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curs_termcap(3X)					      curs_termcap(3X)

NAME
       PC, UP, BC, ospeed, tgetent, tgetflag, tgetnum, tgetstr,	tgoto, tputs -
       curses emulation	of termcap

SYNOPSIS
       #include	<curses.h>
       #include	<term.h>

       extern char PC;
       extern char * UP;
       extern char * BC;
       extern short ospeed;

       int tgetent(char	*bp, const char	*name);
       int tgetflag(const char *id);
       int tgetnum(const char *id);
       char *tgetstr(const char	*id, char **area);
       char *tgoto(const char *cap, int	col, int row);
       int tputs(const char *str, int affcnt, int (*putc)(int));

DESCRIPTION
       These  routines	are included as	a conversion aid for programs that use
       the termcap library.  Their parameters are the same, but	 the  routines
       are  emulated using the terminfo	database.  Thus, they can only be used
       to query	the capabilities of entries for	which  a  terminfo  entry  has
       been compiled.

   INITIALIZATION
       The tgetent routine loads the entry for name.  It returns:

	  1  on	success,

	  0  if	 there	is no such entry (or that it is	a generic type,	having
	     too little	information for	curses applications to run), and

	  -1 if	the terminfo database could not	be found.

       This differs from the termcap library in	two ways:

	  o   The emulation ignores the	buffer pointer bp.   The  termcap  li-
	      brary would store	a copy of the terminal description in the area
	      referenced  by this pointer.  However, ncurses stores its	termi-
	      nal descriptions in compiled binary form,	which is not the  same
	      thing.

	  o   There is a difference in return codes.  The termcap library does
	      not check	if the terminal	description is marked with the generic
	      capability,  or  if the terminal description has cursor-address-
	      ing.

   CAPABILITY VALUES
       The tgetflag routine gets the boolean entry for id, or zero  if	it  is
       not available.

       The  tgetnum  routine gets the numeric entry for	id, or -1 if it	is not
       available.

       The tgetstr routine returns the string entry for	id, or zero if	it  is
       not  available.	Use tputs to output the	returned string.  The area pa-
       rameter is used as follows:

	  o   It is assumed to be the address of a pointer to a	buffer managed
	      by the calling application.

	  o   However, ncurses checks to ensure	that area is not NULL, and al-
	      so that the resulting buffer pointer is  not  NULL.   If	either
	      check fails, the area parameter is ignored.

	  o   If  the  checks succeed, ncurses also copies the return value to
	      the buffer pointed to by area, and the area value	will be	updat-
	      ed to point past the null	ending this value.

	  o   The return value itself is an address in the  terminal  descrip-
	      tion which is loaded into	memory.

       Only  the first two characters of the id	parameter of tgetflag, tgetnum
       and tgetstr are compared	in lookups.

   FORMATTING CAPABILITIES
       The tgoto routine expands the given capability using the	parameters.

       o   Because the capability may have padding characters, the  output  of
	   tgoto should	be passed to tputs rather than some other output func-
	   tion	such as	printf.

       o   While  tgoto	is assumed to be used for the two-parameter cursor po-
	   sitioning capability, termcap applications also use it for  single-
	   parameter capabilities.

	   Doing this shows a quirk in tgoto: most hardware terminals use cur-
	   sor	addressing  with row first, but	the original developers	of the
	   termcap interface chose to put the  column  parameter  first.   The
	   tgoto  function  swaps  the order of	parameters.  It	does this also
	   for calls requiring only a single parameter.	  In  that  case,  the
	   first parameter is merely a placeholder.

       o   Normally the	ncurses	library	is compiled with terminfo support.  In
	   that	case, tgoto uses tparm(3X) (a more capable formatter).

	   However,  tparm  is not a termcap feature, and portable termcap ap-
	   plications should not rely upon its availability.

       The tputs routine is described on the  curs_terminfo(3X)	 manual	 page.
       It can retrieve capabilities by either termcap or terminfo name.

   GLOBAL VARIABLES
       The  variables PC, UP and BC are	set by tgetent to the terminfo entry's
       data for	pad_char, cursor_up and	backspace_if_not_bs, respectively.  UP
       is not used by ncurses.	PC is used in the tdelay_output	function.   BC
       is  used	in the tgoto emulation.	 The variable ospeed is	set by ncurses
       in a system-specific coding to reflect the terminal speed.

RETURN VALUE
       Except where explicitly noted, routines that return an  integer	return
       ERR  upon  failure  and OK (SVr4	only specifies "an integer value other
       than ERR") upon successful completion.

       Routines	that return pointers return NULL on error.

BUGS
       If you call tgetstr to fetch ca or any other parameterized  string,  be
       aware  that it will be returned in terminfo notation, not the older and
       not-quite-compatible termcap notation.  This will not cause problems if
       all you do with it is call tgoto	or tparm, which	both expand  terminfo-
       style  strings as terminfo.  (The tgoto function, if configured to sup-
       port termcap, will check	if the	string	is  indeed  terminfo-style  by
       looking	for  "%p"  parameters or "$<..>" delays, and invoke a termcap-
       style parser if the string does not appear to be	terminfo).

       Because terminfo	conventions for	representing padding in	 string	 capa-
       bilities	 differ	 from  termcap's,  tputs("50");	will put out a literal
       "50" rather than	busy-waiting for 50 milliseconds.  Cope	with it.

       Note that termcap has nothing analogous to terminfo's sgr string.   One
       consequence  of	this  is that termcap applications assume me (terminfo
       sgr0) does not reset the	alternate character set.  This	implementation
       checks for, and modifies	the data shown to the termcap interface	to ac-
       commodate termcap's limitation in this respect.

PORTABILITY
   Standards
       These  functions	 are  provided for supporting legacy applications, and
       should not be used in new programs:

       o   The XSI Curses standard, Issue 4 describes these functions.	Howev-
	   er, they are	marked TO BE WITHDRAWN and may be  removed  in	future
	   versions.

       o   X/Open Curses, Issue	5 (December 2007) marked the termcap interface
	   (along with vwprintw	and vwscanw) as	withdrawn.

       Neither	the  XSI Curses	standard nor the SVr4 man pages	documented the
       return values of	tgetent	correctly, though all three were in  fact  re-
       turned  ever  since SVr1.  In particular, an omission in	the XSI	Curses
       documentation has been misinterpreted to	mean that tgetent  returns  OK
       or  ERR.	 Because the purpose of	these functions	is to provide compati-
       bility with the termcap library,	that is	a defect in XCurses, Issue  4,
       Version 2 rather	than in	ncurses.

   Compatibility with BSD Termcap
       External	variables are provided for support of certain termcap applica-
       tions.  However,	termcap	applications' use of those variables is	poorly
       documented, e.g., not distinguishing between input and output.  In par-
       ticular,	 some  applications  are reported to declare and/or modify os-
       peed.

       The comment that	only the first two characters of the id	parameter  are
       used escapes many application developers.  The original BSD 4.2 termcap
       library (and historical relics thereof) did not require a trailing null
       NUL  on	the  parameter	name  passed to	tgetstr, tgetnum and tgetflag.
       Some applications assume	that the termcap interface  does  not  require
       the trailing NUL	for the	parameter name.	 Taking	into account these is-
       sues:

       o   As  a  special  case,  tgetflag  matched against a single-character
	   identifier provided that was	at the end of  the  terminal  descrip-
	   tion.  You should not rely upon this	behavior in portable programs.
	   This	 implementation	disallows matches against single-character ca-
	   pability names.

       o   This	implementation disallows  matches  by  the  termcap  interface
	   against extended capability names which are longer than two charac-
	   ters.

       The BSD termcap function	tgetent	returns	the text of a termcap entry in
       the  buffer  passed  as an argument.  This library (like	other terminfo
       implementations)	does not store terminal	descriptions as	text.  It sets
       the buffer contents to a	null-terminated	string.

   Other Compatibility
       This library includes a termcap.h header, for compatibility with	 other
       implementations.	  But  the header is rarely used because the other im-
       plementations are not strictly compatible.

       The original BSD	termcap	(through 4.3BSD) had no	header file which gave
       function	prototypes, because that was a feature of ANSI C.  BSD termcap
       was written several years before	C was  standardized.   However,	 there
       were two	different termcap.h header files in the	BSD sources:

       o   One	was used internally by the jove	editor in 2BSD through 4.4BSD.
	   It defined global symbols for the termcap variables which it	used.

       o   The other appeared in 4.4BSD	Lite Release 2 (mid-1993) as  part  of
	   libedit (also known as the editline library).  The CSRG source his-
	   tory	 shows	that  this  was	added in mid-1992.  The	libedit	header
	   file	was used internally, as	a convenience for compiling the	 edit-
	   line	library.  It declared function prototypes, but no global vari-
	   ables.

       The  header  file from libedit was added	to NetBSD's termcap library in
       mid-1994.

       Meanwhile, GNU termcap was under	development, starting  in  1990.   The
       first  release  (termcap	1.0) in	1991 included a	termcap.h header.  The
       second release (termcap 1.1) in September 1992 modified the  header  to
       use const for the function prototypes in	the header where one would ex-
       pect  the parameters to be read-only.  This was a difference versus the
       original	BSD termcap.  The prototype for	tputs also  differed,  but  in
       that instance, it was libedit which differed from BSD termcap.

       A copy of GNU termcap 1.3 was bundled with bash in mid-1993, to support
       the readline library.

       A  termcap.h  file was provided in ncurses 1.8.1	(November 1993).  That
       reflected influence by emacs (rather than jove) and GNU termcap:

       o   it provided declarations for	a few global symbols used by emacs

       o   it provided function	prototypes (using const).

       o   a prototype for tparam (a GNU termcap feature) was provided.

       Later (in mid-1996) the tparam function was removed from	ncurses.  As a
       result, there are differences between any of the	four  implementations,
       which  must  be	taken into account by programs which can work with all
       termcap library interfaces.

SEE ALSO
       curses(3X), putc(3), term_variables(3X),	terminfo(5).

       https://invisible-island.net/ncurses/tctest.html

							      curs_termcap(3X)

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

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