глобальные переменные библиотеки Curses (curses global variables)
Имя (Name)
COLORS
, COLOR_PAIRS
, COLS
, ESCDELAY
, LINES
, TABSIZE
, curscr
,
newscr
, stdscr
- curses
global variables
Синопсис (Synopsis)
#include <curses.h>
int COLOR_PAIRS;
int COLORS;
int COLS;
int ESCDELAY;
int LINES;
int TABSIZE;
WINDOW * curscr;
WINDOW * newscr;
WINDOW * stdscr;
Описание (Description)
This page summarizes variables provided by the curses
library. A
more complete description is given in the curses
(3X) manual page.
Depending on the configuration, these may be actual variables, or
macros (see curs_threads
(3X) and curs_opaque
(3X)) which provide
read-only access to curses's state. In either case, applications
should treat them as read-only to avoid confusing the library.
COLOR_PAIRS
After initializing curses, this variable contains the number of
color pairs which the terminal can support. Usually the number
of color pairs will be the product COLORS
*COLORS
, however this is
not always true:
• a few terminals use HLS colors, which do not follow this rule
• terminals supporting a large number of colors are limited by
the number of color pairs that can be represented in a signed
short value.
COLORS
After initializing curses, this variable contains the number of
colors which the terminal can support.
COLS
After initializing curses, this variable contains the width of
the screen, i.e., the number of columns.
ESCDELAY
This variable holds the number of milliseconds to wait after
reading an escape character, to distinguish between an individual
escape character entered on the keyboard from escape sequences
sent by cursor- and function-keys (see curses(3X)).
LINES
After initializing curses, this variable contains the height of
the screen, i.e., the number of lines.
TABSIZE
This variable holds the number of columns used by the curses
library when converting a tab character to spaces as it adds the
tab to a window (see curs_addch
(3X).
The Current Screen
This implementation of curses uses a special window curscr
to
record its updates to the terminal screen.
This is referred to as the 'physical screen' in the
curs_refresh
(3X) and curs_outopts
(3X) manual pages.
The New Screen
This implementation of curses uses a special window newscr
to
hold updates to the terminal screen before applying them to
curscr
.
This is referred to as the 'virtual screen' in the
curs_kernel
(3X), curs_refresh
(3X) and curs_outopts
(3X) manual
pages.
The Standard Screen
Upon initializing curses, a default window called stdscr
, which
is the size of the terminal screen, is created. Many curses
functions use this window.
Примечание (Note)
The curses library is initialized using either initscr
(3X), or
newterm
(3X).
If curses
is configured to use separate curses/terminfo
libraries, most of these variables reside in the curses library.
Портативность (Portability)
TABSIZE
is a feature of SVr4 curses which is not documented by
X/Open curses.
• In SVr4 curses, TABSIZE
is initially set from the terminal
description's init_tabs
capability. After that, it can be
altered by the applications using SVr4 curses.
SVr4 curses uses the current value of TABSIZE
to compute the
position of tabstops for updating both the virtual screen
with addch
(3X) as well as the physical screen with mvcur
(3X).
• This implementation uses the current value of TABSIZE
only
for updating the virtual screen. It uses the terminal
description's it
(init_tabs
) capability for computing
hardware tabs (i.e., tab stops on the physical screen).
• Other implementations differ. For instance, NetBSD curses
allows TABSIZE
to be set through an environment variable.
This implementation does not.
NetBSD curses does not support hardware tabs; it uses the
init_tabs
capability and the TABSIZE
variable only for
updating the virtual screen.
ESCDELAY
is an extension in AIX curses:
• In AIX, the units for ESCDELAY
are fifths of a millisecond.
• The default value for AIX's ESCDELAY
is 0.1 seconds.
• AIX also enforces a limit of 10,000 seconds for ESCDELAY
;
this implementation currently has no upper limit.
This implementation has long used ESCDELAY
with units of
milliseconds, making it impossible to be completely compatible
with AIX. Likewise, most users have either decided to override
the value, or rely upon its default value.
Смотри также (See also)
curses
(3X), curs_opaque
(3X), curs_terminfo
(3X), curs_threads
(3X),
term_variables
(3X), terminfo(5).