'\" t .\"*************************************************************************** .\" Copyright 2018-2024,2025 Thomas E. Dickey * .\" Copyright 1998-2015,2017 Free Software Foundation, Inc. * .\" * .\" Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a * .\" copy of this software and associated documentation files (the * .\" "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including * .\" without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, * .\" distribute, distribute with modifications, sublicense, and/or sell * .\" copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is * .\" furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions: * .\" * .\" The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included * .\" in all copies or substantial portions of the Software. * .\" * .\" THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS * .\" OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF * .\" MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. * .\" IN NO EVENT SHALL THE ABOVE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, * .\" DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR * .\" OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR * .\" THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE. * .\" * .\" Except as contained in this notice, the name(s) of the above copyright * .\" holders shall not be used in advertising or otherwise to promote the * .\" sale, use or other dealings in this Software without prior written * .\" authorization. * .\"*************************************************************************** .\" .\" $Id: curs_addch.3x,v 1.139 2025/07/05 12:43:18 tom Exp $ .TH curs_addch 3X 2025-07-05 "ncurses 6.5" "Library calls" .ie \n(.g \{\ .ds `` \(lq .ds '' \(rq .ds ' \(aq .ds ^ \(ha .ds ~ \(ti .\} .el \{\ .ie t .ds `` `` .el .ds `` "" .ie t .ds '' '' .el .ds '' "" .ds ' ' .ds ^ ^ .ds ~ ~ .\} . .de bP .ie n .IP \(bu 4 .el .IP \(bu 2 .. .SH NAME \fB\%addch\fP, \fB\%waddch\fP, \fB\%mvaddch\fP, \fB\%mvwaddch\fP, \fB\%echochar\fP, \fB\%wechochar\fP \- add a \fIcurses\fP character to a window and advance the cursor .SH SYNOPSIS .nf \fB#include .PP \fBint addch(const chtype \fIch\fP); \fBint waddch(WINDOW * \fIwin\fP, const chtype \fIch\fP); \fBint mvaddch(int \fIy\fP, int \fIx\fP, const chtype \fIch\fP); \fBint mvwaddch(WINDOW * \fIwin\fP, int \fIy\fP, int \fIx\fP, const chtype \fIch\fP); .PP \fBint echochar(const chtype \fIch\fP); \fBint wechochar(WINDOW * \fIwin\fP, const chtype \fIch\fP); .PP \fI/* (integer) constants */\fP /*\fI .\|.\|. */ \fBACS_BLOCK;\fR /*\fI .\|.\|. */ \fBACS_BOARD;\fR /*\fI .\|.\|. */ \fBACS_BTEE;\fR /*\fI .\|.\|. */ \fBACS_BULLET;\fR /*\fI .\|.\|. */ \fBACS_CKBOARD;\fR /*\fI .\|.\|. */ \fBACS_DARROW;\fR /*\fI .\|.\|. */ \fBACS_DEGREE;\fR /*\fI .\|.\|. */ \fBACS_DIAMOND;\fR /*\fI .\|.\|. */ \fBACS_HLINE;\fR /*\fI .\|.\|. */ \fBACS_LANTERN;\fR /*\fI .\|.\|. */ \fBACS_LARROW;\fR /*\fI .\|.\|. */ \fBACS_LLCORNER;\fR /*\fI .\|.\|. */ \fBACS_LRCORNER;\fR /*\fI .\|.\|. */ \fBACS_LTEE;\fR /*\fI .\|.\|. */ \fBACS_PLMINUS;\fR /*\fI .\|.\|. */ \fBACS_PLUS;\fR /*\fI .\|.\|. */ \fBACS_RARROW;\fR /*\fI .\|.\|. */ \fBACS_RTEE;\fR /*\fI .\|.\|. */ \fBACS_S1;\fR /*\fI .\|.\|. */ \fBACS_S9;\fR /*\fI .\|.\|. */ \fBACS_TTEE;\fR /*\fI .\|.\|. */ \fBACS_UARROW;\fR /*\fI .\|.\|. */ \fBACS_ULCORNER;\fR /*\fI .\|.\|. */ \fBACS_URCORNER;\fR /*\fI .\|.\|. */ \fBACS_VLINE;\fR \fI/* extensions */\fP /*\fI .\|.\|. */ \fBACS_GEQUAL;\fR /*\fI .\|.\|. */ \fBACS_LEQUAL;\fR /*\fI .\|.\|. */ \fBACS_NEQUAL;\fR /*\fI .\|.\|. */ \fBACS_PI;\fR /*\fI .\|.\|. */ \fBACS_S3;\fR /*\fI .\|.\|. */ \fBACS_S7;\fR /*\fI .\|.\|. */ \fBACS_STERLING;\fR .fi .SH DESCRIPTION .SS waddch .B \%waddch writes the .I curses character .I ch to the window .IR win "," then advances the cursor position, analogously to the standard C library's \fI\%putchar\fP(3). \fB\%ncurses\fP(3X) describes the variants of this function. .PP Construct a .I curses character from a .I char by assignment or typecast. Subsection \*(``Video Attributes\*('' of \fB\%attron\fP(3X) describes how to manipulate its attributes and color pair. (A color pair selection is not honored unless initialized; see \fB\%start_color\fP(3X).) .PP The object or expression .I ch may contain attributes and/or a color pair identifier. (A .I \%chtype can be copied from place to place using \fB\%winch\fP(3X) and .BR \%waddch .) See \fB\%curs_attr\fP(3X) for values of predefined constants that can be usefully \*(``or\*(''ed with characters. A .I ch whose character component is a space, and whose only attribute is .BR \%A_NORMAL , is a .IR "blank character" "," and therefore combines with the window's background character; see \fB\%curs_bkgd\fP(3X). .PP If .I ch is a backspace, carriage return, line feed, or tab, the cursor moves appropriately within the window. .bP Backspace moves the cursor one character left; at the left margin of a window, it does nothing. .bP Carriage return moves the cursor to the left margin on the same line of the window. .bP Line feed does a \fB\%clrtoeol\fP(3X), then advances as if from the right margin. .bP Tab advances the cursor to the next tab stop (possibly on the next line); these are placed at every eighth column by default. .IP Alter the tab interval with the .B \%TABSIZE extension; see \fB\%curs_variables\fP(3X). .PP If .I ch is any other nonprintable character, .I curses draws it in printable form using the same convention as \fB\%unctrl\fP(3X). Calling \fB\%winch\fP(3X) on the location of a nonprintable character does not return the character itself, but its \fB\%unctrl\fP(3X) representation. .PP Adding printable characters with \fB\%waddch\fP causes it to wrap at the right margin of the window: .bP If the cursor is not at the bottom of the scrolling region and advancement occurs at the right margin, the cursor automatically wraps to the beginning of the next line. .bP If the cursor is at the bottom of the scrolling region when advancement occurs at the right margin, and \fB\%scrollok\fP(3X) is enabled for .IR win , the scrolling region scrolls up one line and the cursor wraps as above. Otherwise, advancement and scrolling do not occur, and .B \%waddch returns .BR ERR "." .PP A window's margins may coincide with the screen boundaries. This may be a problem when .I \%ncurses updates the screen to match the curses window. When their right and bottom margins coincide, .I \%ncurses uses different strategies to handle the variations of scrolling and wrapping at the lower-right corner by depending on the terminal capabilities: .bP If the terminal does not automatically wrap as characters are added at the right margin (i.e., auto right margins), .I \%ncurses writes the character directly. .bP If the terminal has auto right margins, but also has capabilities for turning auto margins off and on, .I \%ncurses turns the auto margin feature off temporarily when writing to the lower-right corner. .bP If the terminal has an insertion mode which can be turned off and on, .I \%ncurses writes the character just before the lower-right corner, and then inserts a character to push the update into the corner. .SS wechochar .B \%echochar and .B \%wechochar are equivalent to calling .RB \%( w ) addch followed by .RB \%( w ) refresh on .B \%stdscr or the specified window. .I curses interprets these functions as a hint to its optimizer that only a single character cell in the window is being altered between refreshes; for non-control characters, a considerable performance gain may be enjoyed by employing them. .\" TODO: Combine the following with the "Line Drawing" subsection of .\" terminfo(5) and replace this with a cross reference there. .SS "Forms-Drawing Characters" .I curses defines macros starting with .B \%ACS_ that can be used with .B \%waddch to write line-drawing and other symbols to the screen. .I \%ncurses terms these .I "forms-drawing characters." .I curses uses the ACS default listed below if the terminal type lacks the .B \%acs_chars .RB \%( acsc ) capability; that capability does not define a replacement for the character; or if the terminal type and locale configuration require Unicode to access these characters, but the library is unable to use Unicode. The \*(``acsc char\*('' column corresponds to how the characters are specified in the .B \%acs_chars .RB \%( acsc ) string capability, and the characters in it may appear on the screen if the terminal type's database entry incorrectly advertises ACS support. The name \*(``ACS\*('' originates in the Alternate Character Set feature of the DEC VT100 terminal. .PP .ie t .ne 4v .el .ne 5v .TS Lb Lb Lb Lb Lb Lb Lb Lb Lb L L Lx. \& ACS acsc \& Symbol Default char Glyph Name _ ACS_BLOCK # 0 solid square block ACS_BOARD # h board of squares ACS_BTEE + v bottom tee ACS_BULLET o \*~ bullet ACS_CKBOARD : a checker board (stipple) ACS_DARROW v . arrow pointing down ACS_DEGREE \*' f degree symbol ACS_DIAMOND + \(ga diamond ACS_GEQUAL > > greater-than-or-equal-to ACS_HLINE \- q horizontal line ACS_LANTERN # i lantern symbol ACS_LARROW < , arrow pointing left ACS_LEQUAL < y less-than-or-equal-to ACS_LLCORNER + m lower left-hand corner ACS_LRCORNER + j lower right-hand corner ACS_LTEE + t left tee ACS_NEQUAL ! | not-equal ACS_PI * { greek pi ACS_PLMINUS # g plus/minus ACS_PLUS + n plus ACS_RARROW > + arrow pointing right ACS_RTEE + u right tee ACS_S1 \- o scan line 1 ACS_S3 \- p scan line 3 ACS_S7 \- r scan line 7 ACS_S9 \&_ s scan line 9 ACS_STERLING f } pound-sterling symbol ACS_TTEE + w top tee ACS_UARROW \*^ \- arrow pointing up ACS_ULCORNER + l upper left-hand corner ACS_URCORNER + k upper right-hand corner ACS_VLINE | x vertical line .TE .SH RETURN VALUE These functions return .B OK on success and .B ERR on failure. .PP In .IR \%ncurses , these functions fail if .bP the .I curses screen has not been initialized, .bP (for functions taking a .I \%WINDOW pointer argument) .I win is a null pointer, .bP wrapping to a new line is impossible because \fB\%scrollok\fP(3X) has not been called on .I win (or .BR \%stdscr "," as applicable) when a write to its bottom right location is attempted, or .bP it is not possible to add a complete character at the cursor position. .PP The last may be due to different causes: .bP conversion of a wide character to a multibyte character sequence can fail, or .bP at least one of the bytes resulting from wide character conversion to a multibyte character sequence cannot be added to the window. See section \*(``PORTABILITY\*('' below regarding the use of .B \%waddch with wide characters. .PP Functions prefixed with \*(``mv\*('' first perform cursor movement and fail if the position .RI ( y , .IR x ) is outside the window boundaries. .SH NOTES .BR \%addch "," .BR \%mvaddch "," .BR \%mvwaddch "," and .B \%echochar may be implemented as macros. .SH EXTENSIONS The symbols .IR \%ACS_S3 "," .IR \%ACS_S7 "," .IR \%ACS_LEQUAL "," .IR \%ACS_GEQUAL "," .IR \%ACS_PI "," .IR \%ACS_NEQUAL "," and .I \%ACS_STERLING were not documented in any publicly released System\ V .\" And did not exist yet as late as SVr4. .\" https://github.com/ryanwoodsmall/oldsysv/blob/master/\ .\" sysvr4/svr4/lib/xlibcurses/screen/curses.ed and are not standard. However, many publicly available .I \%term\%info entries include .B \%acs_chars .RB \%( acsc ) capabilities in which their key characters .RB ( pryz{|} ) are embedded, and a second-hand list of their character descriptions has come to light, which identifies them as VT100 special characters. .PP The DEC Special Character and Line Drawing Set (VT100) is indexed by an ASCII character in the range 96 (`) to 126 (~). That index character is part of the definition for the curses .B \%ACS_ symbols. The VT100 special characters can be categorized in three groups: .bP useful graphic symbols with a standard .B \%ACS_ symbol, (e.g., the line-drawing symbols), .bP possibly useful characters (these non-standard symbols), .bP representations of control characters (e.g., newline and vertical tabulation). .PP A few .B \%ACS_ symbols do not fit into DEC's VT100 scheme. The AT&T Teletype 5410v1 arrow symbols and .B \%ACS_BLOCK use indices outside the range 96 to 126. Two of the Teletype symbols use indices in that range, with different meaning versus the VT100: .bP .B \%ACS_BOARD corresponds to the VT100 symbol for newline .bP .B \%ACS_LANTERN corresponds to the VT100 symbol for vertical tabulation .PP AT&T defined .B \%ACS_ names for the most useful graphic symbols, as well as for its own. Its header file commented: .sp .EX /* * Standard alternate character set. The current ACS world is evolving, * so we support only a widely available subset: the line drawing characters * from the VT100, plus a few from the Teletype 5410v1. Eventually there * may be support of more sophisticated ACS line drawing, such as that * in the Teletype 5410, the HP line drawing set, and the like. There may * be support for some non line oriented characters as well. * * Line drawing ACS names are of the form ACS_trbl, where t is the top, r * is the right, b is the bottom, and l is the left. t, r, b, and l might * be B (blank), S (single), D (double), or T (thick). The subset defined * here only uses B and S. */ .EE .PP Although these less-useful graphic symbols were not given names, they were used in .I \%terminfo entries. The .I \%ncurses developers invented ACS-prefixed names for them. .\" in v1_9_5_950928_e227 .SH PORTABILITY Applications employing .I \%ncurses extensions should condition their use on the visibility of the .B \%NCURSES_VERSION preprocessor macro. .PP X/Open Curses Issue\ 4 describes these functions. It specifies no error conditions for them. .PP SVr4 describes a successful return value only as \*(``an integer value other than .IR ERR \*(''. \" Courier roman in source; SVID 4, vol. 3, p. 472 .PP The defaults specified for forms-drawing characters apply in the POSIX locale. .SS "ACS Symbols" X/Open Curses states that the .I \%ACS_ definitions are .I char constants. Some implementations are problematic. .bP Solaris .IR curses , for example, defines the ACS symbols as constants; others define them as elements of an array. .IP SVr4 used an array, .IR \%acs_map , as does .IR \%ncurses "." NetBSD .I curses also uses an array, actually named .IR \%_acs_char , with a \%\*(``#define\*('' for compatibility. .bP HP-UX .I curses equates some of the .I \%ACS_ symbols to the analogous .I \%WACS_ symbols as if the .I \%ACS_ symbols were wide characters (see \fB\%curs_add_wch\fP(3X)). The misdefined symbols are the arrows and others that are not used for line drawing. .bP X/Open Curses (Issues\ 2 through 7) has a typographical error for the .I \%ACS_LANTERN symbol, equating its \*(``VT100+ Character\*('' to \*(``I\*('' (capital I), while the header files for SVr4 .I curses and other implementations use \*(``i\*('' (small i). .IP None of the terminal descriptions on Unix platforms use uppercase I, except for Solaris (in its .I \%term\%info entry for \fI\%screen\fP(1), apparently based on the X/Open documentation around 1995). On the other hand, its .B \%gs6300 (AT&T PC6300 with EMOTS Terminal Emulator) description uses lowercase i. .PP The .I displayed values of .I \%ACS_ constants depend on .bP the .I \%ncurses ABI \(em for example, wide-character versus non-wide-character configurations (the former is capable of displaying Unicode while the latter is not), and .bP whether the locale uses UTF-8 encoding. .PP In certain cases, the terminal is unable to display forms-drawing characters .I except by using UTF-8; see the discussion of the .I \%NCURSES_NO_UTF8_ACS environment variable in \fB\%ncurses\fP(3X). .SS "Character Set" X/Open Curses assumes that the parameter passed to .I \%waddch contains a single character. That character may have been more than eight bits wide in an SVr3 or SVr4 implementation, but X/Open Curses leaves the width of a non-wide character code unspecified. The standard further does not specify the internal structure of a .IR chtype "," though the use of bit operations to combine the character code with attributes and a color pair identifier into a .I \%chtype for passage to .I \%waddch is common. A portable application uses only the macros discussed in \fB\%curs_attr\fP(3X) to manipulate a .IR \%chtype "." .PP In .IR \%ncurses , .I \%chtype holds an eight-bit character, but the library allows a multibyte character sequence to be passed via a succession of calls to .IR \%waddch "." Other implementations do not; a .I \%waddch call transmits exactly one character, which may be rendered in one or more screen locations depending on whether it is printable (see \fB\%unctrl\fP(3X)). Depending on the locale, .I \%ncurses inspects the byte passed in each .I \%waddch call and checks whether the latest call continues a multibyte character. When a character is .IR complete "," .I \%ncurses displays the character and advances the cursor. If the calling application interrupts the succession of bytes in a multibyte character sequence by changing the current location \(em for example, with \fB\%wmove\fP(3X) \(em .I \%ncurses discards the incomplete character. .PP For portability to other implementations, do not rely upon the foregoing behavior. Check whether a character can be represented as a single byte in the current locale. .bP If it can, call either .I \%waddch or .IR \%wadd_wch "." .bP If it cannot, use only .IR \%wadd_wch "." .SH HISTORY 4BSD (1980) introduced .I \%waddch and its variants. .PP SVr3 (1987) added the .I \%echochar and .I \%wechochar functions and most of the .I ACS_ constants, except for .IR \%ACS_GEQUAL "," .IR \%ACS_LEQUAL "," .IR \%ACS_NEQUAL "," .IR \%ACS_PI "," .IR \%ACS_S3 "," .IR \%ACS_S7 "," and .IR \%ACS_STERLING "." .PP .I \%ncurses 1.9.6 (1995) furnished the remaining .I ACS_ constants. .SH SEE ALSO \fB\%curs_add_wch\fP(3X) describes comparable functions of the .I \%ncurses library in its wide-character configuration .RI \%( ncursesw ). .PP \fB\%curses\fP(3X), \fB\%curs_addchstr\fP(3X), \fB\%curs_addstr\fP(3X), \fB\%curs_attr\fP(3X), \fB\%curs_bkgd\fP(3X), \fB\%curs_clear\fP(3X), \fB\%curs_inch\fP(3X), \fB\%curs_outopts\fP(3X), \fB\%curs_refresh\fP(3X), \fB\%curs_variables\fP(3X), \fB\%putchar\fP(3)