Sortix 1.1dev ports manual
This manual documents Sortix 1.1dev ports. You can instead view this document in the latest official manual.
CURSES_REFRESH(3) | Library Functions Manual | CURSES_REFRESH(3) |
NAME
curses_refresh, refresh, wrefresh, wnoutrefresh, doupdate, leaveok, flushok — curses terminal update routinesLIBRARY
Curses Library (libcurses, -lcurses)SYNOPSIS
#include <curses.h> intrefresh(void); int
wrefresh(WINDOW *win); int
wnoutrefresh(WINDOW *win); int
doupdate(void); int
leaveok(WINDOW *win, boolf flag); int
flushok(WINDOW *win, boolf flag);
DESCRIPTION
These functions update the terminal with the contents ofstdscr
or of the specified window(s).
The refresh() function causes curses to propagate
changes made to stdscr
to the terminal
display. Any changes made to subwindows of
stdscr
are also propagated.
The wrefresh() function is the same as the
refresh() function, excepting that changes are
propagated to the terminal from the window specified by
win.
The wnoutrefresh() function performs the internal
processing required by curses to determine what changes need to be made to
synchronise the internal screen buffer and the terminal but does not modify
the terminal display.
The doupdate() function updates the terminal
display to match the internal curses representation of the display.
The wnoutrefresh() and
doupdate() functions can be used together to
speed up terminal redraws by deferring the actual terminal updates until after
a batch of updates to multiple windows has been done.
The refresh() function is equivalent to
wnoutrefresh(stdscr)
followed by doupdate().
The leaveok() function determines whether refresh
operations may leave the screen cursor in an arbitrary position on the screen.
Setting flag to
FALSE
ensures that the screen cursor is
positioned at the current cursor position after a refresh operation has taken
place.
The flushok() function is used to determine whether
or not the screen's output file descriptor will be flushed on refresh. Setting
flag to
TRUE
will cause the output to be flushed.
RETURN VALUES
Functions returning pointers will returnNULL
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
curses_pad(3), curses_touch(3), getch(3)NOTES
Calling wrefresh() on a new, unchanged window has no effect.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.March 26, 2003 | Debian |