok,	 yes,  cancel,
	      no, help or extra.

	      Normally	the  first  button in each widget is the default.  The
	      first button shown is determined by the widget together with the
	      "--no-ok"	and "--no-cancel" options.   If	 this  option  is  not
	      given, there is no default button	assigned.

       --default-item string
	      Set the default item in a	checklist, form	or menu	box.  Normally
	      the first	item in	the box	is the default.

       --erase-on-exit
	      When cdialog exits, remove the dialog widget, erasing the	entire
	      screen  to  its  native background color,	and place the terminal
	      cursor at	the lower left corner.

       --exit-label string
	      Override the label used for "EXIT" buttons.

       --extra-button
	      Show an extra button, between "OK" and "Cancel" buttons.

	      The extra	button appears between "Yes" and "No"  for  the	 yesno
	      widget.

       --extra-label string
	      Override	 the  label  used  for	"Extra"	 buttons.   Note:  for
	      inputmenu	widgets, this defaults to "Rename".

       --help Prints the help message to the standard output and  exits.   The
	      help  message  is	also printed if	no options are given, or if an
	      unrecognized option is given.

       --help-button
	      Show a help-button after "OK"  and  "Cancel"  buttons  in	 boxes
	      which  have  a list of tagged items (i.e., checklist, radiolist,
	      menu, and	treeview boxes).

	      The help-button appears after  "Yes"  and	 "No"  for  the	 yesno
	      widget.

	      On  exit,	 the  return status indicates that the Help button was
	      pressed.	Cdialog	also writes a message to its output after  the
	      token "HELP":

	      	  If  "--item-help"  is	 also  given,  the  item-help  text is
		  written.

	      	  Otherwise, the item's	tag (the first field) is written.

	      You  can	 use   the   --help-tags   option   and/or   set   the
	      DIALOG_ITEM_HELP	environment  variable to modify	these messages
	      and exit-status.

	      This option can be applied to other widgets, which have an  "OK"
	      button,  whether or not the "Cancel" button is used.  The	return
	      status and output	 are  not  treated  specially  for  the	 other
	      widgets; the help-button is just an extra	button.

       --help-label string
	      Override the label used for "Help" buttons.

       --help-status
	      If  the help-button is selected, writes the checklist, radiolist
	      or form information  after  the  item-help  "HELP"  information.
	      This  can	 be used to reconstruct	the state of a checklist after
	      processing the help request.

       --help-tags
	      Modify the messages written on exit for --help-button by	making
	      them  always just	the item's tag.	 This does not affect the exit
	      status code.

       --hfile filename
	      Display the given	file using a textbox when the user presses F1.

       --hline string
	      Display the given	string centered	at the bottom of the widget.

       --ignore
	      Ignore options that cdialog does not recognize.  Some well-known
	      ones such	as "--icon" are	ignored	anyway,	but this is  a	better
	      choice for compatibility with other implementations.

       --input-fd fd
	      Read  keyboard  input  from  the	given  file  descriptor.  Most
	      cdialog scripts read from	the  standard  input,  but  the	 gauge
	      widget  reads  a	pipe  (which  is always	standard input).  Some
	      configurations do	not work properly when cdialog tries to	reopen
	      the terminal.  Use this option  (with  appropriate  juggling  of
	      file-descriptors)	 if  your  script  must	 work  in that type of
	      environment.

       --insecure
	      Makes the	password widget	friendlier but less secure, by echoing
	      asterisks	for each character.

       --iso-week
	      Set  the	starting  point	 for  the  week-number	shown  in  the
	      "--calendar"   option   according	  to  ISO-8601,	 which	starts
	      numbering	with the first	week  which  includes  a  Thursday  in
	      January.

       --item-help
	      Interpret	 the tags data for checklist, radiolist	and menu boxes
	      adding a column which is displayed in the	 bottom	 line  of  the
	      screen, for the currently	selected item.

       --keep-tite
	      When built with ncurses, cdialog normally	checks to see if it is
	      running  in  an  xterm,  and  in that case tries to suppress the
	      initialization  strings  that  would  make  it  switch  to   the
	      alternate	 screen.   Switching  between the normal and alternate
	      screens is visually distracting in a script which	 runs  cdialog
	      several  times.	Use  this option to allow cdialog to use those
	      initialization strings.

       --keep-window
	      Normally	when  cdialog  performs	 several   tailboxbg   widgets
	      connected	 by  "--and-widget", it	clears the old widget from the
	      screen by	painting over it.  Use this option  to	suppress  that
	      repainting.

	      At  exit,	 cdialog  repaints  all	of the widgets which have been
	      marked with "--keep-window", even	 if  they  are	not  tailboxbg
	      widgets.	 That  causes  them  to	be repainted in	reverse	order.
	      See the discussion of the	"--clear" option for examples.

       --last-key
	      At exit, report the last key which the user  entered.   This  is
	      the  curses  key code rather than	a symbol or literal character,
	      and is only reported for keys which are bound to an action.   It
	      can be used by scripts to	distinguish between two	keys which are
	      bound to the same	action.

       --max-input size
	      Limit  input  strings  to	the given size.	 If not	specified, the
	      limit is 2048.

       --no-cancel
	      Suppress the "Cancel" button in checklist, inputbox and menu box
	      modes.  A	script can still test if the user pressed the ESC  key
	      to cancel	to quit.

       --no-collapse
	      Normally	cdialog	 converts  tabs	to spaces and reduces multiple
	      spaces to	a single space	for  text  which  is  displayed	 in  a
	      message  boxes,  etc.   Use this option to disable that feature.
	      Note  that  cdialog  will	 still	wrap  text,  subject  to   the
	      "--cr-wrap" and "--trim" options.

	      The   no-collapse	  feature  is  implemented  subject  to	 these
	      conditions:

	      	  the string contains "\n" and the  --no-nl-expand  option  is
		  not used, or

	      	  the --trim option is not used.

	      For more information, see	Whitespace Options.

       --no-hot-list
	      Tells  cdialog  to  suppress the hotkey feature for lists, e.g.,
	      the checkbox, menus.

	      Normally,	the first uppercase character of a list	entry will  be
	      highlighted,  and	 typing	 that character	will move the focus to
	      that entry.  This	option suppresses both	the  highlighting  and
	      the movement.

	      Hotkeys for buttons ("OK"	, "Cancel", etc.) are unaffected.

       --no-items
	      Some  widgets  (checklist, inputmenu, radiolist, menu) display a
	      list with	two columns (a "tag" and "item", i.e., "description").
	      This option tells	cdialog	to read	 shorter  rows,	 omitting  the
	      "item"  part of the list.	 This is occasionally useful, e.g., if
	      the tags provide enough information.

	      See also --no-tags.  If both options  are	 given,	 this  one  is
	      ignored.

       --no-kill
	      Tells  cdialog  to  put  the  tailboxbg  box  in the background,
	      printing its process id to cdialog's output.  SIGHUP is disabled
	      for the background process.

       --no-label string
	      Override the label used for "No" buttons.

       --no-lines
	      Rather than draw lines around boxes, draw	 spaces	 in  the  same
	      place.  See also "--ascii-lines".

       --no-mouse
	      Do not enable the	mouse.

       --no-nl-expand
	      Do  not  convert "\n" substrings of the message/prompt text into
	      literal newlines.

	      The no-nl-expand feature is used only  if	 the  string  contains
	      "\n" so that there is something to convert.

	      For more information, see	Whitespace Options.

       --no-ok
	      Suppress the "OK"	button,	so that	it is not displayed.  A	script
	      can still	test if	the user pressed the "Enter" key to accept the
	      data:

	      	  The  "Enter"	key  is	always handled as the "OK" button when
		  the --no-ok option is	used.  That is,	by default it is bound
		  to the LEAVE virtual key.

		  When --no-ok is not used, you	can use	the  the  Tab  key  to
		  move	the  cursor  through  the  fields  and	buttons	on the
		  widget.  In that case, the "Enter" key activates the current
		  button if the	cursor is positioned on	a button.

	      	  To provide for the case where	you want to activate a	button
		  when	using  --no-ok,	 there	is  another virtual key	LEAVE,
		  which	activates the current button.  By default, ^D (EOF) is
		  bound	to that	key.

       --no-shadow
	      Suppress shadows that would be drawn to the right	and bottom  of
	      each dialog box.

       --no-tags
	      Some  widgets  (checklist, inputmenu, radiolist, menu) display a
	      list with	two columns (a "tag" and "description").  The  tag  is
	      useful  for scripting, but may not help the user.	 The --no-tags
	      option (from Xdialog) may	be used	to suppress the	column of tags
	      from the display.	 Unlike	the --no-items option, this  does  not
	      affect the data which is read from the script.

	      Xdialog  does  not  display  the	tag  column  for the analogous
	      buildlist	and treeview widgets; cdialog does the same.

	      Normally cdialog allows you to quickly move to  entries  on  the
	      displayed	 list,	by  matching  a	 single	character to the first
	      character	of the tag.   When  the	 --no-tags  option  is	given,
	      cdialog  matches against the first character of the description.
	      In either	case, the matchable character is highlighted.

       --ok-label string
	      Override the label used for "OK" buttons.

       --output-fd fd
	      Direct output  to	 the  given  file  descriptor.	 Most  cdialog
	      scripts write to the standard error, but error messages may also
	      be written there,	depending on your script.

       --separator string

       --output-separator string
	      Specify  a  string  that	will  separate the output on cdialog's
	      output   from   checklists,   rather   than   a	newline	  (for
	      --separate-output)  or  a	 space.	 This applies to other widgets
	      such as forms and	editboxes which	normally use a newline.

       --print-maxsize
	      Print the	maximum	size of	dialog boxes, i.e., the	 screen	 size,
	      to  cdialog's  output.   This  may  be used alone, without other
	      options.

       --print-size
	      Prints the size of each dialog box to cdialog's output when  the
	      box is initialized.

       --print-text-only string	[ height [ width ] ]
	      Prints  the  string  as  it would	be wrapped in a	message	box to
	      cdialog's	output.

	      Because the optional height and width default to zero,  if  they
	      are   omitted,   cdialog	 autosizes  according  to  the	screen
	      dimensions.

       --print-text-size string	[ height [ width ] ]
	      Prints the size of the string  as	 it  would  be	wrapped	 in  a
	      message box, to cdialog's	output,	as

	      height width

	      Because  the  optional  height  and  width parameters default to
	      zero, if they are	omitted, cdialog autosizes  according  to  the
	      screen dimensions.

       --print-version
	      Prints  cdialog's	version	to cdialog's output.  This may be used
	      alone, without other options.  It	does not cause cdialog to exit
	      by itself.

       --quoted
	      Normally cdialog quotes the strings returned by  checklist's  as
	      well as the item-help text.  Use this option to quote all	string
	      results  as needed (i.e.,	if the string contains whitespace or a
	      single or	double-quote character).

       --reorder
	      By default, the buildlist	widget uses the	 same  order  for  the
	      output (right) list as for the input (left).  Use	this option to
	      tell cdialog to use the order in which a user adds selections to
	      the output list.

       --scrollbar
	      For  widgets  holding a scrollable set of	data, draw a scrollbar
	      on its right-margin.  This does not respond to the mouse.

       --separate-output
	      For certain widgets  (buildlist,	checklist,  treeview),	output
	      result  one  line	 at a time, with no quoting.  This facilitates
	      parsing by another program.

       --separate-widget string
	      Specify a	string that will  separate  the	 output	 on  cdialog's
	      output  from  each widget.  This is used to simplify parsing the
	      result of	a dialog with several widgets.	If this	option is  not
	      given, the default separator string is a tab character.

       --single-quoted
	      Use single-quoting as needed (and	no quotes if unneeded) for the
	      output of	checklist's as well as the item-help text.

	      If  this option is not set, cdialog may use double quotes	around
	      each item.  In either case, cdialog adds backslashes to make the
	      output useful in shell scripts.

	      Single quotes would be needed if the string contains  whitespace
	      or a single or double-quote character.

       --size-err
	      Check  the  resulting  size of a dialog box before trying	to use
	      it, printing the resulting size if it is larger than the screen.
	      (This  option  is	 obsolete,  since  all	new-window  calls  are
	      checked).

       --sleep secs
	      Sleep (delay) for	the given number of seconds after processing a
	      dialog box.

       --stderr
	      Direct output to the standard error.  This is the	default, since
	      curses normally writes screen updates to the standard output.

       --stdout
	      Direct  output  to the standard output.  This option is provided
	      for compatibility	with Xdialog, however  using  it  in  portable
	      scripts  is  not	recommended,  since curses normally writes its
	      screen updates to	the standard output.  If you use this  option,
	      cdialog  attempts	 to reopen the terminal	so it can write	to the
	      display.	Depending on the platform and your  environment,  that
	      may fail.

       --tab-correct
	      Convert  each  tab  character  to	 one  or  more spaces (for the
	      textbox widget; otherwise	to a single space).   Otherwise,  tabs
	      are  rendered  according to the curses library's interpretation.
	      The --no-collapse	option disables	tab expansion.

       --tab-len n
	      Specify the number of spaces that	a tab  character  occupies  if
	      the  "--tab-correct"  option  is given.  The default is 8.  This
	      option is	only effective for the textbox widget.

       --time-format format
	      If the host provides strftime, this option allows	you to specify
	      the format of the	time printed for the  --timebox	 widget.   The
	      day,  month,  year values	in this	case are for the current local
	      time.

       --timeout secs
	      Timeout if no user response within the given number of  seconds.
	      A	timeout	of zero	seconds	is ignored.

	      Normally	a timeout causes an ESC	character to be	entered	in the
	      current widget, cancelling it.  Other widgets may	 still	be  on
	      the  screen;  these  are	not cancelled.	Set the	DIALOG_TIMEOUT
	      environment variable to tell cdialog to directly	exit  instead,
	      i.e., cancelling all widgets on the screen.

	      This  option  is	ignored	 by  the "--pause" widget.  It is also
	      overridden if the	background "--tailboxbg" option	is used	to set
	      up multiple concurrent widgets.

       --title title
	      Specifies	a title	string to be  displayed	 at  the  top  of  the
	      dialog box.

       --trace filename
	      logs   the   command-line	  parameters,	keystrokes  and	 other
	      information to the given file.  If  cdialog  reads  a  configure
	      file,  it	is logged as well.  Piped input	to the gauge widget is
	      logged.  Use control/T to	log a picture of  the  current	dialog
	      window.

	      The   cdialog   program  handles	some  command-line  parameters
	      specially, and removes them from the parameter list as they  are
	      processed.   For	example,  if the first option is --trace, then
	      that is processed	(and removed) before cdialog  initializes  the
	      display.

       --week-start day
	      sets  the	 starting  day	for the	week, used in the "--calendar"
	      option.  The day parameter can be

	      	  a number (0 to 6, Sunday through Saturday using POSIX) or

	      	  the special value "locale" (this works  with	systems	 using
		  glibc,  providing  an	 extension  to the locale command, the
		  first_weekday	value).

	      	  a string matching one	of the abbreviations for  the  day  of
		  the  week  shown  in	the  calendar  widget,	e.g., "Mo" for
		  "Monday".

       --trim eliminate	leading	blanks,	trim  literal  newlines	 and  repeated
	      blanks from message text.

	      The trim feature is implemented subject to these conditions:

	      	  the string does not contain "\n" or

	      	  the --no-nl-expand option is used.

	      For more information, see	Whitespace Options.

	      See also the "--cr-wrap" and "--no-collapse" options.

       --version
	      Prints cdialog's version to the standard output, and exits.  See
	      also "--print-version".

       --visit-items
	      Modify  the  tab-traversal  of checklist,	radiolist, menubox and
	      inputmenu	to include the list of items as	 one  of  the  states.
	      This  is useful as a visual aid, i.e., the cursor	position helps
	      some users.

	      When this	option is given, the cursor is initially placed	on the
	      list.  Abbreviations (the	first letter of	the tag) apply to  the
	      list  items.   If	you tab	to the button row, abbreviations apply
	      to the buttons.

       --yes-label string
	      Override the label used for "Yes"	buttons.

   Box Options
       All dialog boxes	have at	least three parameters:

       text   the caption or contents of the box.

       height the height of the	dialog box.

       width  the width	of the dialog box.

       Other parameters	depend on the box type.

       --buildlist text	height width list-height [ tag item status ] ...
	      A	buildlist dialog displays two lists, side-by-side.   The  list
	      on the left shows	unselected items.  The list on the right shows
	      selected	items.	As items are selected or unselected, they move
	      between the lists.

	      Use a carriage return or the "OK"	button to accept  the  current
	      value  in	the selected-window and	exit.  The results are written
	      using the	order displayed	in the selected-window.

	      The initial on/off state of each entry is	specified by status.

	      The dialog behaves like  a  menu,	 using	the  --visit-items  to
	      control  whether	the  cursor  is	 allowed  to  visit  the lists
	      directly.

	      	  If --visit-items is not given, tab-traversal uses two	states
		  (OK/Cancel).

	      	  If --visit-items is given, tab-traversal  uses  four	states
		  (Left/Right/OK/Cancel).

	      Whether  or  not	--visit-items is given,	it is possible to move
	      the highlight between the	two lists using	the default "^"	(left-
	      column) and "$" (right-column) keys.

	      On exit, a list of the tag strings of  those  entries  that  are
	      turned on	will be	printed	on cdialog's output.

	      If the "--separate-output" option	is not given, the strings will
	      be  quoted  as  needed to	make it	simple for scripts to separate
	      them.  By	default, this uses double-quotes, as needed.  See  the
	      "--single-quoted"	option,	which modifies the quoting behavior.

       --calendar text height width day	month year
	      A	 calendar  box	displays  month,  day  and  year in separately
	      adjustable windows.  If the values for day, month	 or  year  are
	      missing or negative, the current date's corresponding values are
	      used.   You  can	increment  or decrement	any of those using the
	      left-, up-, right-, and down-arrows.  Use	vi-style h, j, k and l
	      for moving around	the array of days in  a	 month.	  Use  tab  or
	      backtab  to move between windows.	 If the	year is	given as zero,
	      the current date is used as an initial value.

	      On exit, the date	is printed in the  form	 day/month/year.   The
	      format can be overridden using the --date-format option.

       --checklist text	height width list-height [ tag item status ] ...
	      A	 checklist  box	 is  similar to	a menu box; there are multiple
	      entries presented	in the form of a menu.	Another	difference  is
	      that  you	 can  indicate	which  entry is	currently selected, by
	      setting its status to on.	 Instead of choosing one  entry	 among
	      the  entries,  each  entry  can be turned	on or off by the user.
	      The initial on/off state of each entry is	specified by status.

	      On exit, a list of the tag strings of  those  entries  that  are
	      turned on	will be	printed	on cdialog's output.

	      If the "--separate-output" option	is not given, the strings will
	      be  quoted  as  needed to	make it	simple for scripts to separate
	      them.  By	default, this uses double-quotes (as needed).  See the
	      "--single-quoted"	option,	which modifies the quoting behavior.

       --dselect filepath height width
	      The directory-selection dialog displays a	text-entry  window  in
	      which  you  can  type a directory, and above that	a windows with
	      directory	names.

	      Here filepath can	be a filepath  in  which  case	the  directory
	      window  will display the contents	of the path and	the text-entry
	      window will contain the preselected directory.

	      Use tab or arrow keys to move between the	windows.   Within  the
	      directory	 window,  use  the  up/down  arrow  keys to scroll the
	      current selection.   Use	the  space-bar	to  copy  the  current
	      selection	into the text-entry window.

	      Typing any printable characters switches focus to	the text-entry
	      window,  entering	 that  character  as  well  as	scrolling  the
	      directory	window to the closest match.

	      Use a carriage return or the "OK"	button to accept  the  current
	      value in the text-entry window and exit.

	      On  exit,	 the  contents of the text-entry window	are written to
	      cdialog's	output.

       --editbox filepath height width
	      The edit-box dialog displays a copy of the file.	You  may  edit
	      it using the backspace, delete and cursor	keys to	correct	typing
	      errors.	 It   also  recognizes	pageup/pagedown.   Unlike  the
	      --inputbox, you must tab to the  "OK"  or	 "Cancel"  buttons  to
	      close  the dialog.  Pressing the "Enter" key within the box will
	      split the	corresponding line.

	      On exit,	the  contents  of  the	edit  window  are  written  to
	      cdialog's	output.

       --form text height width	formheight [ label y x item y x	flen ilen ] ...
	      The form dialog displays a form consisting of labels and fields,
	      which are	positioned on a	scrollable window by coordinates given
	      in the script.  The field	length flen and	input-length ilen tell
	      how  long	the field can be.  The former defines the length shown
	      for a selected field, while the latter defines  the  permissible
	      length of	the data entered in the	field.

	      	  If  flen is zero, the	corresponding field cannot be altered.
		  and the contents  of	the  field  determine  the  displayed-
		  length.

	      	  If  flen  is	negative,  the	corresponding  field cannot be
		  altered, and the negated  value  of  flen  is	 used  as  the
		  displayed-length.

	      	  If ilen is zero, it is set to	flen.

	      Use  up/down  arrows  (or	 control/N, control/P) to move between
	      fields.  Use tab to move between windows.

	      On  exit,	 the  contents	of  the	 form-fields  are  written  to
	      cdialog's	 output,  each field separated by a newline.  The text
	      used to fill non-editable	fields (flen is	zero or	 negative)  is
	      not written out.

       --fselect filepath height width
	      The fselect (file-selection) dialog displays a text-entry	window
	      in  which	you can	type a filename	(or directory),	and above that
	      two windows with directory names and filenames.

	      Here filepath can	be a filepath  in  which  case	the  file  and
	      directory	 windows will display the contents of the path and the
	      text-entry window	will contain the preselected filename.

	      Use tab or arrow keys to move between the	windows.   Within  the
	      directory	 or  filename  windows,	 use the up/down arrow keys to
	      scroll the current selection.  Use the  space-bar	 to  copy  the
	      current selection	into the text-entry window.

	      Typing any printable characters switches focus to	the text-entry
	      window,  entering	 that  character  as  well  as	scrolling  the
	      directory	and filename windows to	the closest match.

	      Typing the  space	 character  forces  cdialog  to	 complete  the
	      current name (up to the point where there	may be a match against
	      more than	one entry).

	      Use  a  carriage return or the "OK" button to accept the current
	      value in the text-entry window and exit.

	      On exit, the contents of the text-entry window  are  written  to
	      cdialog's	output.

       --gauge text height width [percent]
	      A	 gauge	box displays a meter along the bottom of the box.  The
	      meter indicates the percentage.  New percentages are  read  from
	      standard	input,	one integer per	line.  The meter is updated to
	      reflect each new percentage.  If the standard  input  reads  the
	      string  "XXX",  then  the	 first	line  following	is taken as an
	      integer percentage, then subsequent lines	up  to	another	 "XXX"
	      are  used	for a new prompt.  The gauge exits when	EOF is reached
	      on the standard input.

	      The percent value	denotes	the initial percentage	shown  in  the
	      meter.  If not specified,	it is zero.

	      On  exit,	 no  text  is written to cdialog's output.  The	widget
	      accepts no input,	so the exit status is always OK.

       --infobox text height width
	      An info box is basically a message box.  However,	in this	 case,
	      cdialog  will  exit  immediately after displaying	the message to
	      the user.	 The screen is not cleared when	cdialog	exits, so that
	      the message will remain on the screen until  the	calling	 shell
	      script  clears it	later.	This is	useful when you	want to	inform
	      the user that some operations are	carrying on that  may  require
	      some time	to finish.

	      On  exit,	 no  text  is written to cdialog's output.  An OK exit
	      status is	returned.

       --inputbox text height width [init]
	      An input box is useful when  you	want  to  ask  questions  that
	      require  the  user  to input a string as the answer.  If init is
	      supplied it is  used  to	initialize  the	 input	string.	  When
	      entering	the  string, the backspace, delete and cursor keys can
	      be used to correct typing	errors.	 If the	input string is	longer
	      than can fit  in	the  dialog  box,  the	input  field  will  be
	      scrolled.

	      On exit, the input string	will be	printed	on cdialog's output.

       --inputmenu text	height width menu-height [ tag item ] ...
	      An inputmenu box is very similar to an ordinary menu box.	 There
	      are only a few differences between them:

	      1.  The	entries	  are  not  automatically  centered  but  left
		  adjusted.

	      2.  An extra button (called Rename) is  implied  to  rename  the
		  current item when it is pressed.

	      3.  It  is  possible to rename the current entry by pressing the
		  Rename button.  Then cdialog will  write  the	 following  on
		  cdialog's output.

		  RENAMED <tag>	<item>

       --menu text height width	menu-height [ tag item ] ...
	      As  its  name  suggests,	a menu box is a	dialog box that	can be
	      used to present a	list of	choices	in the form of a menu for  the
	      user to choose.  Choices are displayed in	the order given.  Each
	      menu entry consists of a tag string and an item string.  The tag
	      gives  the entry a name to distinguish it	from the other entries
	      in the menu.  The	item is	a short	description of the option that
	      the entry	represents.   The  user	 can  move  between  the  menu
	      entries by pressing the cursor keys, the first letter of the tag
	      as  a  hot-key, or the number keys 1 through 9.  There are menu-
	      height entries displayed in the menu at one time,	but  the  menu
	      will be scrolled if there	are more entries than that.

	      On  exit	the  tag  of  the chosen menu entry will be printed on
	      cdialog's	output.	 If the	"--help-button"	option is  given,  the
	      corresponding  help text will be printed if the user selects the
	      help button.

       --mixedform text	height width formheight	[ label	y x item y x flen ilen itype ] ...
	      The mixedform dialog displays a form consisting  of  labels  and
	      fields,  much  like  the	--form dialog.	It differs by adding a
	      field-type parameter to each field's description.	 Each  bit  in
	      the type denotes an attribute of the field:

	      1	   hidden, e.g., a password field.

	      2	   readonly, e.g., a label.

       --mixedgauge text height	width percent [	tag1 item1 ] ...
	      A	 mixedgauge  box displays a meter along	the bottom of the box.
	      The meter	indicates the percentage.

	      It also displays a list of the tag- and item-values at  the  top
	      of the box.  See cdialog(3) for the tag values.

	      The  text	is shown as a caption between the list and meter.  The
	      percent value denotes the	initial	percentage shown in the	meter.

	      No provision is made for reading data from the standard input as
	      --gauge does.

	      On exit, no text is written to  cdialog's	 output.   The	widget
	      accepts no input,	so the exit status is always OK.

       --msgbox	text height width
	      A	 message  box  is  very	 similar  to  a	 yes/no	box.  The only
	      difference between a message box and a  yes/no  box  is  that  a
	      message  box  has	 only  a  single  OK button.  You can use this
	      dialog box to display any	message	you like.  After  reading  the
	      message,	the  user can press the	ENTER key so that cdialog will
	      exit and the calling shell script	can continue its operation.

	      If the message is	too large for the space, cdialog may allow you
	      to scroll	it, provided that the underlying curses	implementation
	      is capable enough.  In this case,	a percentage is	shown  in  the
	      base of the widget.

	      On  exit,	 no text is written to cdialog's output.  Only an "OK"
	      button is	provided for input, but	an  ESC	 exit  status  may  be
	      returned.

       --pause text height width seconds
	      A	 pause	box displays a meter along the bottom of the box.  The
	      meter indicates how many seconds remain until  the  end  of  the
	      pause.   The  pause  exits  when	timeout	is reached or the user
	      presses the OK button (status OK)	or the user presses the	CANCEL
	      button or	Esc key.

       --passwordbox text height width [init]
	      A	password box is	similar	to an input box, except	that the  text
	      the user enters is not displayed.	 This is useful	when prompting
	      for  passwords or	other sensitive	information.  Be aware that if
	      anything is passed in "init", it will be visible in the system's
	      process table to casual snoopers.	 Also, it is very confusing to
	      the user to provide them with a  default	password  they	cannot
	      see.   For  these	 reasons,  using "init"	is highly discouraged.
	      See "--insecure" if you do not care about	your password.

	      On exit, the input string	will be	printed	on cdialog's output.

       --passwordform text height width	formheight [ label y x item y x	flen ilen ] ...
	      This is identical	to --form except  that	all  text  fields  are
	      treated as password widgets rather than inputbox widgets.

       --prgbox	text command height width

       --prgbox	command	height width
	      A	prgbox is very similar to a programbox.

	      This  dialog box is used to display the output of	a command that
	      is specified as an argument to prgbox.

	      After the	command	completes, the user can	press the ENTER	key so
	      that cdialog will	exit and the calling shell script can continue
	      its operation.

	      If four parameters are given, it displays	 the  text  under  the
	      title,  delineated  from the scrolling file's contents.  If only
	      three parameters are given, this text is omitted.

       --programbox text height	width

       --programbox height width
	      A	programbox  is	very  similar  to  a  progressbox.   The  only
	      difference  between  a  program box and a	progress box is	that a
	      program box displays an OK button	(but only  after  the  command
	      completes).

	      This  dialog  box	 is  used  to  display	the  piped output of a
	      command.	After the command completes, the user  can  press  the
	      ENTER key	so that	cdialog	will exit and the calling shell	script
	      can continue its operation.

	      If  three	 parameters  are given,	it displays the	text under the
	      title, delineated	from the scrolling file's contents.   If  only
	      two parameters are given,	this text is omitted.

       --progressbox text height width

       --progressbox height width
	      A	progressbox is similar to an tailbox, except that

	      a) rather	than displaying	the contents of	a file,
		 it displays the piped output of a command and

	      b) it will exit when it reaches the end of the file
		 (there	is no "OK" button).

	      If  three	 parameters  are given,	it displays the	text under the
	      title, delineated	from the scrolling file's contents.   If  only
	      two parameters are given,	this text is omitted.

       --radiolist text	height width list-height  [ tag	item status ] ...
	      A	 radiolist  box	is similar to a	menu box.  The only difference
	      is that you can indicate which entry is currently	 selected,  by
	      setting its status to on.

	      On  exit,	 the  tag of the selected item is written to cdialog's
	      output.

       --rangebox text height width min-value max-value	default-value
	      Allow the	user to	select from a range of values, e.g.,  using  a
	      slider.	The  dialog shows the current value as a bar (like the
	      gauge dialog).  Tabs or arrow keys move the cursor  between  the
	      buttons and the value.  When the cursor is on the	value, you can
	      edit it by:

	      left/right cursor	movement to select a digit to modify

	      +/-  characters to increment/decrement the digit by one

	      0	through	9
		   to set the digit to the given value

	      Some keys	are also recognized in all cursor positions:

	      home/end
		   set the value to its	maximum	or minimum

	      pageup/pagedown
		   increment the value so that the slider moves	by one column

       --tailbox file height width
	      Display  text  from  a  file  in a dialog	box, as	in a "tail -f"
	      command.	Scroll left/right  using  vi-style  'h'	 and  'l',  or
	      arrow-keys.  A '0' resets	the scrolling.

	      On  exit,	 no text is written to cdialog's output.  Only an "OK"
	      button is	provided for input, but	an  ESC	 exit  status  may  be
	      returned.

       --tailboxbg file	height width
	      Display  text  from a file in a dialog box as a background task,
	      as in a "tail -f &" command.  Scroll left/right  using  vi-style
	      'h' and 'l', or arrow-keys.  A '0' resets	the scrolling.

	      Cdialog  treats the background task specially if there are other
	      widgets (--and-widget) on	the screen concurrently.  Until	 those
	      widgets  are closed (e.g., an "OK"), cdialog will	perform	all of
	      the tailboxbg widgets in the same	process, polling for  updates.
	      You may use a tab	to traverse between the	widgets	on the screen,
	      and  close them individually, e.g., by pressing ENTER.  Once the
	      non-tailboxbg widgets are	closed,	cdialog	forks a	copy of	itself
	      into  the	 background,  and  prints  its	process	 id   if   the
	      "--no-kill" option is given.

	      On exit, no text is written to cdialog's output.	Only an	"EXIT"
	      button  is  provided  for	 input,	 but an	ESC exit status	may be
	      returned.

	      NOTE: Older versions of cdialog forked immediately and attempted
	      to update	 the  screen  individually.   Besides  being  bad  for
	      performance, it was unworkable.  Some older scripts may not work
	      properly with the	polled scheme.

       --textbox file height width
	      A	 text  box  lets  you display the contents of a	text file in a
	      dialog box.  It is like a	simple text file viewer.  The user can
	      move through the file by using the  cursor,  page-up,  page-down
	      and HOME/END keys	available on most keyboards.  If the lines are
	      too  long	to be displayed	in the box, the	LEFT/RIGHT keys	can be
	      used to scroll the text region horizontally.  You	may  also  use
	      vi-style	keys h,	j, k, and l in place of	the cursor keys, and B
	      or N in place of the page-up and page-down keys.	Scroll up/down
	      using vi-style 'k' and 'j', or  arrow-keys.   Scroll  left/right
	      using  vi-style  'h'  and	 'l', or arrow-keys.  A	'0' resets the
	      left/right scrolling.  For more  convenience,  vi-style  forward
	      and backward searching functions are also	provided.

	      On exit, no text is written to cdialog's output.	Only an	"EXIT"
	      button  is  provided  for	 input,	 but an	ESC exit status	may be
	      returned.

       --timebox text height [width hour minute	second]
	      A	dialog is displayed which allows you to	 select	 hour,	minute
	      and  second.   If	 the  values  for  hour,  minute or second are
	      missing or negative, the current date's corresponding values are
	      used.  You can increment or decrement any	 of  those  using  the
	      left-,  up-, right- and down-arrows.  Use	tab or backtab to move
	      between windows.

	      On exit, the result is printed in	the  form  hour:minute:second.
	      The format can be	overridden using the --time-format option.

       --treeview text height width list-height	[ tag item status depth	] ...
	      Display data organized as	a tree.	 Each group of data contains a
	      tag,  the	 text  to  display  for	 the item, its status ("on" or
	      "off") and the depth of the item in the tree.

	      Only one item can	be selected (like the radiolist).  The tag  is
	      not displayed.

	      On  exit,	 the  tag of the selected item is written to cdialog's
	      output.

       --yesno text height width
	      A	yes/no dialog box of size height rows by width columns will be
	      displayed.  The string specified by text is displayed inside the
	      dialog box.  If this string is too long to fit in	one  line,  it
	      will be automatically divided into multiple lines	at appropriate
	      places.  The text	string can also	contain	the sub-string "\n" or
	      newline  characters  `\n'	 to  control line breaking explicitly.
	      This dialog box is useful	for asking questions that require  the
	      user  to	answer	either	yes  or	 no.  The dialog box has a Yes
	      button and a No button, in which the user	can switch between  by
	      pressing the TAB key.

	      On exit, no text is written to cdialog's output.	In addition to
	      the  "Yes"  and  "No"  exit  codes (see DIAGNOSTICS) an ESC exit
	      status may be returned.

	      The codes	used for "Yes" and "No"	match those used for "OK"  and
	      "Cancel",	internally no distinction is made.

   Obsolete Options
       --beep This was used to tell the	original cdialog that it should	make a
	      beep  when  the separate processes of the	tailboxbg widget would
	      repaint the screen.

       --beep-after
	      Beep after a user	has completed a	widget by pressing one of  the
	      buttons.

   Whitespace Options
       These options can be used to transform whitespace (space, tab, newline)
       as dialog reads the script:
	      --cr-wrap, --no-collapse,	--no-nl-expand,	and --trim

       The options are not independent:

          Cdialog checks if the script	contains at least one "\n" and (unless
	   --no-nl-expand  is  set)  will  ignore the --no-collapse and	--trim
	   options.

          After checking for "\n"  and	 the  --no-nl-expand  option,  cdialog
	   handles the --trim option.

	   If	the   --trim   option	takes  effect,	then  cdialog  ignores
	   --no-collapse.  It changes sequences	of tabs, spaces	(and  newlines
	   unless -cr-wrap is set) to a	single space.

          If	neither	 the  "\n"  or	--trim	cases  apply,  cdialog	checks
	   --no-collapse to decide whether to reduce  sequences	 of  tabs  and
	   spaces to a single space.

	   In  this  case,  cdialog  ignores  --cr-wrap	 and  does  not	modify
	   newlines.

       Taking those dependencies into account, here is a table summarizing the
       behavior	for the	various	combinations of	options.   The	table  assumes
       that  the  script  contains  at	least one "\n" when the	--no-nl-expand
       option is not set.
	    cr-	   no-	      no-	  trim	 Result
	    wrap   collapse   nl-expand
	    -------------------------------------------------------------------
	    no	   no	      no	  no	 Convert tab to	space.
						 Convert newline to space.
						 Convert "\n" to newline.
	    no	   no	      no	  yes	 Convert tab to	space.
						 Convert newline to space.
						 Convert "\n" to newline.
	    no	   no	      yes	  no	 Convert tab to	space.	Do not
						 convert newline to space.
						 Convert multiple-space	to
						 single.  Show "\n" literally.
	    no	   no	      yes	  yes	 Convert tab to	space.
						 Convert multiple-space	to
						 single.  Convert newline to
						 space.	 Show "\n" literally.
	    no	   yes	      no	  no	 Convert newline to space.
						 Convert "\n" to newline.
	    no	   yes	      no	  yes	 Convert newline to space.
						 Convert "\n" to newline.
	    no	   yes	      yes	  no	 Do not	convert	newline	to
						 space.	 Do not	reduce
						 multiple blanks.  Show	"\n"
						 literally.
	    no	   yes	      yes	  yes	 Convert multiple-space	to
						 single.  Convert newline to
						 space.	 Show "\n" literally.
	    yes	   no	      no	  no	 Convert tab to	space.	Wrap
						 on newline.  Convert "\n" to
						 newline.
	    yes	   no	      no	  yes	 Convert tab to	space.	Wrap
						 on newline.  Convert "\n" to
						 newline.
	    yes	   no	      yes	  no	 Convert tab to	space.	Do not
						 convert newline to space.
						 Convert multiple-space	to
						 single.  Show "\n" literally.
	    yes	   no	      yes	  yes	 Convert tab to	space.
						 Convert multiple-space	to
						 single.  Wrap on newline.
						 Show "\n" literally.
	    yes	   yes	      no	  no	 Wrap on newline.  Convert
						 "\n" to newline.
	    yes	   yes	      no	  yes	 Wrap on newline.  Convert
						 "\n" to newline.
	    yes	   yes	      yes	  no	 Do not	convert	newline	to
						 space.	 Do not	reduce
						 multiple blanks.  Show	"\n"
						 literally.
	    yes	   yes	      yes	  yes	 Convert multiple-space	to
						 single.  Wrap on newline.
						 Show "\n" literally.

RUN-TIME CONFIGURATION
       1.  Create a sample configuration file by typing:

	      cdialog --create-rc file

       2.  At start, cdialog determines	the settings to	use as follows:

	   a)  if environment variable DIALOGRC	is set,	its  value  determines
	       the name	of the configuration file.

	   b)  if  the	file in	(a) is not found, use the file $HOME/.dialogrc
	       as the configuration file.

	   c)  if the file in (b) is not found,	try using  the	GLOBALRC  file
	       determined at compile-time, i.e., /etc/dialogrc.

	   d)  if the file in (c) is not found,	use compiled in	defaults.

       3.  Edit	 the  sample configuration file	and copy it to some place that
	   cdialog can find, as	stated in step 2 above.

KEY BINDINGS
       You can override	or add to key bindings in cdialog  by  adding  to  the
       configuration  file.  Cdialog's bindkey command maps single keys	to its
       internal	coding.

	      bindkey widget curses_key	dialog_key

       The widget name can be "*" (all widgets), or specific widgets  such  as
       textbox.	  Specific  widget  bindings override the "*" bindings.	 User-
       defined bindings	override the built-in bindings.

       The curses_key can be expressed in different forms:

          It may be any of the	names derived from curses.h, e.g., "HELP" from
	   "KEY_HELP".

          Cdialog also	recognizes ANSI	control	characters such	as "^A", "^?",
	   as well as C1-controls such as "~A" and "~?".

          Finally, cdialog allows backslash escapes as	in C.	Those  can  be
	   octal character values such as "\033" (the ASCII escape character),
	   or the characters listed in this table:
		 Escaped   Actual
		 -------------------------------
		 \b	   backspace
		 \f	   form	feed
		 \n	   new line (line feed)
		 \r	   carriage return
		 \s	   space
		 \t	   tab
		 \^	   "^" (caret)
		 \?	   "?" (question mark)
		 \\	   "\" (backslash)
		 -------------------------------

       Cdialog's  internal  keycode names correspond to	the DLG_KEYS_ENUM type
       in dlg_keys.h, e.g., "HELP" from	"DLGK_HELP".

   Widget Names
       Some widgets (such as the formbox) have an area	where  fields  can  be
       edited.	 Those	are managed in a subwindow of the widget, and may have
       separate	keybindings from the main widget because  the  subwindows  are
       registered using	a different name.
	    Widget	  Window name	Subwindow Name
	    -------------------------------------------
	    calendar	  calendar
	    checklist	  checklist
	    editbox	  editbox	editbox2
	    form	  formbox	formfield
	    fselect	  fselect	fselect2
	    inputbox	  inputbox	inputbox2
	    menu	  menubox	menu
	    msgbox	  msgbox
	    pause	  pause
	    progressbox	  progressbox
	    radiolist	  radiolist
	    tailbox	  tailbox
	    textbox	  textbox	searchbox
	    timebox	  timebox
	    yesno	  yesno
	    -------------------------------------------

       Some  widgets  are  actually  other widgets, using internal settings to
       modify the behavior.  Those use the same	 widget	 name  as  the	actual
       widget:
	    Widget	   Actual Widget
	    -----------------------------
	    dselect	   fselect
	    infobox	   msgbox
	    inputmenu	   menu
	    mixedform	   form
	    passwordbox	   inputbox
	    passwordform   form
	    prgbox	   progressbox
	    programbox	   progressbox
	    tailboxbg	   tailbox
	    -----------------------------

   Built-in Bindings
       This  manual  page  does	 not  list  the	 key bindings for each widget,
       because that detailed information can be	obtained by  running  cdialog.
       If  you	have  set  the	--trace	option,	cdialog	writes the key-binding
       information for each widget as it is registered.

       A few bindings are built-in, independent	of particular widgets:
       Key		 Purpose
       -------------------------------------------------------------------
       Control-I	 forward tab-traversal,	e.g., with --tailboxbg.
       Control-L	 repaints the screen.
       Control-T	 writes	a screen dump to the --trace file.
       Control-V	 suppresses special-keys for the next input byte.
       DLGK_FIELD_NEXT	 forward tab-traversal,	like Control-I.
       DLGK_FIELD_PREV	 backward tab-traversal, like back-tab.
       DLGK_HELPFILE	 displays the help-file	specified with --hfile.
       KEY_BTAB		 backward tab-traversal, e.g., with --tailboxbg.
       -------------------------------------------------------------------

   Example
       Normally	cdialog	uses different keys for	navigating between the buttons
       and editing part	of a dialog versus navigating within the editing part.
       That is,	tab (and back-tab) traverse buttons (or	 between  buttons  and
       the  editing part), while arrow keys traverse fields within the editing
       part.  Tabs are also  recognized	 as  a	special	 case  for  traversing
       between widgets,	e.g., when using multiple tailboxbg widgets.

       Some  users  may	 wish  to  use	the same key for traversing within the
       editing part as for traversing between buttons.	 The  form  widget  is
       written	to  support this sort of redefinition of the keys, by adding a
       special group in	dlgk_keys.h for	"form"	(left/right/next/prev).	  Here
       is an example binding demonstrating how to do this:

	      bindkey formfield	TAB  form_NEXT
	      bindkey formbox	TAB  form_NEXT
	      bindkey formfield	BTAB form_prev
	      bindkey formbox	BTAB form_prev

       That  type  of redefinition would not be	useful in other	widgets, e.g.,
       calendar, due to	the potentially	large number of	fields to traverse.

EXIT STATUS
       Exit status is subject to being overridden  by  environment  variables.
       The  default  values  and  corresponding	environment variables that can
       override	them are:

       0    if the YES or OK button is pressed (DIALOG_OK).

       1    if the No or Cancel	button is pressed (DIALOG_CANCEL).

       2    if the Help	button is pressed (DIALOG_HELP),
	    except as noted below about	DIALOG_ITEM_HELP.

       3    if the Extra button	is pressed (DIALOG_EXTRA).

       4    if the Help	button is pressed,
	    and	the --item-help	option is set
	    and	the DIALOG_ITEM_HELP environment variable is set to 4.

	    While any of the exit-codes	can be	overridden  using  environment
	    variables,	this  special  case was	introduced in 2004 to simplify
	    compatibility.  Cdialog uses DIALOG_ITEM_HELP (4) internally,  but
	    unless  the	 environment  variable is also set, it changes that to
	    DIALOG_HELP	(2) on exit.

       5    if a timeout expires and the DIALOG_TIMEOUT	variable is set	to 5.

       -1   if errors occur inside cdialog  (DIALOG_ERROR)  or	cdialog	 exits
	    because the	ESC key	(DIALOG_ESC) was pressed.

ENVIRONMENT
       DIALOGOPTS     Define  this variable to apply any of the	common options
		      to each widget.  Most of the common  options  are	 reset
		      before  processing  each widget.	If you set the options
		      in  this	environment  variable,	they  are  applied  to
		      cdialog's	 state	after  the  reset.  As in the "--file"
		      option, double-quotes and	backslashes are	interpreted.

		      The "--file" option is not considered  a	common	option
		      (so   you	  cannot  embed	 it  within  this  environment
		      variable).

       DIALOGRC	      Define this variable if you want to specify the name  of
		      the configuration	file to	use.

       DIALOG_CANCEL

       DIALOG_ERROR

       DIALOG_ESC

       DIALOG_EXTRA

       DIALOG_HELP

       DIALOG_ITEM_HELP

       DIALOG_TIMEOUT

       DIALOG_OK      Define any of these variables to change the exit code on

		      	  Cancel (1),

		      	  error	(-1),

		      	  ESC (255),

		      	  Extra	(3),

		      	  Help (2),

		      	  Help with --item-help	(2),

		      	  Timeout (5), or

		      	  OK (0).

		      Normally shell scripts cannot distinguish	between	-1 and
		      255.

       DIALOG_TTY     Set  this	 variable to "1" to provide compatibility with
		      older versions of	cdialog	 which	assumed	 that  if  the
		      script   redirects   the	 standard   output,  that  the
		      "--stdout" option	was given.

FILES
       $HOME/.dialogrc	   default configuration file

PORTABILITY
       Cdialog works with X/Open curses.  However, some	 implementations  have
       deficiencies:

	     HPUX  curses  (and  perhaps  others)  do	not  open the terminal
	      properly	for  the  newterm  function.   This  interferes	  with
	      cdialog's	 --input-fd  option,  by  preventing  cursor-keys  and
	      similar escape sequences from being recognized.

	     NetBSD 5.1 curses	has incomplete	support	 for  wide-characters.
	      cdialog will build, but not all examples display properly.

COMPATIBILITY
       You may want to write scripts which run with other cdialog "clones".

   Original Dialog
       First,  there  is  the "original" cdialog program to consider (versions
       0.3 to 0.9).  It	had some misspelled (or	 inconsistent)	options.   The
       cdialog	program	 maps  those deprecated	options	to the preferred ones.
       They include:
	      Option	     Treatment
	      ---------------------------------
	      --beep-after   ignored
	      --guage	     mapped to --gauge
	      ---------------------------------

   Xdialog
       This is an X application, rather	than a terminal	 program.   With  some
       care,  it  is  possible	to  write  useful  scripts that	work with both
       Xdialog and cdialog.

       The cdialog program ignores  these  options  which  are	recognized  by
       Xdialog:
	      Option		 Treatment
	      -----------------------------------------------
	      --allow-close	 ignored
	      --auto-placement	 ignored
	      --fixed-font	 ignored
	      --icon		 ignored
	      --keep-colors	 ignored
	      --no-close	 ignored
	      --no-cr-wrap	 ignored
	      --screen-center	 ignored
	      --separator	 mapped	to --separate-output
	      --smooth		 ignored
	      --under-mouse	 ignored
	      --wmclass		 ignored
	      -----------------------------------------------

       Xdialog's  manpage  has	a  section  discussing	its compatibility with
       cdialog.	 There are some	differences not	shown  in  the	manpage.   For
       example,	the html documentation states

	      Note:  former  Xdialog  releases	used the "\n" (line feed) as a
	      results separator	 for  the  checklist  widget;  this  has  been
	      changed  to  "/"	in  Xdialog  v1.5.0 to make it compatible with
	      (c)dialog.  In your old scripts using the	Xdialog	checklist, you
	      will then	have to	add the	--separate-output  option  before  the
	      --checklist one.

       Cdialog	has  not used a	different separator; the difference was	likely
       due to confusion	regarding some script.

   Whiptail
       Then there is whiptail.	For practical purposes,	it  is	maintained  by
       Debian  (very  little  work  is	done by	its upstream developers).  Its
       documentation (README.whiptail) claims

	      whiptail(1) is a lightweight replacement for cdialog(1),
	      to provide dialog	boxes for shell	scripts.
	      It is built on the
	      newt windowing library rather than the ncurses library, allowing
	      it to be smaller in embedded environments	such as	installers,
	      rescue disks, etc.

	      whiptail is designed to be drop-in compatible with cdialog, but
	      has less features: some dialog boxes are not implemented,	such
	      as tailbox, timebox, calendarbox,	etc.

       Comparing actual	sizes (Debian testing, 2007/1/10): The total of	 sizes
       for  whiptail,  the  newt,  popt	 and  slang  libraries is 757 KB.  The
       comparable number for cdialog (counting ncurses)	is 520 KB.   Disregard
       the first paragraph.

       The  second  paragraph is misleading, since whiptail also does not work
       for common options of cdialog, such as the gauge	box.  whiptail is less
       compatible with cdialog than the	original mid-1990s dialog 0.4 program.

       whiptail's manpage borrows features from	cdialog, e.g., but oddly cites
       only cdialog versions up	to 0.4 (1994)  as  a  source.	That  is,  its
       manpage	refers	to  features  which  were  borrowed  from  more	recent
       versions	of cdialog, e.g.,

          --gauge (from 0.5)

          --passwordbox (from Debian changes in 1999),

          --default-item (from	cdialog	2000/02/22),

          --output-fd (from cdialog 2002/08/14).

       Debian uses whiptail for	the official cdialog variation.

       The cdialog program ignores or maps these options which are  recognized
       by whiptail:
	      Option		Treatment
	      -------------------------------------------
	      --cancel-button	mapped to --cancel-label
	      --fb		ignored
	      --fullbutton	ignored
	      --no-button	mapped to --no-label
	      --nocancel	mapped to --no-cancel
	      --noitem		mapped to --no-items
	      --notags		mapped to --no-tags
	      --ok-button	mapped to --ok-label
	      --scrolltext	mapped to --scrollbar
	      --topleft		mapped to --begin 0 0
	      --yes-button	mapped to --yes-label
	      -------------------------------------------

       There  are  visual  differences which are not addressed by command-line
       options:

          cdialog centers lists within	the window.  whiptail  typically  puts
	   lists against the left margin.

          whiptail  uses  angle  brackets  ("<" and ">") for marking buttons.
	   cdialog uses	square brackets.

          whiptail marks the limits of	subtitles with vertical	bars.  cdialog
	   does	not mark the limits.

          whiptail attempts to	mark the top/bottom cells of a scrollbar  with
	   up/down  arrows.  When it cannot do this, it	fills those cells with
	   the background color	of  the	 scrollbar  and	 confusing  the	 user.
	   cdialog  uses  the  entire  scrollbar space,	thereby	getting	better
	   resolution.

BUGS
       Perhaps.

EXAMPLES
       The cdialog sources contain several samples of how to use the different
       box options and how they	look.  Just take a  look  into	the  directory
       samples/	of the source.

AUTHORS
       Thomas E. Dickey	(updates for 0.9b and beyond)

       Kiran Cherupally	- the mixed form and mixed gauge widgets.

       Tobias C. Rittweiler

       Valery Reznic - the form	and progressbox	widgets.

       Yura Kalinichenko adapted the gauge widget as "pause".

       This  is	 a  rewrite (except as needed to provide compatibility)	of the
       earlier version of cdialog 0.9a,	which lists as authors:

          Savio Lam - version 0.3, "dialog"

          Stuart Herbert - patch for version 0.4

          Marc	Ewing -	the gauge widget.

          Pasquale De Marco "Pako" - version 0.9a, "cdialog"

				  2024-01-01			     CDIALOG()

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