эмуляция termcap с помощью библиотеки Curses (curses emulation of termcap)
Имя (Name)
PC
, UP
, BC
, ospeed
, tgetent
, tgetflag
, tgetnum
, tgetstr
, tgoto
,
tputs
- curses
emulation of termcap
Синопсис (Synopsis)
#include <curses.h>
#include <term.h>
extern char PC;
extern char * UP;
extern char * BC;
extern @NCURSES_OSPEED@ 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));
Описание (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:
• The emulation ignores the buffer pointer bp. The termcap
library would store a copy of the terminal description in
the area referenced by this pointer. However, ncurses
stores its terminal descriptions in compiled binary form,
which is not the same thing.
• 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-addressing.
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 parameter is used as follows:
• It is assumed to be the address of a pointer to a buffer
managed by the calling application.
• However, ncurses checks to ensure that area
is not NULL,
and also that the resulting buffer pointer is not NULL.
If either check fails, the area parameter is ignored.
• If the checks succeed, ncurses also copies the return
value to the buffer pointed to by area, and the area value
will be updated to point past the null ending this value.
• The return value itself is an address in the terminal
description 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.
• Because the capability may have padding characters, the
output of tgoto
should be passed to tputs
rather than some
other output function such as printf
.
• While tgoto
is assumed to be used for the two-parameter
cursor positioning capability, termcap applications also use
it for single-parameter capabilities.
Doing this shows a quirk in tgoto
: most hardware terminals
use cursor 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.
• 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
applications 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.
Возвращаемое значение (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.
Ошибки (баги) (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 support 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
capabilities differ from termcap's, users can be surprised:
• tputs("50")
in a terminfo system will put out a literal '50'
rather than busy-waiting for 50 milliseconds.
• However, if ncurses is configured to support termcap, it may
also have been configured to support the BSD-style padding.
In that case, tputs
inspects strings passed to it, looking
for digits at the beginning of the string.
tputs("50")
in a termcap system may wait for 50 milliseconds
rather than put out a literal '50'
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 accommodate termcap's limitation in this
respect.
Портативность (Portability)
Standards
These functions are provided for supporting legacy applications,
and should not be used in new programs:
• The XSI Curses standard, Issue 4 describes these functions.
However, they are marked TO BE WITHDRAWN and may be removed
in future versions.
• 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 returned 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 compatibility 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
applications. However, termcap applications' use of those
variables is poorly documented, e.g., not distinguishing between
input and output. In particular, some applications are reported
to declare and/or modify ospeed
.
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 issues:
• As a special case, tgetflag
matched against a single-
character identifier provided that was at the end of the
terminal description. You should not rely upon this behavior
in portable programs. This implementation disallows matches
against single-character capability names.
• This implementation disallows matches by the termcap
interface against extended capability names which are longer
than two characters.
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 implementations 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:
• One was used internally by the jove editor in 2BSD through
4.4BSD. It defined global symbols for the termcap variables
which it used.
• The other appeared in 4.4BSD Lite Release 2 (mid-1993) as
part of libedit (also known as the editline library). The
CSRG source history shows that this was added in mid-1992.
The libedit header file was used internally, as a convenience
for compiling the editline library. It declared function
prototypes, but no global variables.
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 expect 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:
• it provided declarations for a few global symbols used by
emacs
• it provided function prototypes (using const
).
• 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.
Смотри также (See also)
curses
(3X), putc(3), term_variables
(3X), terminfo(5).
https://invisible-island.net/ncurses/tctest.html