Flashnux

GNU/Linux man pages

Livre :
Expressions régulières,
Syntaxe et mise en oeuvre :

ISBN : 978-2-7460-9712-4
EAN : 9782746097124
(Editions ENI)

GNU/Linux

CentOS 2.1AS

(Slurm)

wscrl(3x)


curs_scroll

curs_scroll

NAME
SYNOPSIS
DESCRIPTION
RETURN VALUE
NOTES
PORTABILITY
SEE ALSO

NAME

scroll, scrl, wscrl - scroll a curses window

SYNOPSIS

#include <curses.h>

int scroll(WINDOW *win);
int scrl(int n);
int wscrl(WINDOW *win, int n);

DESCRIPTION

The scroll routine scrolls the window up one line. This involves moving the lines in the window data structure. As an optimization, if the scrolling region of the window is the entire screen, the physical screen may be scrolled at the same time.

For positive n, the scrl and wscrl routines scroll the window up n lines (line i+n becomes i); otherwise scroll the window down n lines. This involves moving the lines in the window character image structure. The current cursor position is not changed.

For these functions to work, scrolling must be enabled via scrollok.

RETURN VALUE

These routines return ERR upon failure, and OK (SVr4 only specifies "an integer value other than ERR") upon successful completion.

NOTES

Note that scrl and scroll may be macros.

The SVr4 documentation says that the optimization of physically scrolling immediately if the scroll region is the entire screen "is" performed, not "may be" performed. This implementation deliberately does not guarantee that this will occur, in order to leave open the possibility of smarter optimization of multiple scroll actions on the next update.

Neither the SVr4 nor the XSI documentation specify whether the current attribute or current color-pair of blanks generated by the scroll function is zeroed. Under this implementation it is.

PORTABILITY

The XSI Curses standard, Issue 4 describes these functions.

SEE ALSO

curses(3X), curs_outopts(3X)



wscrl(3x)