Sortix nightly manual
This manual documents Sortix nightly, a development build that has not been officially released. You can instead view this document in the latest official manual.
| CURSES_PRINT(3) | Library Functions Manual | CURSES_PRINT(3) | 
NAME
curses_print,
    printw, wprintw,
    mvprintw, mvwprintw,
    unctrl — curses print
    formatted strings on windows routines
LIBRARY
Curses Library (libcurses, -lcurses)
SYNOPSIS
#include
    <curses.h>
int
  
  printw(const
    char *fmt,
  ...);
int
  
  wprintw(WINDOW
    *win, const char
    *fmt, ...);
int
  
  mvprintw(int
    y, int x,
    const char *fmt,
    ...);
int
  
  mvwprintw(WINDOW
    *win, int y,
    int x,
    const char *fmt,
    ...);
char *
  
  unctrl(chtype
    ch);
DESCRIPTION
These functions print formatted strings on
    stdscr or on the specified window.
The
    printw()
    function formats and prints its arguments on stdscr.
    The behavior is deliberately similar to that of
    printf(3), but, notably, the
    return value differs.
The
    wprintw()
    function is the same as the printw() function,
    excepting that the resulting output is printed on the window specified by
    win.
The
    mvprintw()
    and
    mvwprintw()
    functions are the same as the printw() and
    wprintw() functions, respectively, excepting that
    wmove()
    is called to move the cursor to the position specified by
    y, x before the output is
    printed on the window.
The
    unctrl()
    function returns a printable string representation of the character
    ch. If ch is a control character
    then it will be converted to the form ^Y.
RETURN VALUES
Functions returning pointers will return
    NULL if an error is detected. The functions that
    return an int will return one of the following values:
- OK
- The function completed successfully.
- ERR
- An error occurred in the function.
SEE ALSO
STANDARDS
The NetBSD Curses library complies with the X/Open Curses specification, part of the Single Unix Specification.
HISTORY
The Curses package appeared in 4.0BSD.
| April 6, 2011 | Sortix 1.1.0-dev | 
