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in_wchstr(3NCURSES) | Library calls | in_wchstr(3NCURSES) |
NAME¶
in_wchstr, in_wchnstr, win_wchstr, win_wchnstr, mvin_wchstr, mvin_wchnstr, mvwin_wchstr, mvwin_wchnstr - get a curses complex character string from a window
SYNOPSIS¶
#include <ncursesw/curses.h>
int in_wchstr(cchar_t * wchstr); int win_wchstr(WINDOW * win, cchar_t * wchstr); int mvin_wchstr(int y, int x, cchar_t * wchstr); int mvwin_wchstr(WINDOW * win, int y, int x,
cchar_t * wchstr);
int in_wchnstr(cchar_t * wchstr, int n); int win_wchnstr(WINDOW * win, cchar_t * wchstr, int n); int mvin_wchnstr(int y, int x, cchar_t * wchstr, int n); int mvwin_wchnstr(WINDOW * win, int y, int x,
cchar_t * wchstr, int n)
DESCRIPTION¶
win_wchstr extracts a curses complex character string from a curses window win, starting at the cursor and stopping at the end of the line, and stores it in wchstr, terminating it with a wide null curses character. win_wchnstr does the same, but copies at most n curses complex characters from win. A negative n implies no limit; win_wchnstr then works like win_wchstr. ncurses(3NCURSES) describes the variants of these functions.
RETURN VALUE¶
These functions return OK on success and ERR on failure.
In ncurses, these functions fail if
- the curses screen has not been initialized,
- (for functions taking a WINDOW pointer argument) win is a null pointer, or
- wchstr is a null pointer.
Functions prefixed with “mv” first perform cursor movement and fail if the position (y, x) is outside the window boundaries.
NOTES¶
All of these functions except win_wchnstr may be implemented as macros.
Reading a line that overflows the array pointed to by wchstr and its variants causes undefined results. Instead, use the n-infixed functions with a positive n argument no larger than the size of the buffer backing wchstr.
PORTABILITY¶
X/Open Curses Issue 4 describes these functions. It specifies no error conditions for them.
HISTORY¶
X/Open Curses Issue 4 (1995) initially specified these functions. The System V Interface Definition Version 4 of the same year specified a function named winwchstr (and the usual variants). This was a later addition to SVr4.x, not appearing in the first SVr4 (1989). It differed from X/Open's later win_wchstr in that it took an argument of type pointer-to-chtype instead of pointer-to-cchar_t.
SEE ALSO¶
inchstr(3NCURSES) describes comparable functions of the ncurses library in its non-wide-character configuration.
ncurses(3NCURSES), inwstr(3NCURSES), in_wch(3NCURSES)
2025-08-23 | ncurses 6.5 |