Provided by: ncurses-doc_5.9+20140118-1ubuntu1_all bug

NAME

       newwin, delwin, mvwin, subwin, derwin, mvderwin, dupwin, wsyncup, syncok, wcursyncup, wsyncdown - create
       curses windows

SYNOPSIS

       #include <curses.h>

       WINDOW *newwin(int nlines, int ncols, int begin_y,
             int begin_x);
       int delwin(WINDOW *win);
       int mvwin(WINDOW *win, int y, int x);
       WINDOW *subwin(WINDOW *orig, int nlines, int ncols,
             int begin_y, int begin_x);
       WINDOW *derwin(WINDOW *orig, int nlines, int ncols,
             int begin_y, int begin_x);
       int mvderwin(WINDOW *win, int par_y, int par_x);
       WINDOW *dupwin(WINDOW *win);
       void wsyncup(WINDOW *win);
       int syncok(WINDOW *win, bool bf);
       void wcursyncup(WINDOW *win);
       void wsyncdown(WINDOW *win);

DESCRIPTION

       Calling newwin creates and returns a pointer to a new window with the given number of lines and  columns.
       The  upper  left-hand corner of the window is at line begin_y, column begin_x.  If either nlines or ncols
       is zero, they default to LINES - begin_y and COLS - begin_x.  A new  full-screen  window  is  created  by
       calling newwin(0,0,0,0).

       Calling  delwin  deletes  the  named  window, freeing all memory associated with it (it does not actually
       erase the window's screen image).  Subwindows must be deleted before the main window can be deleted.

       Calling mvwin moves the window so that the upper left-hand corner is at position (x,  y).   If  the  move
       would  cause  the  window  to  be  off  the  screen,  it is an error and the window is not moved.  Moving
       subwindows is allowed, but should be avoided.

       Calling subwin creates and returns a pointer to a new window with the given number of lines, nlines,  and
       columns,  ncols.  The window is at position (begin_y, begin_x) on the screen.  (This position is relative
       to the screen, and not to the window orig.)  The window is made in the middle of the window orig, so that
       changes  made  to one window will affect both windows.  The subwindow shares memory with the window orig.
       When using this routine, it is necessary to call touchwin or touchline on orig before calling wrefresh on
       the subwindow.

       Calling  derwin is the same as calling subwin, except that begin_y and begin_x are relative to the origin
       of the window orig rather than the screen.  There is no difference between the subwindows and the derived
       windows.

       Calling  mvderwin  moves  a  derived window (or subwindow) inside its parent window.  The screen-relative
       parameters of the window are not changed.  This routine is used to display different parts of the  parent
       window at the same physical position on the screen.

       Calling dupwin creates an exact duplicate of the window win.

       Calling  wsyncup  touches all locations in ancestors of win that are changed in win.  If syncok is called
       with second argument TRUE then wsyncup is called automatically whenever there is a change in the window.

       The wsyncdown routine touches each location in win that has been touched in any of its ancestor  windows.
       This routine is called by wrefresh, so it should almost never be necessary to call it manually.

       The  routine wcursyncup updates the current cursor position of all the ancestors of the window to reflect
       the current cursor position of the window.

RETURN VALUE

       Routines that return an integer return the integer ERR upon failure  and  OK  (SVr4  only  specifies  "an
       integer value other than ERR") upon successful completion.

       Routines that return pointers return NULL on error.

       X/Open defines no error conditions.  In this implementation

              delwin
                   returns  an  error  if  the window pointer is null, or if the window is the parent of another
                   window.

                   This implementation also maintains a list of windows, and checks that the pointer  passed  to
                   delwin is one that it created, returning an error if it was not..

              mvderwin
                   returns an error if the window pointer is null, or if some part of the window would be placed
                   off-screen.

              mvwin
                   returns an error if the window pointer is null, or if the window is really a pad, or if  some
                   part of the window would be placed off-screen.

              syncok
                   returns an error if the window pointer is null.

NOTES

       If many small changes are made to the window, the wsyncup option could degrade performance.

       Note that syncok may be a macro.

BUGS

       The  subwindow  functions  (subwin,  derwin, mvderwin, wsyncup, wsyncdown, wcursyncup, syncok) are flaky,
       incompletely implemented, and not well tested.

       The System V curses documentation is very unclear about what wsyncup and wsyncdown actually do.  It seems
       to  imply that they are only supposed to touch exactly those lines that are affected by ancestor changes.
       The language here, and the behavior of the  curses  implementation,  is  patterned  on  the  XPG4  curses
       standard.  The weaker XPG4 spec may result in slower updates.

PORTABILITY

       The XSI Curses standard, Issue 4 describes these functions.

SEE ALSO

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

                                                                                                window(3NCURSES)