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NAME

       def_prog_mode, def_shell_mode, reset_prog_mode, reset_shell_mode,
       resetty, savetty, getsyx, setsyx, ripoffline, curs_set, napms - low-
       level curses routines

SYNOPSIS

       #include <curses.h>

       int def_prog_mode(void);
       int def_shell_mode(void);
       int reset_prog_mode(void);
       int reset_shell_mode(void);
       int resetty(void);
       int savetty(void);
       void getsyx(int y, int x);
       void setsyx(int y, int x);
       int ripoffline(int line, int (*init)(WINDOW *, int));
       int curs_set(int visibility);
       int napms(int ms);

DESCRIPTION

       The   following  routines  give  low-level  access  to  various  curses
       capabilities.   Theses  routines  typically  are  used  inside  library
       routines.

       The def_prog_mode and def_shell_mode routines save the current terminal
       modes as the "program" (in curses) or "shell" (not in curses) state for
       use by the reset_prog_mode and reset_shell_mode routines.  This is done
       automatically by initscr.  There is one such save area for each  screen
       context allocated by newterm().

       The  reset_prog_mode and reset_shell_mode routines restore the terminal
       to "program" (in curses) or "shell" (out of curses) state.   These  are
       done automatically by endwin and, after an endwin, by doupdate, so they
       normally are not called.

       The resetty and savetty routines save and  restore  the  state  of  the
       terminal  modes.   savetty  saves  the  current  state  in a buffer and
       resetty restores the state to what it was at the last call to  savetty.

       The  getsyx  routine  returns  the  current  coordinates of the virtual
       screen cursor in y and x.  If leaveok is currently TRUE, then -1,-1  is
       returned.  If lines have been removed from the top of the screen, using
       ripoffline, y and x include these lines; therefore, y and x  should  be
       used only as arguments for setsyx.

       The  setsyx routine sets the virtual screen cursor to y, x.  If y and x
       are both -1, then leaveok is set.  The two routines getsyx  and  setsyx
       are  designed to be used by a library routine, which manipulates curses
       windows but does not  want  to  change  the  current  position  of  the
       program’s  cursor.   The  library  routine  would  call  getsyx  at the
       beginning, do its manipulation of its own windows, do a wnoutrefresh on
       its windows, call setsyx, and then call doupdate.

       The  ripoffline  routine  provides  access  to  the  same facility that
       slk_init [see slk(3NCURSES)] uses to reduce the  size  of  the  screen.
       ripoffline must be called before initscr or newterm is called.  If line
       is positive, a line is removed from the  top  of  stdscr;  if  line  is
       negative,  a line is removed from the bottom.  When this is done inside
       initscr, the routine init (supplied by the user)  is  called  with  two
       arguments:  a  window  pointer  to  the  one-line  window that has been
       allocated and an integer with the number  of  columns  in  the  window.
       Inside  this  initialization  routine,  the integer variables LINES and
       COLS (defined in <curses.h>) are not  guaranteed  to  be  accurate  and
       wrefresh  or  doupdate  must  not  be  called.  It is allowable to call
       wnoutrefresh during the initialization routine.

       ripoffline can be called up to five times  before  calling  initscr  or
       newterm.

       The curs_set routine sets the cursor state is set to invisible, normal,
       or very visible for visibility equal to 0, 1, or  2  respectively.   If
       the  terminal  supports  the  visibility requested, the previous cursor
       state is returned; otherwise, ERR is returned.

       The napms routine is used to sleep for ms milliseconds.

RETURN VALUE

       Except for curs_set, these routines always return OK.

       curs_set returns the previous cursor state, or  ERR  if  the  requested
       visibility is not supported.

       X/Open defines no error conditions.  In this implementation

              def_prog_mode, def_shell_mode, reset_prog_mode, reset_shell_mode
                   return  an error if the terminal was not initialized, or if
                   the I/O call to obtain the terminal settings fails.

              ripoffline
                   returns an error if the maximum number of ripped-off  lines
                   exceeds the maximum (NRIPS = 5).

NOTES

       Note that getsyx is a macro, so & is not necessary before the variables
       y and x.

       Older SVr4 man pages  warn  that  the  return  value  of  curs_set  "is
       currently incorrect".  This implementation gets it right, but it may be
       unwise to count on the correctness of the return value anywhere else.

       Both ncurses and SVr4 will call curs_set in endwin if curs_set has been
       called  to make the cursor other than normal, i.e., either invisible or
       very visible.  There is no way for ncurses  to  determine  the  initial
       cursor state to restore that.

PORTABILITY

       The  functions  setsyx  and  getsyx are not described in the XSI Curses
       standard, Issue 4.  All other functions are as described in XSI Curses.

       The  SVr4  documentation  describes  setsyx and getsyx as having return
       type int. This is misleading, as they are  macros  with  no  documented
       semantics for the return value.

SEE ALSO

       ncurses(3NCURSES),         initscr(3NCURSES),        outopts(3NCURSES),
       refresh(3NCURSES), scr_dump(3NCURSES), slk(3NCURSES)

                                                              kernel(3NCURSES)