FreeBSD manual
download PDF document: curs_getcchar.3.pdf
curs_getcchar(3X) Library calls curs_getcchar(3X)
NAME
getcchar, setcchar - convert between a wide-character string and a
curses complex character
SYNOPSIS
#include <curses.h>
int getcchar(
const cchar_t *wch,
wchar_t *wc,
attr_t *attrs,
short *color_pair,
void *opts );
int setcchar(
cchar_t *wch,
const wchar_t *wc,
const attr_t attrs,
short color_pair,
const void *opts );
DESCRIPTION
getcchar
The getcchar function gets a wide-character string and rendition from a
cchar_t argument. When wc is not a null pointer, the getcchar function
does the following:
o Extracts information from a cchar_t value wch
o Stores the character attributes in the location pointed to by attrs
o Stores the color pair in the location pointed to by color_pair
o Stores the wide-character string, characters referenced by wch,
into the array pointed to by wc.
When wc is a null pointer, the getcchar function does the following:
o Obtains the number of wide characters pointed to by wch
o Does not change the data referenced by attrs or color_pair
setcchar
The setcchar function initializes the location pointed to by wch by
using:
o The character attributes in attrs
o The color pair in color_pair
o The wide-character string pointed to by wc. The string must be
L'\0' terminated, contain at most one spacing character, which must
be the first.
Up to CCHARW_MAX-1 non-spacing characters may follow. Additional
non-spacing characters are ignored.
When wc is not a null pointer, getcchar returns OK upon successful
completion, and ERR otherwise.
Upon successful completion, setcchar returns OK. Otherwise, it returns
ERR.
NOTES
The wch argument may be a value generated by a call to setcchar or by a
function that has a cchar_t output argument. If wch is constructed by
any other means, the effect is unspecified.
EXTENSIONS
X/Open Curses documents the opts argument as reserved for future use,
saying that it must be null. This implementation uses that parameter
in ABI 6 for the functions which have a color pair parameter to support
extended color pairs:
o For functions which modify the color, e.g., setcchar, if opts is
set it is treated as a pointer to int, and used to set the color
pair instead of the short pair parameter.
o For functions which retrieve the color, e.g., getcchar, if opts is
set it is treated as a pointer to int, and used to retrieve the
color pair as an int value, in addition retrieving it via the
standard pointer to short parameter.
PORTABILITY
The CCHARW_MAX symbol is specific to ncurses. X/Open Curses does not
provide details for the layout of the cchar_t structure. It tells what
data are stored in it:
o a spacing character (wchar_t, i.e., 32-bits).
o non-spacing characters (again, wchar_t's).
o attributes (at least 16 bits, inferred from the various ACS- and
WACS-flags).
o color pair (at least 16 bits, inferred from the unsigned short
type).
The non-spacing characters are optional, in the sense that zero or more
may be stored in a cchar_t. XOpen/Curses specifies a limit:
Implementations may limit the number of non-spacing characters that
can be associated with a spacing character, provided any limit is
at least 5.
The Unix implementations at the time follow that limit:
o AIX 4 and OSF1 4 use the same declaration with an array of 5 non-
spacing characters z and a single spacing character c.
o HP-UX 10 uses an opaque structure with 28 bytes, which is large
enough for the 6 wchar_t values.
o Solaris xpg4 curses uses a single array of 6 wchar_t values.
This implementation's cchar_t was defined in 1995 using 5 for the total
Curses documents possible uses for non-spacing characters, including
using them for ligatures between characters (a feature apparently not
supported by any curses implementation). Unicode does not limit the
(analogous) number of combining characters, so some applications may be
affected.
SEE ALSO
curses(3X), curs_attr(3X), curs_color(3X), wcwidth(3)
ncurses 6.5 2024-04-20 curs_getcchar(3X)