Provided by: libbrlapi-dev_6.6-4ubuntu5_amd64 bug

NAME

       brlapi_write - Writing on the braille display

        - Write text to the braille display.

SYNOPSIS

   Data Structures
       struct brlapi_writeArguments_t

   Macros
       #define BRLAPI_DISPLAY_DEFAULT   -1
       #define BRLAPI_CURSOR_LEAVE   -1
       #define BRLAPI_CURSOR_OFF   0
       #define BRLAPI_WRITEARGUMENTS_INITIALIZER

   Functions
       int BRLAPI_STDCALL brlapi_writeText (int cursor, const char *text)
       int BRLAPI_STDCALL brlapi__writeText (brlapi_handle_t *handle, int cursor, const char
           *text)
       int BRLAPI_STDCALL brlapi_writeWText (int cursor, const wchar_t *text)
       int BRLAPI_STDCALL brlapi__writeWText (brlapi_handle_t *handle, int cursor, const wchar_t
           *text)
       int BRLAPI_STDCALL brlapi_writeDots (const unsigned char *dots)
       int BRLAPI_STDCALL brlapi__writeDots (brlapi_handle_t *handle, const unsigned char *dots)
       int BRLAPI_STDCALL brlapi_write (const brlapi_writeArguments_t *arguments)
       int BRLAPI_STDCALL brlapi__write (brlapi_handle_t *handle, const brlapi_writeArguments_t
           *arguments)

Detailed Description

       After brlapi_enterTtyMode() has been called, the application can call one of these
       functions to write things on the braille display.

       Note
           Be sure to call brlapi_enterTtyMode() before calling brlapi_write(), or else you'll
           get an error. This is particularly not always trivial when writing multithreaded
           applications.

           Dots are coded as described in ISO/TR 11548-1: a dot pattern is coded by a byte in
           which bit 0 is set iff dot 1 is up, bit 1 is set iff dot 2 is up, ... bit 7 is set iff
           dot 8 is up. This also corresponds to the low-order byte of the coding of unicode's
           braille row U+2800.

           Text is translated by the server one to one, by just using a simple wchar_t to pattern
           table, i.e. no contraction/expansion is performed, because the client would then have
           no way to know how wide the output would be and thus the quantity of text to feed. If
           contraction/expansion is desired, the client should perform it itself (e.g. thanks to
           liblouis or gnome-braille) and send the resulting dot patterns. This is actually
           exactly the same problem as font rendering on a graphical display: for better control,
           nowadays all font rasterization is performed on the client side, and mere pixmaps are
           sent to the X server.

           For braille displays with multiple lines, text will be wrapped over the lines.

Macro Definition Documentation

   #define BRLAPI_CURSOR_LEAVE   -1
       Do not change the cursor's state or position.

       See also
           brlapi_writeText() brlapi_write() brlapi_writeArguments_t

   #define BRLAPI_CURSOR_OFF   0
       Do not display the cursor.

       See also
           brlapi_writeText() brlapi_write() brlapi_writeArguments_t

   #define BRLAPI_DISPLAY_DEFAULT   -1
       Write to the default display on the braille device.

       See also
           brlapi_write() brlapi_writeArguments_t

   #define BRLAPI_WRITEARGUMENTS_INITIALIZER
       Value:.PP
         { \
         .displayNumber = BRLAPI_DISPLAY_DEFAULT, \
         .regionBegin = 0, \
         .regionSize = 0, \
         .text = NULL, \
         .textSize = -1, \
         .andMask = NULL, \
         .orMask = NULL, \
         .cursor = BRLAPI_CURSOR_LEAVE, \
         .charset = NULL \
       }
       Allows to initialize a structure of type brlapi_writeArguments_t * with default values:
       displayNumber = BRLAPI_DISPLAY_DEFAULT; (unspecified) regionBegin = regionSize = 0;
       (update the whole display, DEPRECATED and will be forbidden in next release. You must
       always express the region you wish to update) text = andMask = orMask = NULL; (no text, no
       attribute) cursor = BRLAPI_CURSOR_LEAVE; (don't touch cursor)

Function Documentation

   int BRLAPI_STDCALL brlapi__write (brlapi_handle_t * handle, const brlapi_writeArguments_t *
       arguments)
   int BRLAPI_STDCALL brlapi__writeDots (brlapi_handle_t * handle, const unsigned char * dots)
   int BRLAPI_STDCALL brlapi__writeText (brlapi_handle_t * handle, int cursor, const char * text)
   int BRLAPI_STDCALL brlapi__writeWText (brlapi_handle_t * handle, int cursor, const wchar_t *
       text)
   int BRLAPI_STDCALL brlapi_write (const brlapi_writeArguments_t * arguments)
       Update a specific region of the braille display and apply and/or masks

       Parameters
           arguments gives information necessary for the update

       regionBegin and regionSize must be filled for specifying which part of the display will be
       updated, as well as the size (in characters, not bytes) of the text, andMask and orMask
       members.

       If given, the 'text' field holds the text that will be displayed in the region. The char
       string must hold exactly as many characters as the region fields express. For multibyte
       text, this is the number of multibyte caracters. Notably, combining and double-width
       caracters count for 1.

       The actual length of the text in bytes may be specified thanks to textSize. If -1 is
       given, it will be computed thanks to strlen(), so 'text' must then be a NUL-terminated
       string.

       The 'andMask' and 'orMask' masks, if present, are then applied on top of the text, one
       byte per character. This hence permits the superimposing of attributes over the text. For
       instance, setting an andMask mask full of BRLAPI_DOTS(1,1,1,1,1,1,0,0) will only keep
       (logical AND) dots 1-6, hence dropping dots 7 and 8. On the contrary, setting an orMask
       full of BRLAPI_DOT7|BRLAPI_DOT8 will add (logical OR) dots 7 and 8.

       The 'charset' field, if present, specifies the charset of the 'text' field. If it is '',
       the current locale's charset (if any) is assumed. Else, the 8-bit charset of the server is
       assumed.

       A special invocation is with an unmodified initialized structure: this clears the client's
       whole display, letting the display of other applications on the same tty or of
       applications 'under' the tty appear. See Concurrency management section of the BrlAPI
       documentation for more details.

       Returns
           0 on success, -1 on error.

   int BRLAPI_STDCALL brlapi_writeDots (const unsigned char * dots)
       Write the given dots array to the display

       Parameters
           dots points on an array of dot information, one per character. Its size must hence be
           the same as what brlapi_getDisplaySize() returns.

       Returns
           0 on success, -1 on error.

   int BRLAPI_STDCALL brlapi_writeText (int cursor, const char * text)
       Write the given \0-terminated string to the braille display

       If the string is too long, it is truncated. If it's too short, it is padded with spaces.
       The text is assumed to be in the current application locale charset set by setlocale(3) if
       it was called, or the locale charset from the application locale environment variables if
       setlocale(3) was not called.

       Parameters
           cursor gives the cursor position; if equal to BRLAPI_CURSOR_OFF, no cursor is shown at
           all; if cursor==BRLAPI_CURSOR_LEAVE, the cursor is left where it is
           text points to the string to be displayed.

       Returns
           0 on success, -1 on error.

   int BRLAPI_STDCALL brlapi_writeWText (int cursor, const wchar_t * text)
       Write the given \0-terminated unicode string to the braille display

       If the string is too long, it is truncated. If it's too short, it is padded with spaces.

       Parameters
           cursor gives the cursor position; if equal to BRLAPI_CURSOR_OFF, no cursor is shown at
           all; if cursor==BRLAPI_CURSOR_LEAVE, the cursor is left where it is
           text points to the string to be displayed.

       Returns
           0 on success, -1 on error.

Author

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