Skip site navigation (1)Skip section navigation (2)

FreeBSD Manual Pages

  
 
  

home | help
curs_window(3X)						       curs_window(3X)

NAME
       newwin, delwin, mvwin, subwin, derwin, mvderwin,	dupwin,	wsyncup,
       syncok, wcursyncup, wsyncdown - create curses windows

SYNOPSIS
       #include	<curses.h>

       WINDOW *newwin(
	     int nlines, int ncols,
	     int begin_y, int begin_x);
       int delwin(WINDOW *win);
       int mvwin(WINDOW	*win, int y, int x);
       WINDOW *subwin(WINDOW *orig,
	     int nlines, int ncols,
	     int begin_y, int begin_x);
       WINDOW *derwin(WINDOW *orig,
	     int nlines, int ncols,
	     int begin_y, int begin_x);
       int mvderwin(WINDOW *win, int par_y, int	par_x);
       WINDOW *dupwin(WINDOW *win);
       void wsyncup(WINDOW *win);
       int syncok(WINDOW *win, bool bf);
       void wcursyncup(WINDOW *win);
       void wsyncdown(WINDOW *win);

DESCRIPTION
   newwin
       Calling newwin creates and returns a pointer to a new window  with  the
       given  number  of lines and columns.  The upper left-hand corner	of the
       window is at
	      line begin_y,
	      column begin_x

       If either nlines	or ncols is zero, they default to
	      LINES - begin_y and
	      COLS - begin_x.

       A new full-screen window	is created by calling newwin(0,0,0,0).

   delwin
       Calling delwin deletes the named	window,	freeing	all memory  associated
       with  it	 (it does not actually erase the window's screen image).  Sub-
       windows must be deleted before the main window can be deleted.

   mvwin
       Calling mvwin moves the window so that the upper	left-hand corner is at
       position	 (x,  y).   If	the  move would	cause the window to be off the
       screen, it is an	error and the window is	not moved.  Moving  subwindows
       is allowed, but should be avoided.

   subwin
       Calling	subwin	creates	and returns a pointer to a new window with the
       given number of lines, nlines, and columns, ncols.  The	window	is  at
       position	(begin_y, begin_x) on the screen.  The subwindow shares	memory
       with the	window orig, so	that changes made to one  window  will	affect
       both  windows.  When using this routine,	it is necessary	to call	touch-
       win or touchline	on orig	before calling wrefresh	on the subwindow.

   derwin
       Calling derwin is the same as calling subwin, except that  begin_y  and
       begin_x	are  relative to the origin of the window orig rather than the
       screen.	There is no difference between the subwindows and the  derived
       windows.

       Calling	mvderwin moves a derived window	(or subwindow) inside its par-
       ent window.  The	screen-relative	 parameters  of	 the  window  are  not
       changed.	 This routine is used to display different parts of the	parent
       window at the same physical position on the screen.

   dupwin
       Calling dupwin creates an exact duplicate of the	window win.

   wsyncup
       Calling wsyncup touches all locations in	 ancestors  of	win  that  are
       changed	in  win.   If  syncok is called	with second argument TRUE then
       wsyncup is called automatically whenever	there is a change in the  win-
       dow.

   wsyncdown
       The  wsyncdown  routine	touches	 each  location	 in  win that has been
       touched in any of its ancestor windows.	This routine is	called by wre-
       fresh, so it should almost never	be necessary to	call it	manually.

   wcursyncup
       The  routine  wcursyncup	updates	the current cursor position of all the
       ancestors of the	window to reflect the current cursor position  of  the
       window.

RETURN VALUE
       Routines	that return an integer return the integer ERR upon failure and
       OK (SVr4	only specifies "an integer value other than  ERR")  upon  suc-
       cessful completion.

       Routines	that return pointers return NULL on error.

       X/Open defines no error conditions.  In this implementation

       delwin
	    returns  an	 error if the window pointer is	null, or if the	window
	    is the parent of another window.

       derwin
	    returns an error if	the parent window pointer is null, or  if  any
	    of	its  ordinates	or dimensions is negative, or if the resulting
	    window does	not fit	inside the parent window.

       dupwin
	    returns an error if	the window pointer is null.

	    This implementation	also maintains a list of windows,  and	checks
	    that  the pointer passed to	delwin is one that it created, return-
	    ing	an error if it was not..

       mvderwin
	    returns an error if	the window pointer is null, or if some part of
	    the	window would be	placed off-screen.

       mvwin
	    returns  an	 error if the window pointer is	null, or if the	window
	    is really a	pad, or	if some	part of	the  window  would  be	placed
	    off-screen.

       newwin
	    will  fail if either of its	beginning ordinates is negative, or if
	    either the number of lines or columns is negative.

       syncok
	    returns an error if	the window pointer is null.

       subwin
	    returns an error if	the parent window pointer is null, or  if  any
	    of	its  ordinates	or dimensions is negative, or if the resulting
	    window does	not fit	inside the parent window.

       The functions which return a window pointer may also fail if  there  is
       insufficient  memory  for  its data structures.	Any of these functions
       will fail if the	screen has not been initialized, i.e., with initscr or
       newterm.

NOTES
       If  many	small changes are made to the window, the wsyncup option could
       degrade performance.

       Note that syncok	may be a macro.

BUGS
       The subwindow functions (subwin,	derwin,	mvderwin, wsyncup,  wsyncdown,
       wcursyncup,  syncok)  are flaky,	incompletely implemented, and not well
       tested.

       The System V curses documentation is very unclear  about	 what  wsyncup
       and  wsyncdown  actually	do.  It	seems to imply that they are only sup-
       posed to	touch exactly  those  lines  that  are	affected  by  ancestor
       changes.	 The language here, and	the behavior of	the curses implementa-
       tion, is	patterned on the XPG4 curses standard.	The weaker  XPG4  spec
       may result in slower updates.

PORTABILITY
       The XSI Curses standard,	Issue 4	describes these	functions.

SEE ALSO
       curses(3X), curs_refresh(3X), curs_touch(3X), curs_variables(3X)

							       curs_window(3X)

NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | RETURN VALUE | NOTES | BUGS | PORTABILITY | SEE ALSO

Want to link to this manual page? Use this URL:
<https://man.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=mvwin&sektion=3x&manpath=FreeBSD+13.0-RELEASE+and+Ports>

home | help