1.\" Copyright (c) 1985, 1991, 1993, 1994 2.\" The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved. 3.\" 4.\" Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without 5.\" modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions 6.\" are met: 7.\" 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright 8.\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. 9.\" 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright 10.\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the 11.\" documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution. 12.\" 3. All advertising materials mentioning features or use of this software 13.\" must display the following acknowledgement: 14.\" This product includes software developed by the University of 15.\" California, Berkeley and its contributors. 16.\" 4. Neither the name of the University nor the names of its contributors 17.\" may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software 18.\" without specific prior written permission. 19.\" 20.\" THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE REGENTS AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND 21.\" ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE 22.\" IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE 23.\" ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE REGENTS OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE 24.\" FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL 25.\" DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS 26.\" OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) 27.\" HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT 28.\" LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY 29.\" OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF 30.\" SUCH DAMAGE. 31.\" 32.\" @(#)termcap.5 8.3 (Berkeley) 4/16/94 33.\" 34.\" /*************************************************************************** 35.\" * COPYRIGHT NOTICE * 36.\" **************************************************************************** 37.\" * ncurses is copyright (C) 1992-1995 * 38.\" * Zeyd M. Ben-Halim * 39.\" * zmbenhal@netcom.com * 40.\" * Eric S. Raymond * 41.\" * esr@snark.thyrsus.com * 42.\" * * 43.\" * Permission is hereby granted to reproduce and distribute ncurses * 44.\" * by any means and for any fee, whether alone or as part of a * 45.\" * larger distribution, in source or in binary form, PROVIDED * 46.\" * this notice is included with any such distribution, and is not * 47.\" * removed from any of its header files. Mention of ncurses in any * 48.\" * applications linked with it is highly appreciated. * 49.\" * * 50.\" * ncurses comes AS IS with no warranty, implied or expressed. * 51.\" * * 52.\" ***************************************************************************/ 53.\" 54.\" $FreeBSD: src/share/termcap/termcap.5,v 1.12.2.6 2002/08/15 08:30:27 ru Exp $ 55.\" $DragonFly: src/share/termcap/termcap.5,v 1.6 2007/04/22 07:57:31 swildner Exp $ 56.\" 57.Dd April 16, 1994 58.Dt TERMCAP 5 59.Os 60.Sh NAME 61.Nm termcap 62.Nd terminal capability data base 63.Sh SYNOPSIS 64.Nm 65.Sh DESCRIPTION 66The 67.Nm 68file 69is a data base describing terminals, 70used, 71for example, 72by 73.Xr \&vi 1 74and 75.Xr ncurses 3 . 76Terminals are described in 77.Nm 78by giving a set of capabilities that they have and by describing 79how operations are performed. 80Padding requirements and initialization sequences 81are included in 82.Nm . 83.Pp 84Entries in 85.Nm 86consist of a number of `:'-separated fields. 87The first entry for each terminal gives the names that are known for the 88terminal, separated by `|' characters. 89The first name given is the most common abbreviation for the terminal. 90The last name given should be a long name fully identifying the terminal, 91and all others are understood as synonyms for the terminal name. 92All names but the last should be in lower case and contain no blanks; 93the last name may well contain upper case characters and blanks for 94readability. 95.Pp 96Terminal names (except for the last, verbose entry) 97should be chosen using the following conventions. 98The particular piece of hardware making up the terminal 99should have a root name chosen, thus 100.Dq hp2621 101This name should not contain hyphens. 102Modes that the hardware can be in 103or user preferences 104should be indicated by appending a hyphen and an indicator of the mode. 105Therefore, a 106.Dq vt100 107in 132-column mode would be 108.Dq vt100-w . 109The following suffixes should be used where possible: 110.Pp 111.Bl -column indent "With automatic margins (usually default)xx" -offset indent 112.Sy "Suffix Meaning Example" 113-w Wide mode (more than 80 columns) vt100-w 114-am With automatic margins (usually default) vt100-am 115-nam Without automatic margins vt100-nam 116.Pf \- Ar n Ta No "Number of lines on screen aaa-60" 117-na No arrow keys (leave them in local) concept100-na 118.Pf \- Ar \&np Ta No "Number of pages of memory concept100-4p" 119-rv Reverse video concept100-rv 120.El 121.Sh CAPABILITIES 122The description field attempts to convey the semantics of the 123capability. 124You may find some codes in the description field: 125.Pp 126.Bl -tag -width #[1-9] 127.It (P) 128indicates that padding may be specified. 129.It #[1-9] 130in the description field indicates that the string is passed through 131.Xr tparm 3 132or 133.Xr tgoto 3 134with parms as given (#\fIi\fP). 135.It (P*) 136indicates that padding may vary in proportion to the number of 137lines affected. 138.It (#\d\fIi\fP\u) 139indicates the \fIi\fP\uth\d parameter. 140.El 141.Pp 142These are the boolean capabilities: 143.Bd -literal 144\fBBoolean TCap Description\fR 145\fBVariables Code\fR 146auto_left_margin bw cursor_left wraps from column 0 to last 147 column 148auto_right_margin am terminal has automatic margins 149no_esc_ctlc xb beehive (f1=escape, f2=ctrl C) 150ceol_standout_glitch xs standout not erased by overwriting (hp) 151eat_newline_glitch xn newline ignored after 80 cols (concept) 152erase_overstrike eo can erase overstrikes with a blank 153generic_type gn generic line type 154hard_copy hc hardcopy terminal 155has_meta_key km Has a meta key, sets msb high 156has_status_line hs has extra status line 157insert_null_glitch in insert mode distinguishes nulls 158memory_above da display may be retained above the screen 159memory_below db display may be retained below the screen 160move_insert_mode mi safe to move while in insert mode 161move_standout_mode ms safe to move while in standout mode 162over_strike os terminal can overstrike 163status_line_esc_ok es escape can be used on the status line 164dest_tabs_magic_smso xt tabs destructive, magic so char (t1061) 165tilde_glitch hz can't print ~'s (hazeltine) 166transparent_underline ul underline character overstrikes 167xon_xoff xo terminal uses xon/xoff handshaking 168needs_xon_xoff nx padding won't work, xon/xoff required 169prtr_silent 5i printer won't echo on screen 170hard_cursor HC cursor is hard to see 171non_rev_rmcup NR enter_ca_mode does not reverse exit_ca_mode 172no_pad_char NP pad character does not exist 173non_dest_scroll_region ND scrolling region is non-destructive 174can_change cc terminal can re-define existing colors 175back_color_erase ut screen erased with background color 176hue_lightness_saturation hl terminal uses only HLS color 177 notation (tektronix) 178col_addr_glitch YA only positive motion for column address and 179 micro_column_address caps 180cr_cancels_micro_mode YB using cr turns off micro mode 181has_print_wheel YC printer needs operator to change character 182 set 183row_addr_glitch YD only positive motion for row_address and 184 micro_row_address caps 185semi_auto_right_margin YE printing in last column causes cr 186cpi_changes_res YF changing character pitch changes resolution 187lpi_changes_res YG changing line pitch changes resolution 188.Ed 189.Pp 190These are the numeric capabilities: 191.Bd -literal 192\fBNumeric TCap Description\fR 193\fBVariables Code\fR 194columns co number of columns in aline 195init_tabs it tabs initially every # spaces 196lines li number of lines on screen or page 197lines_of_memory lm lines of memory if > line. 0 => varies 198magic_cookie_glitch sg number of blank chars left by 199 enter_standout_mode or exit_standout_mode 200padding_baud_rate pb lowest baud rate where padding needed 201virtual_terminal vt virtual terminal number (CB/unix) 202width_status_line ws columns in status line 203num_labels Nl number of labels on screen 204label_height lh rows in each label 205label_width lw columns in each label 206max_attributes ma maximum combined attributes terminal can 207 handle 208maximum_windows MW maximum number of definable windows 209magic_cookie_glitch_ul ug number of blanks left by underline 210# 211# These came in with SVr4's color support 212# 213max_colors Co maximum numbers of colors on screen 214max_pairs pa maximum number of color-pairs on the screen 215no_color_video NC video attributes that can't be used with 216 colors 217# 218# The following numeric capabilities are present in the SVr4.0 term 219# structure, but are not yet documented in the man page. 220# They came in with SVr4's printer support. 221# 222buffer_capacity Ya numbers of bytes buffered before printing 223dot_vert_spacing Yb spacing of pins vertically in pins per inch 224dot_horz_spacing Yc spacing of dots horizontally in dots per 225 inch 226max_micro_address Yd maximum value in micro_..._address 227max_micro_jump Ye maximum value in parm_..._micro 228micro_char_size Yf character size when in micro mode 229micro_line_size Yg line size when in micro mode 230number_of_pins Yh numbers of pins in print-head 231output_res_char Yi horizontal resolution in units per line 232output_res_line Yj vertical resolution in units per line 233output_res_horz_inch Yk horizontal resolution in units per inch 234output_res_vert_inch Yl vertical resolution in units per inch 235print_rate Ym print rate in chars per second 236wide_char_size Yn character step size when in double wide 237 mode 238buttons BT number of buttons on mouse 239bit_image_entwining Yo number of passed for each bit-image row 240bit_image_type Yp type of bit-image device 241.Ed 242.Pp 243These are the string capabilities: 244.Bd -literal 245\fBString TCap Description\fR 246\fBVariables Code\fR 247back_tab bt back tab (P) 248bell bl audible signal (bell) (P) 249carriage_return cr carriage return (P*) 250change_scroll_region cs change region to line #1 to line #2 (P) 251clear_all_tabs ct clear all tab stops (P) 252clear_screen cl clear screen and home cursor (P*) 253clr_eol ce clear to end of line (P) 254clr_eos cd clear to end of screen (P*) 255column_address ch horizontal position #1, absolute (P) 256command_character CC terminal settable cmd character in 257 prototype 258cursor_address cm move to row #1 columns #2 259cursor_down do down one line 260cursor_home ho home cursor 261cursor_invisible vi make cursor invisible 262cursor_left le move left one space 263cursor_mem_address CM memory relative cursor addressing 264cursor_normal ve make cursor appear normal (undo 265 cursor_invisible/cursor_visible) 266cursor_right nd move right one space 267cursor_to_ll ll last line, first column 268cursor_up up up one line 269cursor_visible vs make cursor very visible 270delete_character dc delete character (P*) 271delete_line dl delete line (P*) 272dis_status_line ds disable status line 273down_half_line hd half a line down 274enter_alt_charset_mode as start alternate character set (P) 275enter_blink_mode mb turn on blinking 276enter_bold_mode md turn on bold (extra bright) mode 277enter_ca_mode ti string to start programs using 278 cursor_address 279enter_delete_mode dm enter delete mode 280enter_dim_mode mh turn on half-bright mode 281enter_insert_mode im enter insert mode 282enter_secure_mode mk turn on blank mode (characters invisible) 283enter_protected_mode mp turn on protected mode 284enter_reverse_mode mr turn on reverse video mode 285enter_standout_mode so begin standout mode 286enter_underline_mode us begin underline mode 287erase_chars ec erase #1 characters (P) 288exit_alt_charset_mode ae end alternate character set (P) 289exit_attribute_mode me turn off all attributes 290exit_ca_mode te strings to end programs using cup 291exit_delete_mode ed end delete mode 292exit_insert_mode ei exit insert mode 293exit_standout_mode se exit standout mode 294exit_underline_mode ue exit underline mode 295flash_screen vb visible bell (may not move cursor) 296form_feed ff hardcopy terminal page eject (P*) 297from_status_line fs return from status line 298init_1string i1 initialization string 299init_2string is initialization string 300init_3string i3 initialization string 301init_file if name of initialization file 302insert_character ic insert character (P) 303insert_line al insert line (P*) 304insert_padding ip insert padding after inserted character 305key_backspace kb backspace key 306key_catab ka clear-all-tabs key 307key_clear kC clear-screen or erase key 308key_ctab kt clear-tab key 309key_dc kD delete-character key 310key_dl kL delete-line key 311key_down kd down-arrow key 312key_eic kM sent by rmir or smir in insert mode 313key_eol kE clear-to-end-of-line key 314key_eos kS clear-to-end-of-screen key 315key_f0 k0 F0 function key 316key_f1 k1 F1 function key 317key_f10 k; F10 function key 318key_f2 k2 F2 function key 319key_f3 k3 F3 function key 320key_f4 k4 F4 function key 321key_f5 k5 F5 function key 322key_f6 k6 F6 function key 323key_f7 k7 F7 function key 324key_f8 k8 F8 function key 325key_f9 k9 F9 function key 326key_home kh home key 327key_ic kI insert-character key 328key_il kA insert-line key 329key_left kl left-arrow key 330key_ll kH last-line key 331key_npage kN next-page key 332key_ppage kP prev-page key 333key_right kr right-arrow key 334key_sf kF scroll-forward key 335key_sr kR scroll-backward key 336key_stab kT set-tab key 337key_up ku up-arrow key 338keypad_local ke leave 'keyboard_transmit' mode 339keypad_xmit ks enter 'keyboard_transmit' mode 340lab_f0 l0 label on function key f0 if not f0 341lab_f1 l1 label on function key f1 if not f1 342lab_f10 la label on function key f10 if not f10 343lab_f2 l2 label on function key f2 if not f2 344lab_f3 l3 label on function key f3 if not f3 345lab_f4 l4 label on function key f4 if not f4 346lab_f5 l5 label on function key f5 if not f5 347lab_f6 l6 label on function key f6 if not f6 348lab_f7 l7 label on function key f7 if not f7 349lab_f8 l8 label on function key f8 if not f8 350lab_f9 l9 label on function key f9 if not f9 351meta_off mo turn off meta mode 352meta_on mm turn on meta mode (8th-bit on) 353newline nw newline (behave like cr followed by lf) 354pad_char pc padding char (instead of null) 355parm_dch DC delete #1 chars (P*) 356parm_delete_line DL delete #1 lines (P*) 357parm_down_cursor DO down #1 lines (P*) 358parm_ich IC insert #1 chars (P*) 359parm_index SF scroll forward #1 lines (P) 360parm_insert_line AL insert #1 lines (P*) 361parm_left_cursor LE move #1 chars to the left (P) 362parm_right_cursor RI move #1 chars to the right (P*) 363parm_rindex SR scroll back #1 lines (P) 364parm_up_cursor UP up #1 lines (P*) 365pkey_key pk program function key #1 to type string #2 366pkey_local pl program function key #1 to execute 367 string #2 368pkey_xmit px program function key #1 to transmit 369 string #2 370print_screen ps print contents of screen 371prtr_off pf turn off printer 372prtr_on po turn on printer 373repeat_char rp repeat char #1 #2 times (P*) 374reset_1string r1 reset string 375reset_2string r2 reset string 376reset_3string r3 reset string 377reset_file rf name of reset file 378restore_cursor rc restore cursor to last position of 379 save_cursor 380row_address cv vertical position #1 absolute (P) 381save_cursor sc save current cursor position (P) 382scroll_forward sf scroll text up (P) 383scroll_reverse sr scroll text down (P) 384set_attributes sa define video attributes #1-#9 (PG9) 385set_tab st set a tab in every row, current columns 386set_window wi current window is lines #1-#2 cols #3-#4 387tab ta tab to next 8-space hardware tab stop 388to_status_line ts move to status line 389underline_char uc underline char and move past it 390up_half_line hu half a line up 391init_prog iP path name of program for initialization 392key_a1 K1 upper left of keypad 393key_a3 K3 upper right of keypad 394key_b2 K2 center of keypad 395key_c1 K4 lower left of keypad 396key_c3 K5 lower right of keypad 397prtr_non pO turn on printer for #1 bytes 398termcap_init2 i2 secondary initialization string 399termcap_reset rs terminal reset string 400# 401# SVr1 capabilities stop here. IBM's version of terminfo is the same as 402# SVr4 up to this point, but has a different set afterwards. 403# 404char_padding rP like insert_padding but when in insert mode 405acs_chars ac graphics charset pairs - def=vt100 406plab_norm pn program label #1 to show string #2 407key_btab kB back-tab key 408enter_xon_mode SX turn on xon/xoff handshaking 409exit_xon_mode RX turn off xon/xoff handshaking 410enter_am_mode SA turn on automatic margins 411exit_am_mode RA turn off automatic margins 412xon_character XN XON character 413xoff_character XF XOFF character 414ena_acs eA enable alternate char set 415label_on LO turn on soft labels 416label_off LF turn off soft labels 417key_beg @1 begin key 418key_cancel @2 cancel key 419key_close @3 close key 420key_command @4 command key 421key_copy @5 copy key 422key_create @6 create key 423key_end @7 end key 424key_enter @8 enter/send key 425key_exit @9 exit key 426key_find @0 find key 427key_help %1 help key 428key_mark %2 mark key 429key_message %3 message key 430key_move %4 move key 431key_next %5 next key 432key_open %6 open key 433key_options %7 options key 434key_previous %8 previous key 435key_print %9 print key 436key_redo %0 redo key 437key_reference &1 reference key 438key_refresh &2 refresh key 439key_replace &3 replace key 440key_restart &4 restart key 441key_resume &5 resume key 442key_save &6 save key 443key_suspend &7 suspend key 444key_undo &8 undo key 445key_sbeg &9 shifted key 446key_scancel &0 shifted key 447key_scommand *1 shifted key 448key_scopy *2 shifted key 449key_screate *3 shifted key 450key_sdc *4 shifted key 451key_sdl *5 shifted key 452key_select *6 select key 453key_send *7 shifted key 454key_seol *8 shifted key 455key_sexit *9 shifted key 456key_sfind *0 shifted key 457key_shelp #1 shifted key 458key_shome #2 shifted key 459key_sic #3 shifted key 460key_sleft #4 shifted key 461key_smessage %a shifted key 462key_smove %b shifted key 463key_snext %c shifted key 464key_soptions %d shifted key 465key_sprevious %e shifted key 466key_sprint %f shifted key 467key_sredo %g shifted key 468key_sreplace %h shifted key 469key_sright %i shifted key 470key_srsume %j shifted key 471key_ssave !1 shifted key 472key_ssuspend !2 shifted key 473key_sundo !3 shifted key 474req_for_input RF send next input char (for ptys) 475key_f11 F1 F11 function key 476key_f12 F2 F12 function key 477key_f13 F3 F13 function key 478key_f14 F4 F14 function key 479key_f15 F5 F15 function key 480key_f16 F6 F16 function key 481key_f17 F7 F17 function key 482key_f18 F8 F18 function key 483key_f19 F9 F19 function key 484key_f20 FA F20 function key 485key_f21 FB F21 function key 486key_f22 FC F22 function key 487key_f23 FD F23 function key 488key_f24 FE F24 function key 489key_f25 FF F25 function key 490key_f26 FG F26 function key 491key_f27 FH F27 function key 492key_f28 FI F28 function key 493key_f29 FJ F29 function key 494key_f30 FK F30 function key 495key_f31 FL F31 function key 496key_f32 FM F32 function key 497key_f33 FN F33 function key 498key_f34 FO F34 function key 499key_f35 FP F35 function key 500key_f36 FQ F36 function key 501key_f37 FR F37 function key 502key_f38 FS F38 function key 503key_f39 FT F39 function key 504key_f40 FU F40 function key 505key_f41 FV F41 function key 506key_f42 FW F42 function key 507key_f43 FX F43 function key 508key_f44 FY F44 function key 509key_f45 FZ F45 function key 510key_f46 Fa F46 function key 511key_f47 Fb F47 function key 512key_f48 Fc F48 function key 513key_f49 Fd F49 function key 514key_f50 Fe F50 function key 515key_f51 Ff F51 function key 516key_f52 Fg F52 function key 517key_f53 Fh F53 function key 518key_f54 Fi F54 function key 519key_f55 Fj F55 function key 520key_f56 Fk F56 function key 521key_f57 Fl F57 function key 522key_f58 Fm F58 function key 523key_f59 Fn F59 function key 524key_f60 Fo F60 function key 525key_f61 Fp F61 function key 526key_f62 Fq F62 function key 527key_f63 Fr F63 function key 528clr_bol cb Clear to beginning of line 529clear_margins MC clear right and left soft margins 530set_left_margin ML set left soft margin 531set_right_margin MR set right soft margin 532label_format Lf label format 533set_clock SC set clock, #1 hrs #2 mins #3 secs 534display_clock DK display clock at (#1,#2) 535remove_clock RC remove clock 536create_window CW define a window #1 from #2, #3 to #4, #5 537goto_window WG go to window #1 538hangup HU hang-up phone 539dial_phone DI dial number #1 540quick_dial QD dial number #1 without checking 541tone TO select touch tone dialing 542pulse PU select pulse dialling 543flash_hook fh flash switch hook 544fixed_pause PA pause for 2-3 seconds 545wait_tone WA wait for dial-tone 546user0 u0 User string #0 547user1 u1 User string #1 548user2 u2 User string #2 549user3 u3 User string #3 550user4 u4 User string #4 551user5 u5 User string #5 552user6 u6 User string #6 553user7 u7 User string #7 554user8 u8 User string #8 555user9 u9 User string #9 556# 557# SVr4 added these capabilities to support color 558# 559orig_pair op Set default pair to its original value 560orig_colors oc Set all color pairs to the original ones 561initialize_color Ic initialize color #1 to (#2,#3,#4) 562initialize_pair Ip Initialize color pair #1 to fg=(#2,#3,#4), 563 bg=(#5,#6,#7) 564set_color_pair sp Set current color pair to #1 565set_foreground Sf Set foreground color #1 566set_background Sb Set background color #1 567# 568# SVr4 added these capabilities to support printers 569# 570change_char_pitch ZA Change number of characters per inch 571change_line_pitch ZB Change number of lines per inch 572change_res_horz ZC Change horizontal resolution 573change_res_vert ZD Change vertical resolution 574define_char ZE Define a character 575enter_doublewide_mode ZF Enter double-wide mode 576enter_draft_quality ZG Enter draft-quality mode 577enter_italics_mode ZH Enter italic mode 578enter_leftward_mode ZI Start leftward carriage motion 579enter_micro_mode ZJ Start micro-motion mode 580enter_near_letter_quality ZK Enter NLQ mode 581enter_normal_quality ZL Enter normal-quality mode 582enter_shadow_mode ZM Enter shadow-print mode 583enter_subscript_mode ZN Enter subscript mode 584enter_superscript_mode ZO Enter superscript mode 585enter_upward_mode ZP Start upward carriage motion 586exit_doublewide_mode ZQ End double-wide mode 587exit_italics_mode ZR End italic mode 588exit_leftward_mode ZS End left-motion mode 589exit_micro_mode ZT End micro-motion mode 590exit_shadow_mode ZU End shadow-print mode 591exit_subscript_mode ZV End subscript mode 592exit_superscript_mode ZW End superscript mode 593exit_upward_mode ZX End reverse character motion 594micro_column_address ZY Like column_address in micro mode 595micro_down ZZ Like cursor_down in micro mode 596micro_left Za Like cursor_left in micro mode 597micro_right Zb Like cursor_right in micro mode 598micro_row_address Zc Like row_address in micro mode 599micro_up Zd Like cursor_up in micro mode 600order_of_pins Ze Match software bits to print-head pins 601parm_down_micro Zf Like parm_down_cursor in micro mode 602parm_left_micro Zg Like parm_left_cursor in micro mode 603parm_right_micro Zh Like parm_right_cursor in micro mode 604parm_up_micro Zi Like parm_up_cursor in micro mode 605select_char_set Zj Select character set 606set_bottom_margin Zk Set bottom margin at current line 607set_bottom_margin_parm Zl Set bottom margin at line #1 or #2 lines 608 from bottom 609set_left_margin_parm Zm Set left (right) margin at column #1 (#2) 610set_right_margin_parm Zn Set right margin at column #1 611set_top_margin Zo Set top margin at current line 612set_top_margin_parm Zp Set top (bottom) margin at row #1 (#2) 613start_bit_image Zq Start printing bit image graphics 614start_char_set_def Zr Start character set definition 615stop_bit_image Zs Stop printing bit image graphics 616stop_char_set_def Zt End definition of character aet 617subscript_characters Zu List of subscriptible characters 618superscript_characters Zv List of superscriptible characters 619these_cause_cr Zw Printing any of these chars causes CR 620zero_motion Zx No motion for subsequent character 621# 622# The following string capabilities are present in the SVr4.0 term 623# structure, but are not documented in the man page. 624# 625char_set_names Zy List of character set names 626key_mouse Km Mouse event has occurred 627mouse_info Mi Mouse status information 628req_mouse_pos RQ Request mouse position 629get_mouse Gm Curses should get button events 630set_a_foreground AF Set ANSI foreground color 631set_a_background AB Set ANSI background color 632pkey_plab xl Program function key #1 to type string #2 633 and show string #3 634device_type dv Indicate language/codeset support 635code_set_init ci Init sequence for multiple codesets 636set0_des_seq s0 Shift to code set 0 (EUC set 0, ASCII) 637set1_des_seq s1 Shift to code set 1 638set2_des_seq s2 Shift to code set 2 639set3_des_seq s3 Shift to code set 3 640set_lr_margin ML Set both left and right margins to #1, #2 641set_tb_margin MT Sets both top and bottom margins to #1, #2 642bit_image_repeat Xy Repeat bit image cell #1 #2 times 643bit_image_newline Zz Move to next row of the bit image 644bit_image_carriage_return Yv Move to beginning of same row 645color_names Yw Give name for color #1 646define_bit_image_region Yx Define rectangular bit image region 647end_bit_image_region Yy End a bit-image region 648set_color_band Yz Change to ribbon color #1 649set_page_length YZ Set page length to #1 lines 650# 651# SVr4 added these capabilities for direct PC-clone support 652# 653display_pc_char S1 Display PC character 654enter_pc_charset_mode S2 Enter PC character display mode 655exit_pc_charset_mode S3 Exit PC character display mode 656enter_scancode_mode S4 Enter PC scancode mode 657exit_scancode_mode S5 Exit PC scancode mode 658pc_term_options S6 PC terminal options 659scancode_escape S7 Escape for scancode emulation 660alt_scancode_esc S8 Alternate escape for scancode emulation 661# 662# The XSI Curses standard added these. 663# 664enter_horizontal_hl_mode Xh Enter horizontal highlight mode 665enter_left_hl_mode Xl Enter left highlight mode 666enter_low_hl_mode Xo Enter low highlight mode 667enter_right_hl_mode Xr Enter right highlight mode 668enter_top_hl_mode Xt Enter top highlight mode 669enter_vertical_hl_mode Xv Enter vertical highlight mode 670.Ed 671.Pp 672Obsolete termcap capabilities. 673New software should not rely on them at all. 674.Bd -literal 675\fBBoolean TCap Description\fR 676\fBVariables Code\fR 677linefeed_is_newline NL move down with ^J 678even_parity EP terminal requires even parity 679odd_parity OP terminal requires odd parity 680half_duplex HD terminal is half-duplex 681lower_case_only LC terminal has only lower case 682upper_case_only UC terminal has only upper case 683has_hardware_tabs pt has 8-char tabs invoked with ^I 684return_does_clr_eol xr return clears the line 685tek_4025_insert_line xx Tektronix 4025 insert-line glitch 686backspaces_with_bs bs uses ^H to move left 687crt_no_scrolling ns crt cannot scroll 688no_correctly_working_cr nc no way to go to start of line 689.Ed 690.Bd -literal 691\fBNumber TCap Description\fR 692\fBVariables Code\fR 693backspace_delay dB padding required for ^H 694form_feed_delay dF padding required for ^L 695horizontal_tab_delay dT padding required for ^I 696vertical_tab_delay dV padding required for ^V 697number_of_function_keys kn count of function keys 698carriage_return_delay dC pad needed for CR 699new_line_delay dN pad needed for LF 700.Ed 701.Bd -literal 702\fBString TCap Description\fR 703\fBVariables Code\fR 704other_non_function_keys ko list of self-mapped keycaps 705arrow_key_map ma map arrow keys 706memory_lock_above ml lock visible screen memory above the 707 current line 708memory_unlock mu unlock visible screen memory above the 709 current line 710linefeed_if_not_lf nl use to move down 711backspace_if_not_bs bc move left, if not ^H 712.Ed 713.Ss A Sample Entry 714The following entry, which describes the Concept\-100, is among the more 715complex entries in the 716.Nm 717file as of this writing. 718.Pp 719.Bd -literal 720ca\||\|concept100\||\|c100\||\|concept\||\|c104\||\|concept100-4p\||\|HDS Concept\-100:\e 721 :al=3*\eE^R:am:bl=^G:cd=16*\eE^C:ce=16\eE^U:cl=2*^L:cm=\eEa%+ %+ :\e 722 :co#80:.cr=9^M:db:dc=16\eE^A:dl=3*\eE^B:do=^J:ei=\eE\e200:eo:im=\eE^P:in:\e 723 :ip=16*:is=\eEU\eEf\eE7\eE5\eE8\eEl\eENH\eEK\eE\e200\eEo&\e200\eEo\e47\eE:k1=\eE5:\e 724 :k2=\eE6:k3=\eE7:kb=^h:kd=\eE<:ke=\eEx:kh=\eE?:kl=\eE>:kr=\eE=:ks=\eEX:\e 725 :ku=\eE;:le=^H:li#24:mb=\eEC:me=\eEN\e200:mh=\eEE:mi:mk=\eEH:mp=\eEI:\e 726 :mr=\eED:nd=\eE=:pb#9600:rp=0.2*\eEr%.%+ :se=\eEd\eEe:sf=^J:so=\eEE\eED:\e 727 :.ta=8\et:te=\eEv \e200\e200\e200\e200\e200\e200\eEp\er\en:\e 728 :ti=\eEU\eEv 8p\eEp\er:ue=\eEg:ul:up=\eE;:us=\eEG:\e 729 :vb=\eEk\e200\e200\e200\e200\e200\e200\e200\e200\e200\e200\e200\e200\e200\e200\eEK:\e 730 :ve=\eEw:vs=\eEW:vt#8:xn:\e 731 :bs:cr=^M:dC#9:dT#8:nl=^J:ta=^I:pt: 732.Ed 733.Pp 734Entries may continue onto multiple lines by giving a \e as the last 735character of a line, and empty fields 736may be included for readability (here between the last field on a line 737and the first field on the next). 738Comments may be included on lines beginning with 739.Dq # . 740.Ss Types of Capabilities 741Capabilities in 742.Nm 743are of three types: Boolean capabilities, 744which indicate particular features that the terminal has; 745numeric capabilities, 746giving the size of the display or the size of other attributes; 747and string capabilities, 748which give character sequences that can be used to perform particular 749terminal operations. 750All capabilities have two-letter codes. 751For instance, the fact that 752the Concept has 753.Em automatic margins 754(an automatic return and linefeed 755when the end of a line is reached) is indicated by the Boolean capability 756.Sy \&am . 757Hence the description of the Concept includes 758.Sy \&am . 759.Pp 760Numeric capabilities are followed by the character `#' then the value. 761In the example above 762.Sy \&co , 763which indicates the number of columns the display has, 764gives the value `80' for the Concept. 765.Pp 766Finally, string-valued capabilities, such as 767.Sy \&ce 768(clear-to-end-of-line 769sequence) are given by the two-letter code, an `=', then a string 770ending at the next following `:'. 771A delay in milliseconds may appear after 772the `=' in such a capability, 773which causes padding characters to be supplied by 774.Xr tputs 3 775after the remainder of the string is sent to provide this delay. 776The delay can be either a number, 777such as `20', or a number followed by 778an `*', 779such as `3*'. 780An `*' indicates that the padding required is proportional 781to the number of lines affected by the operation, and the amount given is 782the per-affected-line padding required. 783(In the case of insert-character, 784the factor is still the number of 785.Em lines 786affected; 787this is always 1 unless the terminal has 788.Sy \&in 789and the software uses it.) 790When an `*' is specified, it is sometimes useful to give a delay of the form 791`3.5' to specify a delay per line to tenths of milliseconds. 792(Only one decimal place is allowed.) 793.Pp 794A number of escape sequences are provided in the string-valued capabilities 795for easy encoding of control characters there. 796.Sy \&\eE 797maps to an 798.Dv ESC 799character, 800.Sy \&^X 801maps to a control-X for any appropriate X, 802and the sequences 803.Sy \&\en 804.Sy \&\er 805.Sy \&\et 806.Sy \&\eb 807.Sy \&\ef 808map to linefeed, return, tab, backspace, and formfeed, respectively. 809Finally, characters may be given as three octal digits after a 810.Sy \&\e , 811and the characters 812.Sy \&^ 813and 814.Sy \&\e 815may be given as 816.Sy \&\e^ 817and 818.Sy \&\e\e . 819If it is necessary to place a 820.Sy \&: 821in a capability it must be escaped as 822.Sy \e: 823or be encoded as 824.Sy \&\e072 . 825If it is necessary to place a 826.Dv NUL 827character in a string capability it 828must be encoded as 829.Sy \&\e200 . 830(The routines that deal with 831.Nm 832use C strings and strip the high bits of the output very late, so that 833a 834.Sy \&\e200 835comes out as a 836.Sy \&\e000 837would.) 838.Pp 839Sometimes individual capabilities must be commented out. 840To do this, put a period before the capability name. 841For example, see the first 842.Sy \&cr 843and 844.Sy \&ta 845in the example above. 846.Ss Preparing Descriptions 847The most effective way to prepare a terminal description is by imitating 848the description of a similar terminal in 849.Nm 850and to build up a description gradually, using partial descriptions 851with 852.Xr \&vi 1 853to check that they are correct. 854Be aware that a very unusual terminal may expose deficiencies in 855the ability of the 856.Nm 857file to describe it 858or bugs in 859.Xr \&vi 1 . 860To easily test a new terminal description you are working on 861you can put it in your home directory in a file called 862.Pa .termcap 863and programs will look there before looking in 864.Pa /usr/share/misc/termcap . 865You can also set the environment variable 866.Ev TERMPATH 867to a list of absolute file pathnames (separated by spaces or colons), 868one of which contains the description you are working on, 869and programs will search them in the order listed, and nowhere else. 870See 871.Xr termcap 3 . 872The 873.Ev TERMCAP 874environment variable is usually set to the 875.Nm 876entry itself 877to avoid reading files when starting up a program. 878.Pp 879To get the padding for insert-line right 880(if the terminal manufacturer did not document it), 881a severe test is to use 882.Xr \&vi 1 883to edit 884.Pa /etc/passwd 885at 9600 baud, delete roughly 16 lines from the middle of the screen, 886then hit the `u' key several times quickly. 887If the display messes up, more padding is usually needed. 888A similar test can be used for insert-character. 889.Ss Basic Capabilities 890The number of columns on each line of the display is given by the 891.Sy \&co 892numeric capability. 893If the display is a 894.Tn CRT , 895then the 896number of lines on the screen is given by the 897.Sy \&li 898capability. 899If the display wraps around to the beginning of the next line when 900the cursor reaches the right margin, then it should have the 901.Sy \&am 902capability. 903If the terminal can clear its screen, 904the code to do this is given by the 905.Sy \&cl 906string capability. 907If the terminal overstrikes 908(rather than clearing the position when a character is overwritten), 909it should have the 910.Sy \&os 911capability. 912If the terminal is a printing terminal, 913with no soft copy unit, 914give it both 915.Sy \&hc 916and 917.Sy \&os . 918.Pf ( Sy \&os 919applies to storage scope terminals, 920such as the Tektronix 4010 series, 921as well as to hard copy and 922.Tn APL 923terminals.) 924If there is a code to move the cursor to the left edge of the current row, 925give this as 926.Sy \&cr . 927(Normally this will be carriage-return, 928.Sy \&^M . ) 929If there is a code to produce an audible signal (bell, beep, 930etc.), 931give this as 932.Sy \&bl . 933.Pp 934If there is a code (such as backspace) 935to move the cursor one position to the left, 936that capability should be given as 937.Sy \&le . 938Similarly, 939codes to move to the right, up, and down 940should be given as 941.Sy \&nd , 942.Sy \&up , 943and 944.Sy \&do , 945respectively. 946These 947.Em local cursor motions 948should not alter the text they pass over; 949for example, you would not normally use 950.Dq nd=\ \& 951unless the terminal has the 952.Sy \&os 953capability, 954because the space would erase the character moved over. 955.Pp 956A very important point here is that the local cursor motions encoded 957in 958.Nm 959have undefined behavior at the left and top edges of a 960.Tn CRT 961display. 962Programs should never attempt to backspace around the left edge, 963unless 964.Sy \&bw 965is given, and never attempt to go up off the top 966using local cursor motions. 967.Pp 968In order to scroll text up, 969a program goes to the bottom left corner of the screen and sends the 970.Sy \&sf 971(index) string. 972To scroll text down, 973a program goes to the top left corner of the screen and sends the 974.Sy \&sr 975(reverse index) string. 976The strings 977.Sy \&sf 978and 979.Sy \&sr 980have undefined behavior 981when not on their respective corners of the screen. 982Parameterized versions of the scrolling sequences are 983.Sy \&SF 984and 985.Sy \&SR , 986which have the same semantics as 987.Sy \&sf 988and 989.Sy \&sr 990except that they take one parameter 991and scroll that many lines. 992They also have undefined behavior 993except at the appropriate corner of the screen. 994.Pp 995The 996.Sy \&am 997capability tells whether the cursor sticks at the right 998edge of the screen when text is output there, 999but this does not necessarily apply to 1000.Sy \&nd 1001from the last column. 1002Leftward local motion is defined from the left edge only when 1003.Sy \&bw 1004is given; then an 1005.Sy \&le 1006from the left edge will move to the right edge of the previous row. 1007This is useful for drawing a box around the edge of the screen, 1008for example. 1009If the terminal has switch-selectable automatic margins, 1010the 1011.Nm 1012description usually assumes that this feature is on, 1013.Em i.e . , 1014.Sy \&am . 1015If the terminal has a command 1016that moves to the first column of the next line, 1017that command can be given as 1018.Sy \&nw 1019(newline). 1020It is permissible for this to clear the remainder of the current line, 1021so if the terminal has no correctly-working 1022.Tn \&CR 1023and 1024.Tn \&LF 1025it may still be possible to craft a working 1026.Sy \&nw 1027out of one or both of them. 1028.Pp 1029These capabilities suffice to describe hardcopy and 1030.Dq glass-tty 1031terminals. 1032Thus the Teletype model 33 is described as 1033.Bd -literal -offset indent 1034T3\||\|tty33\||\|33\||\|tty\||\|Teletype model 33:\e 1035 :bl=^G:co#72:cr=^M:do=^J:hc:os: 1036.Ed 1037.Pp 1038and the Lear Siegler 1039.Tn ADM Ns \-3 1040is described as 1041.Bd -literal -offset indent 1042l3\||\|adm3\||\|3\||\|LSI \s-1ADM\s0-3:\e 1043:am:bl=^G:cl=^Z:co#80:cr=^M:do=^J:le=^H:li#24:sf=^J: 1044.Ed 1045.Ss Parameterized Strings 1046Cursor addressing and other strings requiring parameters 1047are described by a 1048parameterized string capability, with 1049.Xr printf 3 Ns \-like 1050escapes 1051.Sy \&%x 1052in it, 1053while other characters are passed through unchanged. 1054For example, to address the cursor the 1055.Sy \&cm 1056capability is given, using two parameters: the row and column to move to. 1057(Rows and columns are numbered from zero and refer to the physical screen 1058visible to the user, not to any unseen memory. 1059If the terminal has memory-relative cursor addressing, 1060that can be indicated by an analogous 1061.Sy \&CM 1062capability.) 1063.Pp 1064The 1065.Sy \&% 1066encodings have the following meanings: 1067.Bl -column xxxxx 1068.It "%% output `%'" 1069.It "%d output value as in" 1070.Xr printf 3 1071%d 1072.It "%2 output value as in" 1073.Xr printf 3 1074%2d 1075.It "%3 output value as in" 1076.Xr printf 3 1077%3d 1078.It "%. output value as in" 1079.Xr printf 3 1080%c 1081.It "%+" Ns Em x Ta No add 1082.Em x 1083to value, then do %. 1084.It "%>" Ns Em \&xy Ta No if 1085value > 1086.Em x 1087then add 1088.Em y , 1089no output 1090.It "%r reverse order of two parameters, no output" 1091.It "%i increment by one, no output" 1092.It "%n exclusive-or all parameters with 0140 (Datamedia 2500)" 1093.It "\&%B" Ta Tn BCD No "(16*(value/10)) + (value%10), no output" 1094.It "%D Reverse coding (value \- 2*(value%16)), no output (Delta Data)." 1095.El 1096.Pp 1097Consider the Hewlett-Packard 2645, which, to get to row 3 and column 12, needs 1098to be sent 1099.Dq \eE&a12c03Y 1100padded for 6 milliseconds. 1101Note that the order 1102of the row and column coordinates is reversed here 1103and that the row and column 1104are sent as two-digit integers. 1105Thus its 1106.Sy \&cm 1107capability is 1108.Dq Li cm=6\eE&%r%2c%2Y . 1109.Pp 1110The Datamedia 2500 needs the current row and column sent 1111encoded in binary using 1112.Dq \&%. . 1113Terminals that use 1114.Dq %.\& 1115need to be able to 1116backspace the cursor 1117.Pq Sy \&le 1118and to move the cursor up one line on the screen 1119.Pq Sy \&up . 1120This is necessary because it is not always safe to transmit 1121.Sy \&\en , 1122.Sy \&^D , 1123and 1124.Sy \&\er , 1125as the system may change or discard them. 1126(Programs using 1127.Nm 1128must set terminal modes so that tabs are not expanded, so 1129.Sy \&\et 1130is safe to send. 1131This turns out to be essential for the Ann Arbor 4080.) 1132.Pp 1133A final example is the Lear Siegler 1134.Tn ADM Ns \-3a , 1135which offsets row and column 1136by a blank character, thus 1137.Dq Li cm=\eE=%+ %+\ \& . 1138.Pp 1139Row or column absolute cursor addressing 1140can be given as single parameter capabilities 1141.Sy \&ch 1142(horizontal position absolute) and 1143.Sy \&cv 1144(vertical position absolute). 1145Sometimes these are shorter than the more general two-parameter sequence 1146(as with the Hewlett-Packard 2645) and can be used in preference to 1147.Sy \&cm . 1148If there are parameterized local motions 1149.Pf ( Em e.g . , 1150move 1151.Ar n 1152positions to the right) 1153these can be given as 1154.Sy \&DO , 1155.Sy \&LE , 1156.Sy \&RI , 1157and 1158.Sy \&UP 1159with a single parameter indicating how many positions to move. 1160These are primarily useful if the terminal does not have 1161.Sy \&cm , 1162such as the Tektronix 4025. 1163.Ss Cursor Motions 1164If the terminal has a fast way to home the cursor 1165(to the very upper left corner of the screen), this can be given as 1166.Sy \&ho . 1167Similarly, a fast way of getting to the lower left-hand corner 1168can be given as 1169.Sy \&ll ; 1170this may involve going up with 1171.Sy \&up 1172from the home position, 1173but a program should never do this itself (unless 1174.Sy \&ll 1175does), because it can 1176make no assumption about the effect of moving up from the home position. 1177Note that the home position is the same as 1178cursor address (0,0): to the top left corner of the screen, not of memory. 1179(Therefore, the 1180.Dq \eEH 1181sequence on Hewlett-Packard terminals 1182cannot be used for 1183.Sy \&ho . ) 1184.Ss Area Clears 1185If the terminal can clear from the current position to the end of the 1186line, leaving the cursor where it is, this should be given as 1187.Sy \&ce . 1188If the terminal can clear from the current position to the end of the 1189display, this should be given as 1190.Sy \&cd . 1191.Sy \&cd 1192must only be invoked from the first column of a line. 1193(Therefore, 1194it can be simulated by a request to delete a large number of lines, 1195if a true 1196.Sy \&cd 1197is not available.) 1198.Ss Insert/Delete Line 1199If the terminal can open a new blank line 1200before the line containing the cursor, 1201this should be given as 1202.Sy \&al ; 1203this must be invoked only from the first 1204position of a line. 1205The cursor must then appear at the left of the newly blank line. 1206If the terminal can delete the line that the cursor is on, this 1207should be given as 1208.Sy \&dl ; 1209this must only be used from the first position on 1210the line to be deleted. 1211Versions of 1212.Sy \&al 1213and 1214.Sy \&dl 1215which take a single parameter 1216and insert or delete that many lines 1217can be given as 1218.Sy \&AL 1219and 1220.Sy \&DL . 1221If the terminal has a settable scrolling region 1222(like the VT100), 1223the command to set this can be described with the 1224.Sy \&cs 1225capability, 1226which takes two parameters: the top and bottom lines of the scrolling region. 1227The cursor position is, alas, undefined after using this command. 1228It is possible to get the effect of insert or delete line 1229using this command \(em the 1230.Sy \&sc 1231and 1232.Sy \&rc 1233(save and restore cursor) commands are also useful. 1234Inserting lines at the top or bottom of the screen can also be done using 1235.Sy \&sr 1236or 1237.Sy \&sf 1238on many terminals without a true insert/delete line, 1239and is often faster even on terminals with those features. 1240.Pp 1241If the terminal has the ability to define a window as part of memory 1242which all commands affect, it should be given as the parameterized string 1243.Sy \&wi . 1244The four parameters are the starting and ending lines in memory 1245and the starting and ending columns in memory, in that order. 1246(This 1247.Xr terminfo 5 1248capability is described for completeness. 1249It is unlikely that any 1250.Nm Ns \-using 1251program will support it.) 1252.Pp 1253If the terminal can retain display memory above the screen, then the 1254.Sy \&da 1255capability should be given; 1256if display memory can be retained 1257below, then 1258.Sy \&db 1259should be given. 1260These indicate 1261that deleting a line or scrolling may bring non-blank lines up from below 1262or that scrolling back with 1263.Sy \&sr 1264may bring down non-blank lines. 1265.Ss Insert/Delete Character 1266There are two basic kinds of intelligent terminals with respect to 1267insert/delete character that can be described using 1268.Nm . 1269The most common insert/delete character operations affect only the characters 1270on the current line and shift characters off the end of the line rigidly. 1271Other terminals, such as the Concept\-100 and the Perkin Elmer Owl, make 1272a distinction between typed and untyped blanks on the screen, shifting 1273upon an insert or delete only to an untyped blank on the screen which is 1274either eliminated or expanded to two untyped blanks. 1275You can determine 1276the kind of terminal you have by clearing the screen then typing 1277text separated by cursor motions. 1278Type 1279.Dq Li abc\ \ \ \ def 1280using local 1281cursor motions (not spaces) between the 1282.Dq abc 1283and the 1284.Dq def . 1285Then position the cursor before the 1286.Dq abc 1287and put the terminal in insert 1288mode. 1289If typing characters causes the rest of the line to shift 1290rigidly and characters to fall off the end, then your terminal does 1291not distinguish between blanks and untyped positions. 1292If the 1293.Dq abc 1294shifts over to the 1295.Dq def 1296which then move together around the end of the 1297current line and onto the next as you insert, then you have the second type of 1298terminal and should give the capability 1299.Sy \&in , 1300which stands for 1301.Dq insert null . 1302While these are two logically separate attributes 1303(one line 1304.Em \&vs . 1305multi-line insert mode, 1306and special treatment of untyped spaces), 1307we have seen no terminals whose insert 1308mode cannot be described with the single attribute. 1309.Pp 1310The 1311.Nm 1312entries can describe both terminals that have an insert mode and terminals 1313that send a simple sequence to open a blank position on the current line. 1314Give as 1315.Sy \&im 1316the sequence to get into insert mode. 1317Give as 1318.Sy \&ei 1319the sequence to leave insert mode. 1320Now give as 1321.Sy \&ic 1322any sequence that needs to be sent just before 1323each character to be inserted. 1324Most terminals with a true insert mode 1325will not give 1326.Sy \&ic ; 1327terminals that use a sequence to open a screen 1328position should give it here. 1329(If your terminal has both, 1330insert mode is usually preferable to 1331.Sy \&ic . 1332Do not give both unless the terminal actually requires both to be used 1333in combination.) 1334If post-insert padding is needed, give this as a number of milliseconds 1335in 1336.Sy \&ip 1337(a string option). 1338Any other sequence that may need to be 1339sent after insertion of a single character can also be given in 1340.Sy \&ip . 1341If your terminal needs to be placed into an `insert mode' 1342and needs a special code preceding each inserted character, 1343then both 1344.Sy \&im Ns / Sy \&ei 1345and 1346.Sy \&ic 1347can be given, and both will be used. 1348The 1349.Sy \&IC 1350capability, with one parameter 1351.Em n , 1352will repeat the effects of 1353.Sy \&ic 1354.Em n 1355times. 1356.Pp 1357It is occasionally necessary to move around while in insert mode 1358to delete characters on the same line 1359.Pf ( Em e.g . , 1360if there is a tab after 1361the insertion position). 1362If your terminal allows motion while in 1363insert mode, you can give the capability 1364.Sy \&mi 1365to speed up inserting 1366in this case. 1367Omitting 1368.Sy \&mi 1369will affect only speed. 1370Some terminals 1371(notably Datamedia's) must not have 1372.Sy \&mi 1373because of the way their 1374insert mode works. 1375.Pp 1376Finally, you can specify 1377.Sy \&dc 1378to delete a single character, 1379.Sy \&DC 1380with one parameter 1381.Em n 1382to delete 1383.Em n 1384characters, 1385and delete mode by giving 1386.Sy \&dm 1387and 1388.Sy \&ed 1389to enter and exit delete mode 1390(which is any mode the terminal needs to be placed in for 1391.Sy \&dc 1392to work). 1393.Ss Highlighting, Underlining, and Visible Bells 1394If your terminal has one or more kinds of display attributes, 1395these can be represented in a number of different ways. 1396You should choose one display form as 1397.Em standout mode , 1398representing a good high-contrast, easy-on-the-eyes format 1399for highlighting error messages and other attention getters. 1400(If you have a choice, reverse video plus half-bright is good, 1401or reverse video alone.) 1402The sequences to enter and exit standout mode 1403are given as 1404.Sy \&so 1405and 1406.Sy \&se , 1407respectively. 1408If the code to change into or out of standout 1409mode leaves one or even two blank spaces or garbage characters on the screen, 1410as the 1411.Tn TVI 1412912 and Teleray 1061 do, 1413then 1414.Sy \&sg 1415should be given to tell how many characters are left. 1416.Pp 1417Codes to begin underlining and end underlining can be given as 1418.Sy \&us 1419and 1420.Sy \&ue , 1421respectively. 1422Underline mode change garbage is specified by 1423.Sy \&ug , 1424similar to 1425.Sy \&sg . 1426If the terminal has a code to underline the current character and move 1427the cursor one position to the right, 1428such as the Microterm Mime, 1429this can be given as 1430.Sy \&uc . 1431.Pp 1432Other capabilities to enter various highlighting modes include 1433.Sy \&mb 1434(blinking), 1435.Sy \&md 1436(bold or extra bright), 1437.Sy \&mh 1438(dim or half-bright), 1439.Sy \&mk 1440(blanking or invisible text), 1441.Sy \&mp 1442(protected), 1443.Sy \&mr 1444(reverse video), 1445.Sy \&me 1446(turn off 1447.Em all 1448attribute modes), 1449.Sy \&as 1450(enter alternate character set mode), and 1451.Sy \&ae 1452(exit alternate character set mode). 1453Turning on any of these modes singly may or may not turn off other modes. 1454.Pp 1455If there is a sequence to set arbitrary combinations of mode, 1456this should be given as 1457.Sy \&sa 1458(set attributes), taking 9 parameters. 1459Each parameter is either 0 or 1, 1460as the corresponding attributes is on or off. 1461The 9 parameters are, in order: standout, underline, reverse, blink, 1462dim, bold, blank, protect, and alternate character set. 1463Not all modes need be supported by 1464.Sy \&sa , 1465only those for which corresponding attribute commands exist. 1466(It is unlikely that a 1467.Nm Ns \-using 1468program will support this capability, which is defined for compatibility 1469with 1470.Xr terminfo 5 . ) 1471.Pp 1472Terminals with the 1473.Dq magic cookie 1474glitches 1475.Pf ( Sy \&sg 1476and 1477.Sy \&ug ) , 1478rather than maintaining extra attribute bits for each character cell, 1479instead deposit special 1480.Dq cookies , 1481or 1482.Dq garbage characters , 1483when they receive mode-setting sequences, 1484which affect the display algorithm. 1485.Pp 1486Some terminals, 1487such as the Hewlett-Packard 2621, 1488automatically leave standout 1489mode when they move to a new line or when the cursor is addressed. 1490Programs using standout mode 1491should exit standout mode on such terminals 1492before moving the cursor or sending a newline. 1493On terminals where this is not a problem, 1494the 1495.Sy \&ms 1496capability should be present 1497to say that this overhead is unnecessary. 1498.Pp 1499If the terminal has 1500a way of flashing the screen to indicate an error quietly 1501(a bell replacement), 1502this can be given as 1503.Sy \&vb ; 1504it must not move the cursor. 1505.Pp 1506If the cursor needs to be made more visible than normal 1507when it is not on the bottom line 1508(to change, for example, a non-blinking underline into an easier-to-find 1509block or blinking underline), 1510give this sequence as 1511.Sy \&vs . 1512If there is a way to make the cursor completely invisible, give that as 1513.Sy \&vi . 1514The capability 1515.Sy \&ve , 1516which undoes the effects of both of these modes, 1517should also be given. 1518.Pp 1519If your terminal correctly displays underlined characters 1520(with no special codes needed) 1521even though it does not overstrike, 1522then you should give the capability 1523.Sy \&ul . 1524If overstrikes are erasable with a blank, 1525this should be indicated by giving 1526.Sy \&eo . 1527.Ss Keypad 1528If the terminal has a keypad that transmits codes when the keys are pressed, 1529this information can be given. 1530Note that it is not possible to handle 1531terminals where the keypad only works in local mode 1532(this applies, for example, to the unshifted Hewlett-Packard 2621 keys). 1533If the keypad can be set to transmit or not transmit, 1534give these codes as 1535.Sy \&ks 1536and 1537.Sy \&ke . 1538Otherwise the keypad is assumed to always transmit. 1539The codes sent by the left-arrow, right-arrow, up-arrow, down-arrow, 1540and home keys can be given as 1541.Sy \&kl , 1542.Sy \&kr , 1543.Sy \&ku , 1544.Sy \&kd , 1545and 1546.Sy \&kh , 1547respectively. 1548If there are function keys such as f0, f1, ..., f9, the codes they send 1549can be given as 1550.Sy \&k0 , 1551.Sy \&k1 , 1552\&..., 1553.Sy \&k9 . 1554If these keys have labels other than the default f0 through f9, the labels 1555can be given as 1556.Sy \&l0 , 1557.Sy \&l1 , 1558\&..., 1559.Sy \&l9 . 1560The codes transmitted by certain other special keys can be given: 1561.Sy \&kH 1562(home down), 1563.Sy \&kb 1564(backspace), 1565.Sy \&ka 1566(clear all tabs), 1567.Sy \&kt 1568(clear the tab stop in this column), 1569.Sy \&kC 1570(clear screen or erase), 1571.Sy \&kD 1572(delete character), 1573.Sy \&kL 1574(delete line), 1575.Sy \&kM 1576(exit insert mode), 1577.Sy \&kE 1578(clear to end of line), 1579.Sy \&kS 1580(clear to end of screen), 1581.Sy \&kI 1582(insert character or enter insert mode), 1583.Sy \&kA 1584(insert line), 1585.Sy \&kN 1586(next page), 1587.Sy \&kP 1588(previous page), 1589.Sy \&kF 1590(scroll forward/down), 1591.Sy \&kR 1592(scroll backward/up), and 1593.Sy \&kT 1594(set a tab stop in this column). 1595In addition, if the keypad has a 3 by 3 array of keys 1596including the four arrow keys, then the other five keys can be given as 1597.Sy \&K1 , 1598.Sy \&K2 , 1599.Sy \&K3 , 1600.Sy \&K4 , 1601and 1602.Sy \&K5 . 1603These keys are useful when the effects of a 3 by 3 directional pad are needed. 1604The obsolete 1605.Sy \&ko 1606capability formerly used to describe 1607.Dq other 1608function keys has been 1609completely supplanted by the above capabilities. 1610.Pp 1611The 1612.Sy \&ma 1613entry is also used to indicate arrow keys on terminals that have 1614single-character arrow keys. 1615It is obsolete but still in use in 1616version 2 of 1617.Sy \&vi 1618which must be run on some minicomputers due to 1619memory limitations. 1620This field is redundant with 1621.Sy \&kl , 1622.Sy \&kr , 1623.Sy \&ku , 1624.Sy \&kd , 1625and 1626.Sy \&kh . 1627It consists of groups of two characters. 1628In each group, the first character is what an arrow key sends, and the 1629second character is the corresponding 1630.Sy \&vi 1631command. 1632These commands are 1633.Ar h 1634for 1635.Sy \&kl , 1636.Ar j 1637for 1638.Sy \&kd , 1639.Ar k 1640for 1641.Sy \&ku , 1642.Ar l 1643for 1644.Sy \&kr , 1645and 1646.Ar H 1647for 1648.Sy \&kh . 1649For example, the Mime would have 1650.Dq Li ma=^Hh^Kj^Zk^Xl 1651indicating arrow keys left (^H), down (^K), up (^Z), and right (^X). 1652(There is no home key on the Mime.) 1653.Ss Tabs and Initialization 1654If the terminal needs to be in a special mode when running 1655a program that uses these capabilities, 1656the codes to enter and exit this mode can be given as 1657.Sy \&ti 1658and 1659.Sy \&te . 1660This arises, for example, from terminals like the Concept with more than 1661one page of memory. 1662If the terminal has only memory-relative cursor addressing and not 1663screen-relative cursor addressing, 1664a screen-sized window must be fixed into 1665the display for cursor addressing to work properly. 1666This is also used for the Tektronix 4025, where 1667.Sy \&ti 1668sets the command character to be the one used by 1669.Nm . 1670.Pp 1671Other capabilities 1672include 1673.Sy \&is , 1674an initialization string for the terminal, 1675and 1676.Sy \&if , 1677the name of a file containing long initialization strings. 1678These strings are expected to set the terminal into modes 1679consistent with the rest of the 1680.Nm 1681description. 1682They are normally sent to the terminal by the 1683.Xr tset 1 1684program each time the user logs in. 1685They will be printed in the following order: 1686.Sy \&is ; 1687setting tabs using 1688.Sy \&ct 1689and 1690.Sy \&st ; 1691and finally 1692.Sy \&if . 1693.Pf ( Xr Terminfo 5 1694uses 1695.Sy \&i\&1-i2 1696instead of 1697.Sy \&is 1698and runs the program 1699.Sy \&iP 1700and prints 1701.Sy "\&i\&3" 1702after the other initializations.) 1703A pair of sequences that does a harder reset from a totally unknown state 1704can be analogously given as 1705.Sy \&rs 1706and 1707.Sy \&if . 1708These strings are output by the 1709.Xr reset 1 1710program, which is used when the terminal gets into a wedged state. 1711.Pf ( Xr Terminfo 5 1712uses 1713.Sy "\&r1-r3" 1714instead of 1715.Sy \&rs . ) 1716Commands are normally placed in 1717.Sy \&rs 1718and 1719.Sy \&rf 1720only if they produce annoying effects on the screen and are not necessary 1721when logging in. 1722For example, the command to set the VT100 into 80-column mode 1723would normally be part of 1724.Sy \&is , 1725but it causes an annoying glitch of the screen and is not normally needed 1726since the terminal is usually already in 80-column mode. 1727.Pp 1728If the terminal has hardware tabs, 1729the command to advance to the next tab stop can be given as 1730.Sy \&ta 1731(usually 1732.Sy \&^I ) . 1733A 1734.Dq backtab 1735command which moves leftward to the previous tab stop 1736can be given as 1737.Sy \&bt . 1738By convention, 1739if the terminal driver modes indicate that tab stops are being expanded 1740by the computer rather than being sent to the terminal, 1741programs should not use 1742.Sy \&ta 1743or 1744.Sy \&bt 1745even if they are present, 1746since the user may not have the tab stops properly set. 1747If the terminal has hardware tabs that are initially set every 1748.Ar n 1749positions when the terminal is powered up, then the numeric parameter 1750.Sy \&it 1751is given, showing the number of positions between tab stops. 1752This is normally used by the 1753.Xr tset 1 1754command to determine whether to set the driver mode for hardware tab 1755expansion, and whether to set the tab stops. 1756If the terminal has tab stops that can be saved in nonvolatile memory, the 1757.Nm 1758description can assume that they are properly set. 1759.Pp 1760If there are commands to set and clear tab stops, they can be given as 1761.Sy \&ct 1762(clear all tab stops) and 1763.Sy \&st 1764(set a tab stop in the current column of every row). 1765If a more complex sequence is needed to set the tabs than can be 1766described by this, the sequence can be placed in 1767.Sy \&is 1768or 1769.Sy \&if . 1770.Ss Delays 1771Certain capabilities control padding in the terminal driver. 1772These are primarily needed by hardcopy terminals and are used by the 1773.Xr tset 1 1774program to set terminal driver modes appropriately. 1775Delays embedded in the capabilities 1776.Sy \&cr , 1777.Sy \&sf , 1778.Sy \&le , 1779.Sy \&ff , 1780and 1781.Sy \&ta 1782will cause the appropriate delay bits to be set in the terminal driver. 1783If 1784.Sy \&pb 1785(padding baud rate) is given, these values can be ignored at baud rates 1786below the value of 1787.Sy \&pb . 1788For 1789.Bx 4.2 1790.Xr tset 1 , 1791the delays are given as numeric capabilities 1792.Sy \&dC , 1793.Sy \&dN , 1794.Sy \&dB , 1795.Sy \&dF , 1796and 1797.Sy \&dT 1798instead. 1799.Ss Miscellaneous 1800If the terminal requires other than a 1801.Dv NUL 1802(zero) character as a pad, 1803this can be given as 1804.Sy \&pc . 1805Only the first character of the 1806.Sy \&pc 1807string is used. 1808.Pp 1809If the terminal has commands to save and restore the position of the 1810cursor, give them as 1811.Sy \&sc 1812and 1813.Sy \&rc . 1814.Pp 1815If the terminal has an extra 1816.Dq status line 1817that is not normally used by 1818software, this fact can be indicated. 1819If the status line is viewed as an extra line below the bottom line, 1820then the capability 1821.Sy \&hs 1822should be given. 1823Special strings to go to a position in the status line and to return 1824from the status line can be given as 1825.Sy \&ts 1826and 1827.Sy \&fs . 1828.Pf ( Sy \&fs 1829must leave the cursor position in the same place that it was before 1830.Sy \&ts . 1831If necessary, the 1832.Sy \&sc 1833and 1834.Sy \&rc 1835strings can be included in 1836.Sy \&ts 1837and 1838.Sy \&fs 1839to get this effect.) 1840The capability 1841.Sy \&ts 1842takes one parameter, which is the column number of the status line 1843to which the cursor is to be moved. 1844If escape sequences and other special commands such as tab work while in 1845the status line, the flag 1846.Sy \&es 1847can be given. 1848A string that turns off the status line (or otherwise erases its contents) 1849should be given as 1850.Sy \&ds . 1851The status line is normally assumed to be the same width as the 1852rest of the screen, 1853.Em i.e . , 1854.Sy \&co . 1855If the status line is a different width (possibly because the terminal 1856does not allow an entire line to be loaded), then its width in columns 1857can be indicated with the numeric parameter 1858.Sy \&ws . 1859.Pp 1860If the terminal can move up or down half a line, this can be 1861indicated with 1862.Sy \&hu 1863(half-line up) and 1864.Sy \&hd 1865(half-line down). 1866This is primarily useful for superscripts and subscripts on hardcopy 1867terminals. 1868If a hardcopy terminal can eject to the next page (form feed), 1869give this as 1870.Sy \&ff 1871(usually 1872.Sy \&^L ) . 1873.Pp 1874If there is a command to repeat a given character a given number of times 1875(to save time transmitting a large number of identical characters), 1876this can be indicated with the parameterized string 1877.Sy \&rp . 1878The first parameter is the character to be repeated and the second is 1879the number of times to repeat it. 1880(This is a 1881.Xr terminfo 5 1882feature that is unlikely to be supported by a program that uses 1883.Nm . ) 1884.Pp 1885If the terminal has a settable command character, such as the 1886Tektronix 4025, this can be indicated with 1887.Sy \&CC . 1888A prototype command character is chosen which is used in all capabilities. 1889This character is given in the 1890.Sy \&CC 1891capability to identify it. 1892The following convention is supported on some 1893.Ux 1894systems: 1895The environment is to be searched for a 1896.Ev \&CC 1897variable, 1898and if found, 1899all occurrences of the prototype character are replaced by the character 1900in the environment variable. 1901This use of the 1902.Ev \&CC 1903environment variable 1904is a very bad idea, as it conflicts with 1905.Xr make 1 . 1906.Pp 1907Terminal descriptions that do not represent a specific kind of known 1908terminal, such as 1909.Em switch , 1910.Em dialup , 1911.Em patch , 1912and 1913.Em network , 1914should include the 1915.Sy \&gn 1916(generic) capability so that programs can complain that they do not know 1917how to talk to the terminal. 1918(This capability does not apply to 1919.Em virtual 1920terminal descriptions for which the escape sequences are known.) 1921.Pp 1922If the terminal uses xoff/xon 1923.Pq Tn DC3 Ns / Ns Tn DC1 1924handshaking for flow control, give 1925.Sy \&xo . 1926Padding information should still be included so that routines can make 1927better decisions about costs, but actual pad characters will not be 1928transmitted. 1929.Pp 1930If the terminal has a 1931.Dq meta key 1932which acts as a shift key, setting the 19338th bit of any character transmitted, then this fact can be indicated with 1934.Sy \&km . 1935Otherwise, software will assume that the 8th bit is parity and it will 1936usually be cleared. 1937If strings exist to turn this 1938.Dq meta mode 1939on and off, they can be given as 1940.Sy \&mm 1941and 1942.Sy \&mo . 1943.Pp 1944If the terminal has more lines of memory than will fit on the screen at once, 1945the number of lines of memory can be indicated with 1946.Sy \&lm . 1947An explicit value of 0 indicates that the number of lines is not fixed, 1948but that there is still more memory than fits on the screen. 1949.Pp 1950If the terminal is one of those supported by the 1951.Ux 1952system virtual 1953terminal protocol, the terminal number can be given as 1954.Sy \&vt . 1955.Pp 1956Media copy strings which control an auxiliary printer 1957connected to the terminal can be given as 1958.Sy \&ps : 1959print the contents of the screen; 1960.Sy \&pf : 1961turn off the printer; and 1962.Sy \&po : 1963turn on the printer. 1964When the printer is on, all text sent to the terminal will be sent to the 1965printer. 1966It is undefined whether the text is also displayed on the terminal screen 1967when the printer is on. 1968A variation 1969.Sy \&pO 1970takes one parameter and leaves the printer on for as many characters as the 1971value of the parameter, then turns the printer off. 1972The parameter should not exceed 255. 1973All text, including 1974.Sy \&pf , 1975is transparently passed to the printer while 1976.Sy \&pO 1977is in effect. 1978.Pp 1979Strings to program function keys can be given as 1980.Sy \&pk , 1981.Sy \&pl , 1982and 1983.Sy \&px . 1984Each of these strings takes two parameters: the function key number 1985to program (from 0 to 9) and the string to program it with. 1986Function key numbers out of this range may program undefined keys 1987in a terminal-dependent manner. 1988The differences among the capabilities are that 1989.Sy \&pk 1990causes pressing the given key to be the same as the user typing the given 1991string; 1992.Sy \&pl 1993causes the string to be executed by the terminal in local mode; 1994and 1995.Sy \&px 1996causes the string to be transmitted to the computer. 1997Unfortunately, due to lack of a definition for string parameters in 1998.Nm , 1999only 2000.Xr terminfo 5 2001supports these capabilities. 2002.Ss Glitches and Braindamage 2003Hazeltine terminals, which do not allow `~' characters to be displayed, 2004should indicate 2005.Sy \&hz . 2006.Pp 2007The 2008.Sy \&nc 2009capability, now obsolete, formerly indicated Datamedia terminals, 2010which echo 2011.Sy \&\er \en 2012for 2013carriage return then ignore a following linefeed. 2014.Pp 2015Terminals that ignore a linefeed immediately after an 2016.Sy \&am 2017wrap, such as the Concept, should indicate 2018.Sy \&xn . 2019.Pp 2020If 2021.Sy \&ce 2022is required to get rid of standout 2023(instead of merely writing normal text on top of it), 2024.Sy \&xs 2025should be given. 2026.Pp 2027Teleray terminals, where tabs turn all characters moved over to blanks, 2028should indicate 2029.Sy \&xt 2030(destructive tabs). 2031This glitch is also taken to mean that it is not possible 2032to position the cursor on top of a 2033.Dq magic cookie , 2034and that 2035to erase standout mode it is necessary to use delete and insert line. 2036.Pp 2037The Beehive Superbee, which is unable to correctly transmit the 2038.Dv ESC 2039or 2040.Sy \&^C 2041characters, has 2042.Sy \&xb , 2043indicating that the 2044.Dq \&f\&1 2045key is used for 2046.Dv ESC 2047and 2048.Dq \&f\&2 2049for ^C. 2050(Only certain Superbees have this problem, depending on the 2051.Tn ROM . ) 2052.Pp 2053Other specific terminal problems may be corrected by adding more 2054capabilities of the form 2055.Sy x Em x . 2056.Ss Similar Terminals 2057If there are two very similar terminals, 2058one can be defined as being just like the other with certain exceptions. 2059The string capability 2060.Sy \&tc 2061can be given 2062with the name of the similar terminal. 2063This capability must be 2064.Em last , 2065and the combined length of the entries 2066must not exceed 1024. 2067The capabilities given before 2068.Sy \&tc 2069override those in the terminal type invoked by 2070.Sy \&tc . 2071A capability can be canceled by placing 2072.Sy \&xx@ 2073to the left of the 2074.Sy \&tc 2075invocation, where 2076.Sy \&xx 2077is the capability. 2078For example, the entry 2079.Bd -literal -offset indent 2080hn\||\|2621\-nl:ks@:ke@:tc=2621: 2081.Ed 2082.Pp 2083defines a 2084.Dq 2621\-nl 2085that does not have the 2086.Sy \&ks 2087or 2088.Sy \&ke 2089capabilities, 2090hence does not turn on the function key labels when in visual mode. 2091This is useful for different modes for a terminal, or for different 2092user preferences. 2093.Sh FILES 2094.Bl -tag -width /usr/share/misc/termcap.db -compact 2095.It Pa /usr/share/misc/termcap 2096File containing terminal descriptions. 2097.It Pa /usr/share/misc/termcap.db 2098Hash database file containing terminal descriptions (see 2099.Xr cap_mkdb 1 ) . 2100.El 2101.Sh SEE ALSO 2102.Xr cap_mkdb 1 , 2103.Xr ex 1 , 2104.Xr more 1 , 2105.Xr tset 1 , 2106.Xr ul 1 , 2107.Xr vi 1 , 2108.Xr ncurses 3 , 2109.Xr printf 3 , 2110.Xr termcap 3 , 2111.Xr term 5 2112.Sh HISTORY 2113The 2114.Nm 2115file format appeared in 2116.Bx 3 . 2117.Sh CAVEATS AND BUGS 2118The 2119.Em Note : 2120.Nm 2121functions 2122were replaced by 2123.Xr terminfo 5 2124in 2125.At V 2126Release 2.0. 2127The transition will be relatively painless if capabilities flagged as 2128.Dq obsolete 2129are avoided. 2130.Pp 2131Lines and columns are now stored by the kernel as well as in the termcap 2132entry. 2133Most programs now use the kernel information primarily; the information 2134in this file is used only if the kernel does not have any information. 2135.Pp 2136The 2137.Xr \&vi 1 2138program allows only 256 characters for string capabilities, and the routines 2139in 2140.Xr termlib 3 2141do not check for overflow of this buffer. 2142The total length of a single entry (excluding only escaped newlines) 2143may not exceed 1024. 2144.Pp 2145Not all programs support all entries. 2146