CURSES(3) BSD Library Functions Manual CURSES(3)NAME
curses_cursor, getcury, getcurx, getyx, getbegy, getbegx, getbegyx,
getmaxy, getmaxx, getmaxyx, getpary, getparx, getparyx, move, wmove,
mvcur, wcursyncup — curses cursor and window location and positioning
routines
LIBRARY
Curses Library (libcurses, -lcurses)
SYNOPSIS
#include <curses.h>
int
getcury(WINDOW *win);
int
getcurx(WINDOW *win);
void
getyx(WINDOW *win, int y, int x);
int
getbegy(WINDOW *win);
int
getbegx(WINDOW *win);
void
getbegyx(WINDOW *win, int y, int x);
int
getmaxy(WINDOW *win);
int
getmaxx(WINDOW *win);
void
getmaxyx(WINDOW *win, int y, int x);
int
getpary(WINDOW *win);
int
getparx(WINDOW *win);
void
getparyx(WINDOW *win, int y, int x);
int
move(int y, int x);
int
wmove(WINDOW *win, int y, int x);
int
mvcur(int oldy, int oldx, int y, int x);
void
wcursyncup(WINDOW *win);
DESCRIPTION
These functions and macros locate and position cursors and windows.
The getcury() and getcurx() functions get the current row and column
positions, respectively, of the cursor in the window win. The getyx()
macro sets the values of y and x to the current row and column positions
of the cursor in the window win.
The origin row and columns of a window win can be determined by calling
the getbegy() and getbegx() functions, respectively, and the maximum row
and column for the window can be found by calling the functions getmaxy()
and getmaxx(), respectively. The getbegyx() and getmaxyx() macros set
the values of y and x to the origin and maximum row and column positions,
respectively, for the window win.
The getpary() and getparx() functions return the row and column position
of the given subwindow relative to the window's parent. The macro
getparyx() sets the values of y and x to the origin of the subwindow rel‐
ative to the window's parent.
The move() function positions the cursor on the current window at the
position given by y, x. The cursor position is not changed on the screen
until the next refresh().
The wmove() function is the same as the move() function, excepting that
the cursor is moved in the window specified by win.
The function mvcur() moves the cursor to y, x on the screen. The argu‐
ments oldy, oldx define the previous cursor position for terminals that
do not support absolute cursor motions. The curses library may optimise
the cursor motion based on these values. If the mvcur() succeeds then
the curses internal structures are updated with the new position of the
cursor. If the destination arguments for mvcur() exceed the terminal
bounds an error will be returned and the cursor position will be
unchanged.
The wcursyncup() function sets the cursor positions of all ancestors of
win to that of win.
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 ALSOcurses_refresh(3)STANDARDS
The NetBSD Curses library complies with the X/Open Curses specification,
part of the Single Unix Specification. The getbegx(), getbegy(),
getcurx(), getcury(), getmaxx(), getmaxy(), getparx(), and getpary()
functions are extensions.
HISTORY
The Curses package appeared in 4.0BSD.
BSD February 23, 2010 BSD