curs_terminfo(3x) — Linux manual page

NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | RETURN VALUE | NOTES | EXTENSIONS | PORTABILITY | HISTORY | SEE ALSO | COLOPHON

curs_terminfo(3X)             Library calls             curs_terminfo(3X)

NAME         top

       del_curterm, putp, restartterm, set_curterm, setupterm, tigetflag,
       tigetnum, tigetstr, tiparm, tiparm_s, tiscan_s, tparm, tputs,
       vid_attr, vid_puts, vidattr, vidputs - curses interfaces to term‐
       info database

SYNOPSIS         top

       #include <curses.h>
       #include <term.h>

       TERMINAL * cur_term;

       const char * const boolnames[];
       const char * const boolcodes[];
       const char * const boolfnames[];
       const char * const numnames[];
       const char * const numcodes[];
       const char * const numfnames[];
       const char * const strnames[];
       const char * const strcodes[];
       const char * const strfnames[];

       int setupterm(const char * term, int filedes, int * errret);
       TERMINAL * set_curterm(TERMINAL * nterm);
       int del_curterm(TERMINAL * oterm);
       int restartterm(const char * term, int filedes, int * errret);

       char * tparm(const char * str, ...);
            /* or */
       char * tparm(const char * str, long p1 ... long p9);

       int tputs(const char * str, int affcnt, int (* putc)(int));
       int putp(const char * str);

       int vidputs(chtype attrs, int (* putc)(int));
       int vidattr(chtype attrs);
       int vid_puts(attr_t attrs, short pair, void * opts, int (* putc)(int));
       int vid_attr(attr_t attrs, short pair, void * opts);

       int tigetflag(const char * cap-code);
       int tigetnum(const char * cap-code);
       char * tigetstr(const char * cap-code);

       char * tiparm(const char * str, ...);

       /* extensions */
       char * tiparm_s(int expected, int mask, const char * str, ...);
       int tiscan_s(int * expected, int * mask, const char * str);

       /* deprecated */
       int setterm(const char * term);

DESCRIPTION         top

       These lower-level functions of the curses standard must be called
       by programs that deal directly with the terminfo database to
       handle certain terminal capabilities, such as programming function
       keys.  For all other functionality, curses functions are more
       suitable and their use is recommended.

       None of these functions use (or are aware of) multibyte character
       strings such as UTF-8.

       •   Capability names and codes use the POSIX portable character
           set.

       •   Capability string values have no associated encoding; they are
           strings of 8-bit characters.

   Initialization
       Call setupterm from your application to have terminfo manage the
       terminal device; this action initializes the terminal-dependent
       variables listed in term_variables(3X).  (A curses application
       calling initscr(3X) or newterm(3X) achieves the same result.)
       Applications can use the terminal capabilities either directly, by
       object definitions corresponding to capability names and codes
       (see term_variables(3X)) or by calling the functions documented
       here.  setupterm initializes the terminfo variables lines and
       columns as described in use_env(3X).

       Pass parameterized string capability values through tparm to
       instantiate them.  All terminfo strings (including the output of
       tparm) should be sent to the terminal device with tputs or putp.
       Call reset_shell_mode(3X) to restore the terminal modes before
       exiting.  (A curses application calling endwin(3X) achieves the
       same result.)

       Programs that use cursor addressing should emit certain
       capabilities at specific times.  Specifically, output

       •   enter_ca_mode upon startup, and

       •   exit_ca_mode before exiting.

       Programs that execute shell subprocesses should

       •   call reset_shell_mode(3X) and output exit_ca_mode before the
           shell is called, and

       •   output enter_ca_mode and call reset_prog_mode(3X) after
           returning from the shell.

       setupterm reads in the terminfo database, initializing the term‐
       info structures, but does not set up the output virtualization
       structures used by curses.  Its parameters follow.

          term is the terminal type, a character string.  If term is
               null, the environment variable TERM is read.

          filedes
               is the file descriptor used for getting and setting
               terminal I/O modes.

               Higher-level applications use newterm(3X) to initialize
               the terminal, passing an output stream rather than a
               descriptor.  In curses, the two are the same because
               newterm calls setupterm, passing the file descriptor
               derived from its output stream parameter.

          errret
               points to an optional location where an error status can
               be returned to the caller.  If errret is not null, then
               setupterm returns OK or ERR and stores a status value in
               the integer pointed to by errret.  A return value of OK
               combined with status of 1 in errret is normal.

               If ERR is returned, examine errret.

               1    means that the terminal is a hard-copy type (lacks
                    destructive backspace), and cannot be used for curses
                    applications.  The library determines this fact by
                    checking the terminal type's hardcopy (hc)
                    capability.

               0    means that the terminal could not be found, or that
                    it is a generic type, having too little information
                    for curses applications to run.

                    setupterm determines if the entry is a generic type
                    by checking the generic_type (gn) capability.

               -1   means that the terminfo database could not be found.

               If errret is null, setupterm reports an error message upon
               finding an error and exits.  Thus, the simplest call is:

                      setupterm((char *) NULL, 1, (int *) NULL);

               which uses all the defaults and sends the output to
               stdout.

   The Terminal State
       setupterm stores its information about the terminal in a TERMINAL
       structure pointed to by the global variable cur_term.  If it
       detects an error, or decides that the terminal is unsuitable
       (hardcopy or generic), it discards this information, making it
       unavailable to applications.

       If setupterm is called repeatedly for the same terminal type, it
       reuses the information.  It maintains only one copy of a given
       type's capabilities in memory.  If called for different types,
       setupterm allocates new storage for each set of terminal
       capabilities.

       set_curterm sets cur_term to nterm, making all of the terminfo
       Boolean, numeric, and string capabilities use the values from
       nterm.  It returns the old value of cur_term.

       del_curterm releases the memory pointed to by oterm.  If oterm is
       the same as cur_term, references to any of the terminfo Boolean,
       numeric, and string capabilities thereafter may refer to invalid
       memory locations until setupterm is called again.

       restartterm is similar to setupterm, but is intended for use after
       restoring program memory to a previous state (for example, when
       reloading an application that has been suspended from one terminal
       session and restored in another).  restartterm assumes that the
       display dimensions and the input and output options are the same
       as when memory was saved, but the terminal type and line speed may
       differ.  Accordingly, restartterm saves relevant terminal state,
       calls setupterm, then restores that state.

   Formatting Output
       tparm instantiates the string str with parameters pi.  It returns
       a pointer to a character string representing str with the
       parameters applied to “%” expressions within.  Application
       developers should keep in mind some quirks of the interface.

       •   Although tparm's actual parameters may be integers or strings,
           the prototype expects long (integer) values.

       •   Aside from the set_attributes (sgr) capability, most terminal
           capabilities require no more than one or two parameters.

       •   Padding information is ignored by tparm; it is interpreted by
           tputs.

       •   The capability string is null-terminated.  Use “\200” where an
           ASCII NUL is needed in the output.

       tiparm is a newer form of tparm that uses stdarg.h rather than a
       fixed-length parameter list.  Its numeric parameters are ints
       rather than longs.

       tparm and tiparm assume that the application passes parameters
       consistent with the terminal description.  ncurses provides two
       extensions as alternatives to deal with untrusted data.

       •   The tiparm_s extension is a safer formatting function than
           tparm or tiparm, because it allows the developer to tell the
           curses library how many parameters to expect in the parameter
           list, and which may be string parameters.

           The mask parameter has one bit set for each of the parameters
           (up to 9) passed as char pointers rather than numbers.

       •   The extension tiscan_s allows the application to inspect a
           formatting capability to see what the curses library would
           assume.

   Output Functions
       String capabilities can contain padding, a time delay
       (accommodating performance limitations of hardware terminals)
       expressed as $<n>, where n is a nonnegative integral count of
       milliseconds.  If n exceeds 30,000 (thirty seconds), ncurses caps
       it at that value.

       tputs interprets time delays in the string str and acts upon them.

       •   The str parameter must be a terminfo string capability or the
           return value of tparm or tiparm.

       •   affcnt is the number of lines affected, or 1 if not
           applicable.

       •   putc is a putchar-like function to which the characters are
           passed, one at a time.

       tputs processes each time delay with the delay_output(3X)
       function, routing any resulting padding characters through this
       function.

       putp calls “tputs(str, 1, putchar)”.  The output of putp always
       goes to stdout, rather than the filedes specified in setupterm.

       vidputs displays the string on the terminal in the video attribute
       mode attrs, which is any combination of the attributes listed in
       curses(3X).  The characters are passed to the putchar-like
       function putc.

       vidattr is like vidputs, except that it outputs through
       putchar(3).

       vid_attr and vid_puts correspond to vidattr and vidputs,
       respectively.  They use multiple parameters to represent the
       character attributes and color; namely,

       •   attrs, of type attr_t, for the attributes and

       •   pair, of type short, for the color pair number.

       Use the attribute constants prefixed with “WA_” with vid_attr and
       vid_puts.

       X/Open Curses reserves the opts argument for future use, saying
       that applications must provide a null pointer for that argument;
       but see section “EXTENSIONS” below.

       While putp is a lower-level function that does not use higher-
       level curses state, ncurses declares it in curses.h because
       System V did so (see section “HISTORY” below).

   Terminal Capability Functions
       tigetflag, tigetnum, and tigetstr return the value of the
       capability corresponding to the terminfo cap-code, such as xenl,
       passed to them.  The cap-code for each capability is given in the
       table column of that name in the “Capabilities” section of
       terminfo(5).

       These functions return special values to denote errors.

       tigetflag returns

       -1     if cap-code is not a Boolean capability, or

       0      if it is canceled or absent from the terminal description.

       tigetnum returns

       -2     if cap-code is not a numeric capability, or

       -1     if it is canceled or absent from the terminal description.

       tigetstr returns

       (char *)-1
              if cap-code is not a string capability, or

       NULL   if it is canceled or absent from the terminal description.

   Terminal Capability Names
       These null-terminated arrays contain

       •   the short terminfo names (“codes”),

       •   the termcap names (“names”), and

       •   the long terminfo names (“fnames”)

       for each standard terminfo capability name.

              const char *boolnames[], *boolcodes[], *boolfnames[]
              const char *numnames[], *numcodes[], *numfnames[]
              const char *strnames[], *strcodes[], *strfnames[]

   Releasing Memory
       Each successful call to setupterm allocates memory to hold the
       terminal description.  As a side effect, it sets cur_term to point
       to this memory.  If an application calls
              del_curterm(cur_term);
       the memory will be freed.

       The formatting functions tparm and tiparm extend the storage
       allocated by setupterm as follows.

       •   They add the “static” terminfo variables [a-z].  Before
           ncurses 6.3, those were shared by all screens.  With ncurses
           6.3, those are allocated per screen.  See terminfo(5).

       •   To improve performance, ncurses 6.3 caches the result of
           analyzing terminfo strings for their parameter types.  That is
           stored as a binary tree referenced from the TERMINAL
           structure.

       The higher-level initscr and newterm functions use setupterm.
       Normally they do not free this memory, but it is possible to do
       that using the delscreen(3X) function.

RETURN VALUE         top

       Functions that return integers return ERR upon failure and OK upon
       success.

       In ncurses,

       del_curterm
            fails if its terminal parameter is null.

       putp calls tputs, returning the same error codes.

       restartterm
            fails if the associated call to setupterm returns ERR.

       setupterm
            fails if it cannot allocate enough memory, or create the
            initial windows (stdscr, curscr, and newscr).  Other error
            conditions are documented above.

       tparm
            returns a null pointer if the capability would require
            unexpected parameters; that is, too many, too few, or
            incorrect types (strings where integers are expected, or vice
            versa).

       tputs
            fails if the string parameter is null.  It does not detect
            I/O errors: X/Open Curses states that tputs ignores the
            return value of the output function putc.

NOTES         top

       The vid_attr function in ncurses is a special case.  It was
       originally implemented based on a draft of X/Open Curses, as a
       macro, before other parts of the ncurses wide-character API were
       developed, and unlike the other wide-character functions, is also
       provided in the non-wide-character configuration.

EXTENSIONS         top

       The functions marked as extensions originated in ncurses, and are
       not found in SVr4 curses, 4.4BSD curses, or any other previous
       curses implementation.

       ncurses allows opts to be a pointer to int, which overrides the
       pair (short) argument.

PORTABILITY         top

       Except for setterm, X/Open Curses Issue 4 describes these
       functions.  It specifies no error conditions for them.

       SVr4 describes a successful return value except where “otherwise
       noted” as “an integer value other than ERR”.

   Header Files
       On legacy curses systems, include curses.h and term.h in that
       order to make visible the definitions of the string arrays storing
       the capability names and codes.

   Compatibility Macros
       ncurses implements a few macros for early System V curses
       compatibility (see section “HISTORY” below).  They include crmode,
       fixterm, gettmode, nocrmode, resetterm, saveterm, and setterm.

       In SVr4, these are found in curses.h, but except for setterm, are
       likewise macros.  The one function, setterm, is mentioned in the
       manual page.  It further notes that setterm was replaced by
       setupterm, stating that the call
              setupterm(term, 1, (int *)0)
       provides the same functionality as
              setterm(term)
       and discouraging the latter for new programs.

   Legacy Data
       setupterm copies the terminal name to the array ttytype.  This
       behavior is not specified by X/Open Curses, but is assumed by some
       applications.

       Other implementations may not declare the capability name arrays.
       Some provide them without declaring them.  X/Open Curses does not
       specify them.

       Extended terminal capability names, as defined by “tic -x”, are
       not stored in the arrays described here.

   Output Buffering
       Older versions of ncurses assumed that the file descriptor passed
       to setupterm from initscr or newterm used buffered I/O, and wrote
       to the corresponding stdio stream.  In addition to the limitation
       that the terminal was left in block-buffered mode on exit (like
       System V curses), it was problematic because ncurses did not allow
       a reliable way to clean up on receiving SIGTSTP.

       ncurses 6.x uses output buffers managed directly by ncurses.  The
       lower-level functions described here that write to the terminal
       device do so via the standard output stream; they thus are not
       signal-safe.  The higher-level functions in ncurses employ
       alternate versions of these functions using a more reliable
       buffering scheme.

   Function Prototypes
       The X/Open Curses prototypes are based on the SVr4 curses header
       declarations, which were defined at the same time the C language
       was first standardized in the late 1980s.

       •   X/Open Curses uses const less effectively than a later design
           might, sometimes applying it needlessly to function parameters
           that are passed by value (and therefore copied), and in most
           cases overlooking parameters that normally would benefit from
           const.  Passing const-qualified parameters to functions that
           do not declare them const may prevent the program from
           compiling.  On the other hand, “writable strings” are an
           obsolescent C language feature.

           As an extension, ncurses can be configured to change the
           function prototypes to use the const keyword.  The ncurses ABI
           6 enables this feature by default.

       •   X/Open Curses prototypes tparm with a fixed number of
           parameters, rather than a variable argument list.

           ncurses uses a variable argument list, but can be configured
           to use the fixed-parameter list.  Portable applications should
           provide nine parameters after the format; zeroes are fine for
           this purpose.

           In response to review comments by Thomas E. Dickey, X/Open
           Curses Issue 7 proposed the tiparm function in mid-2009.

           While tiparm is always provided in ncurses, the older form is
           available only as a build-time configuration option.  If not
           specially configured, tparm is the same as tiparm.

       Both forms of tparm have drawbacks.

       •   Most calls to tparm require only one or two parameters.
           Passing nine on each call is awkward.

           Using long for the numeric parameter type is a workaround to
           make the parameter use the same amount of stack memory as a
           pointer.  That approach dates to the mid-1980s, before C was
           standardized.  Since ANSI C (1989), C language standards do
           not require a pointer to fit in a long).

       •   Providing the right number of parameters for a variadic
           function such as tiparm can be a problem, in particular for
           string parameters.  However, only a few terminfo capabilities
           use string parameters (for instance, the ones used for
           programmable function keys).

           The ncurses library checks usage of these capabilities, and
           returns ERR if the capability mishandles string parameters.
           But it cannot check if a calling program provides strings in
           the right places for the tparm calls.

           ncurses's tput(1) checks its use of these capabilities with a
           table, so that it calls tparm correctly.

   Special TERM treatment
       If ncurses is configured to use a terminal driver that does not
       employ the POSIX termios API, as with the MinGW port,

       •   setupterm interprets a missing or empty TERM variable as the
           special value “unknown”.

           SVr4 curses uses the special value “dumb”.

           The difference between the two is that the former uses the
           generic_type (gn) terminfo capability, while the latter does
           not.  A generic terminal is unsuitable for full-screen
           applications.

       •   setupterm allows explicit use of the Microsoft Windows console
           driver by checking whether the TERM environment variable has
           the value “#win32con” or an abbreviation of that string.

   Other Portability Issues
       In SVr4, set_curterm returns an int, OK or ERR.  We have chosen to
       implement the X/Open Curses semantics.

       In SVr4, the third argument of tputs has the type “int (*)(char)”.

       At least one implementation of X/Open Curses (Solaris xcurses)
       returns a value other than OK or ERR from tputs.  It instead
       returns the length of the string, and does no error checking.

       Very old versions of AIX curses required inclusion of curses.h
       before term.h.

HISTORY         top

       SVr2 (1984) introduced the terminfo feature.  Its programming
       manual mentioned the following low-level functions.

       Function    Description
       ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
       fixterm     restore terminal to “in curses” state
       gettmode    establish current terminal modes
       mvcur       low level cursor motion
       putp        use tputs to send characters via putchar
       resetterm   set terminal modes to “out of curses” state
       resetty     reset terminal flags to stored value
       saveterm    save current modes as “in curses” state
       savetty     store current terminal flags
       setterm     establish terminal with given type
       setupterm   establish terminal with given type
       tparm       interpolate parameters into string capability
       tputs       apply padding information to a string
       vidattr     like vidputs, but output through putchar
       vidputs     write string to terminal, applying specified
                   attributes

       The programming manual also mentioned functions provided for
       termcap compatibility (commenting that they “may go away at a
       later date”).

       Function   Description
       ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
       tgetent    look up termcap entry for given name
       tgetflag   get Boolean entry for given id
       tgetnum    get numeric entry for given id
       tgetstr    get string entry for given id
       tgoto      apply parameters to given capability
       tputs      write characters via a function parameter, applying
                  padding

       Early terminfo programs obtained capability values from the
       TERMINAL structure initialized by setupterm.

       SVr3 (1987) extended terminfo by adding functions to retrieve
       capability values (like the termcap interface), and reusing tgoto
       and tputs.

       Function    Description
       ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
       tigetflag   get Boolean entry for given id
       tigetnum    get numeric entry for given id
       tigetstr    get string entry for given id

       SVr3 also replaced several of the SVr2 terminfo functions that had
       no counterpart in the termcap interface, documenting them as
       obsolete.

       Function    Replaced by
       ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
       crmode      cbreak
       fixterm     reset_prog_mode
       gettmode    n/a
       nocrmode    nocbreak
       resetterm   reset_shell_mode
       saveterm    def_prog_mode
       setterm     setupterm

       SVr3 kept the mvcur, vidattr, and vidputs functions, along with
       putp, tparm, and tputs.  The latter were needed to support
       padding, and to handle capabilities accessed by functions such as
       vidattr (which used more than the two parameters supported by
       tgoto).

       SVr3 introduced the functions for switching between terminal
       descriptions; for example, set_curterm.  Some changes reflected
       incremental improvements to the SVr2 library.

       •   The TERMINAL type definition was introduced in SVr3.01, for
           the term structure provided in SVr2.

       •   Various global variables such as boolnames were mentioned in
           the programming manual at this point, though the variables had
           been provided in SVr2.

       SVr4 (1989) added the vid_attr and vid_puts functions.

       Other low-level functions are declared in the curses header files
       of Unix systems, but none are documented.  Those noted as
       “obsolete” by SVr3 remained in use by System V's vi(1) editor.

SEE ALSO         top

       curses(3X), curs_initscr(3X), curs_kernel(3X), curs_memleaks(3X),
       curs_termcap(3X), curs_variables(3X), putc(3), term_variables(3X),
       terminfo(5)

COLOPHON         top

       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
       from ⟨https://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/ncurses/⟩ on 2026-01-16.  If you
       discover any rendering problems in this HTML version of the page,
       or you believe there is a better or more up-to-date source for the
       page, or you have corrections or improvements to the information
       in this COLOPHON (which is not part of the original manual page),
       send a mail to man-pages@man7.org

ncurses @NCURSES_MAJOR@.@NCU... 2025-11-11              curs_terminfo(3X)