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NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | RETURN VALUE | NOTES | PORTABILITY | HISTORY | SEE ALSO | COLOPHON |
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curs_printw(3X) Library calls curs_printw(3X)
printw, wprintw, mvprintw, mvwprintw, vwprintw, vw_printw - write
formatted output to a curses window
#include <curses.h>
int printw(const char *fmt, ...);
int wprintw(WINDOW *win, const char *fmt, ...);
int mvprintw(int y, int x, const char *fmt, ...);
int mvwprintw(WINDOW *win, int y, int x, const char *fmt, ...);
int vw_printw(WINDOW *win, const char *fmt, va_list varglist);
/* obsolete */
int vwprintw(WINDOW *win, const char *fmt, va_list varglist);
printw, wprintw, mvprintw, and mvwprintw are analogous to
printf(3). In effect, the string that would be output by
printf(3) is instead output as though waddstr(3X) were used with
win (or stdscr) as its first argument.
vwprintw and vw_printw are analogous to vprintf(3), and perform a
wprintw using a variable argument list. The third argument is a
va_list, a pointer to a list of arguments, as defined in stdarg.h.
These functions return ERR upon failure and OK upon success.
In ncurses, failure occurs if the library cannot allocate enough
memory for the buffer into which the output is formatted, or if
the window pointer win is null.
Functions prefixed with “mv” first perform cursor movement and
fail if the position (y, x) is outside the window boundaries.
No wide character counterpart functions are defined by the “wide”
ncurses configuration nor by any standard. To format and write a
wide-character string to a curses window, consider using
swprintf(3) and waddwstr(3X) or similar.
X/Open Curses Issue 4 describes these functions. It specifies no
error conditions for them.
ncurses defines vw_printw and vwprintw identically to support
legacy applications. However, the latter is obsolete.
• X/Open Curses Issue 4 Version 2 (1996), marked vwprintw as
requiring varargs.h and “TO BE WITHDRAWN”, and specified
vw_printw using the stdarg.h interface.
• X/Open Curses Issue 5, Draft 2 (December 2007) marked vwprintw
(along with vwscanw and the termcap interface) as withdrawn.
After incorporating review comments, this became X/Open Curses
Issue 7 (2009).
• ncurses provides vwprintw, but marks it as deprecated.
4BSD (1980) introduced wprintw and its variants. It implemented
all as functions, not macros; this initial distribution of curses
preceded the ANSI C standard of 1989, prior to which a variadic
macro facility was not widely available in the language. printw
went unused in Berkeley distributions until 4.1cBSD (1983), which
employed it in games. 4BSD's wprintw did not use varargs.h, which
had been available since Seventh Edition Unix (1979). In 1991 (a
couple of years after SVr4 was generally available, and after the
C standard was published), other developers updated the library,
using stdarg.h internally in 4.4BSD curses. Even with this
improvement, BSD curses did not use function prototypes (nor even
declare functions) in curses.h until 1992.
4BSD documented printw and wprintw tersely as “printf on stdscr”
and “printf on win”, respectively.
SVr3 summarized the functions in three lines, asserting that they
were analogous to printf(3) and explaining that the string that
printf(3) would write to the standard output stream would instead
be output using waddstr to the given window.
SVr3 added vwprintw, describing its third parameter as a va_list,
defined in varargs.h, and referred the reader to the manual pages
for varargs and vprintf for detailed descriptions.
SVr4 (1989) introduced no new variations of printw, but provided
for using either varargs.h or stdarg.h to define the va_list type.
X/Open Curses Issue 4 (1995), defined vw_printw to replace
vwprintw, stating that its va_list type is defined in stdarg.h.
curses(3X), curs_addstr(3X), curs_scanw(3X), printf(3), vprintf(3)
This page is part of the ncurses (new curses) project.
Information about the project can be found at
⟨https://invisible-island.net/ncurses/ncurses.html⟩. If you have a
bug report for this manual page, send it to bug-ncurses@gnu.org.
This page was obtained from the tarball ncurses-6.6.tar.gz fetched
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send a mail to man-pages@man7.org
ncurses @NCURSES_MAJOR@.@NCU... 2025-08-16 curs_printw(3X)