TERMCAP(3) MachTen Programmer’s Manual TERMCAP(3)
NAME
tgetent, tgetnum, tgetflag, tgetstr, tgoto, tputs - terminal
independent
operation routines
SYNOPSIS
char PC;
char *BC;
char *UP;
short ospeed;
tgetent(char *bp, char *name)
tgetnum(char *id)
tgetflag(char *id)
char *
tgetstr(char *id, char **area)
char *
tgoto(char *cm, destcol, destline)
tputs(register char *cp, int affcnt, int (*outc)())
DESCRIPTION
These functions extract and use capabilities from a terminal
capability
data base, usually /usr/share/misc/termcap, the format of
which is de-
scribed in termcap(5). These are low level routines; see
curses(3) for a
higher level package.
The tgetent() function extracts
the entry for terminal name into the
buffer at bp. The bp argument should be a character buffer
of size 1024
and must be retained through all subsequent calls to
tgetnum(),
tgetflag(), and tgetstr(). The tgetent() function returns -1
if none of
the termcap data base files could be opened, 0 if the
terminal name given
does not have an entry, and 1 if all goes well. It will look
in the en-
vironment for a TERMCAP variable. If found, and the value
does not begin
with a slash, and the terminal type name is the same as the
environment
string TERM, the TERMCAP string is used instead of reading a
termcap
file. If it does begin with a slash, the string is used as a
path name
of the termcap file to search. If TERMCAP does not begin
with a slash
and name is different from TERM, tgetent() searches the
files
$HOME/.termcap and /usr/share/misc/termcap, in that order,
unless the en-
vironment variable TERMPATH exists, in which case it
specifies a list of
file pathnames (separated by spaces or colons) to be
searched instead.
Whenever multiple files are searched and a tc field occurs
in the re-
quested entry, the entry it names must be found in the same
file or one
of the succeeding files. This can speed up entry into
programs that call
tgetent(), as well as help debug new terminal descriptions
or make one
for your terminal if you can’t write the file
/usr/share/misc/termcap.
The tgetnum() function gets the
numeric value of capability id, returning
-1 if it is not given for the terminal. The tgetflag()
function returns
1 if the specified capability is present in the
terminal’s entry, 0 if it
is not. The tgetstr() function returns the string value of
the capabili-
ty id, places it in the buffer at area, and advances the
area pointer.
It decodes the abbreviations for this field described in
termcap(5), ex-
cept for cursor addressing and padding information. The
tgetstr() func-
tion returns NULL if the capability was not found.
The tgoto() function returns a
cursor addressing string decoded from cm
to go to column destcol in line destline. It uses the
external variables
UP (from the up capability) and BC (if bc is given rather
than bs) if
necessary to avoid placing n, ^D or ^@ in the returned
string. (Pro-
grams which call tgoto() should be sure to turn off the
XTABS bit(s),
since tgoto() may now output a tab. Note that programs using
termcap
should in general turn off XTABS anyway since some terminals
use control-
I for other functions, such as nondestructive space.) If a %
sequence is
given which is not understood, then tgoto() returns
(OOPS).
The tputs() function decodes the
leading padding information of the
string cp; affcnt gives the number of lines affected by the
operation, or
1 if this is not applicable, outc is a routine which is
called with each
character in turn. The external variable ospeed should
contain the out-
put speed of the terminal as encoded by stty(3). The
external variable
PC should contain a pad character to be used (from the
capability) if a
null (^@) is inappropriate.
FILES
/usr/lib/libtermcap.a -l ltermcap library (also known as -l
ltermlib)
/usr/share/misc/termcap standard terminal capability data
base
$HOME/.termcap user’s terminal capability data
base
SEE ALSO
ex(1), curses(3), termcap(5)
HISTORY
The tgetent functions appeared in 4.0BSD.
4th Berkeley Distribution December 11, 1993 2