Provided by: ncurses-doc_6.4+20240113-1ubuntu2_all bug

NAME

       newpad, subpad, prefresh, pnoutrefresh, pechochar, pecho_wchar - create and display curses
       pads

SYNOPSIS

       #include <curses.h>

       WINDOW *newpad(int nlines, int ncols);
       WINDOW *subpad(WINDOW *orig, int nlines, int ncols,
             int begin_y, int begin_x);
       int prefresh(WINDOW *pad, int pminrow, int pmincol,
             int sminrow, int smincol, int smaxrow, int smaxcol);
       int pnoutrefresh(WINDOW *pad, int pminrow, int pmincol,
             int sminrow, int smincol, int smaxrow, int smaxcol);
       int pechochar(WINDOW *pad, chtype ch);
       int pecho_wchar(WINDOW *pad, const cchar_t *wch);

DESCRIPTION

   newpad
       newpad creates and returns a pointer to a new pad data structure with the given number  of
       lines,  nlines,  and  columns,  ncols.   A  pad  is  like  a window, except that it is not
       restricted by the screen size, and is not necessarily associated with a particular part of
       the screen.  Pads can be used when a large window is needed, and only a part of the window
       will be on the screen at one time.  Automatic refreshes of  pads  (as  from  scrolling  or
       echoing of input) do not occur.

       It  is  not  valid  to  call  wrefresh  with a pad argument; call prefresh or pnoutrefresh
       instead.  They require additional parameters  to  specify  the  part  of  the  pad  to  be
       displayed and the location on the screen to be used for the display.

   subpad
       The  subpad  routine  creates  and  returns a pointer to a subwindow within a pad with the
       given number of lines, nlines, and columns,  ncols.   Unlike  subwin,  which  uses  screen
       coordinates,  the window is at position (begin_x, begin_y) on the pad.  The window is made
       in the middle of the window orig, so that changes made to one window affect both  windows.
       During  the  use of this routine, it will often be necessary to call touchwin or touchline
       on orig before calling prefresh.

   prefresh, pnoutrefresh
       The prefresh and pnoutrefresh routines are analogous to wrefresh and  wnoutrefresh  except
       that  they  relate  to  pads  instead of windows.  The additional parameters are needed to
       indicate what part of the pad and screen are involved.

       •   The pminrow and pmincol parameters specify the upper left-hand corner of the rectangle
           to be displayed in the pad.

       •   The  sminrow,  smincol,  smaxrow,  and  smaxcol  parameters  specify  the edges of the
           rectangle to be displayed on the screen.

       The lower right-hand corner of the rectangle to be displayed in the pad is calculated from
       the  screen coordinates, since the rectangles must be the same size.  Both rectangles must
       be entirely contained within their respective structures.   Negative  values  of  pminrow,
       pmincol, sminrow, or smincol are treated as if they were zero.

   pechochar
       The  pechochar routine is functionally equivalent to a call to addch followed by a call to
       refresh(3NCURSES), a call to waddch followed by a call to wrefresh, or a  call  to  waddch
       followed  by  a  call  to  prefresh.   The knowledge that only a single character is being
       output is taken  into  consideration  and,  for  non-control  characters,  a  considerable
       performance  gain  might be seen by using these routines instead of their equivalents.  In
       the case of pechochar, the last location of the pad  on  the  screen  is  reused  for  the
       arguments to prefresh.

   pecho_wchar
       The  pecho_wchar  function  is the analogous wide-character form of pechochar.  It outputs
       one character to a pad and immediately refreshes the pad.  It  does  this  by  a  call  to
       wadd_wch followed by a call to prefresh.

RETURN VALUE

       Functions  that  return an integer return ERR upon failure and OK (SVr4 specifies only “an
       integer value other than ERR”) upon successful completion.

       Functions that return pointers return NULL on error, and set errno to ENOMEM.

       X/Open Curses does not define any error conditions.  In this implementation

          prefresh and pnoutrefresh
               return an error if the window pointer is null, or if the window is  not  really  a
               pad or if the area to refresh extends off-screen or if the minimum coordinates are
               greater than the maximum.

          pechochar
               returns an error if the window is not really a pad, and  the  associated  call  to
               wechochar returns an error.

          pecho_wchar
               returns  an  error  if  the window is not really a pad, and the associated call to
               wecho_wchar returns an error.

NOTES

       pechochar may be a macro.

PORTABILITY

       BSD curses has no pad feature.

       SVr2 curses (1986) provided the newpad and related functions, documenting them in a single
       line each.  SVr3 (1987) provided more extensive documentation.

       The  documentation  does  not explain the term pad.  However, the Apollo Aegis workstation
       operating system supported a graphical pad feature:

       •   These graphical pads could be much larger than the computer's display.

       •   The read-only output from a command could be scrolled back to inspect, and select text
           from the pad.

       The two uses may be related.

       The  XSI  Curses  standard,  Issue 4 describes these functions, without significant change
       from the SVr3 documentation.  It describes no error conditions.  The behavior of subpad if
       the  parent  window  is  not  a pad is undocumented, and is not checked by the vendor Unix
       implementations:

       •   SVr4 curses sets a flag in the WINDOW structure in newpad which tells if the window is
           a pad.

           However,  it  uses  this  information  only  in  waddch  (to  decide if it should call
           wrefresh) and wscrl (to avoid scrolling a pad), and does  not  check  in  wrefresh  to
           ensure that the pad is refreshed properly.

       •   Solaris  xcurses  checks  whether  a window is a pad in wnoutrefresh, returning ERR in
           that case.

           However, it only sets the flag for subwindows if the parent  window  is  a  pad.   Its
           newpad  function  does  not  set this information.  Consequently, the check will never
           fail.

           It makes no comparable check in pnoutrefresh, though interestingly enough,  a  comment
           in the source code states that the lack of a check was an MKS extension.

       •   NetBSD  7 curses sets a flag in the WINDOW structure for newpad and subpad, using this
           to help with the distinction between wnoutrefresh and pnoutrefresh.

           It does not check for the case where a subwindow is created in a pad using  subwin  or
           derwin.

           The dupwin function returns a regular window when duplicating a pad.  Likewise, getwin
           always returns a window, even if the saved data was from a pad.

       This implementation

       •   sets a flag in the WINDOW structure for newpad and subpad,

       •   allows a subwin or derwin call to succeed having a pad parent by forcing the subwindow
           to be a pad,

       •   checks  in  both  wnoutrefresh  and  pnoutrefresh  to ensure that pads and windows are
           handled distinctly, and

       •   ensures that dupwin and getwin treat pads versus windows consistently.

SEE ALSO

       ncurses(3NCURSES), addch(3NCURSES), refresh(3NCURSES), touch(3NCURSES)