1                         Writing Programs with NCURSES
2
3     by Eric S. Raymond and Zeyd M. Ben-Halim
4     updates since release 1.9.9e by Thomas Dickey
5
6                                   Contents
7
8     * Introduction
9          + A Brief History of Curses
10          + Scope of This Document
11          + Terminology
12     * The Curses Library
13          + An Overview of Curses
14               o Compiling Programs using Curses
15               o Updating the Screen
16               o Standard Windows and Function Naming Conventions
17               o Variables
18          + Using the Library
19               o Starting up
20               o Output
21               o Input
22               o Using Forms Characters
23               o Character Attributes and Color
24               o Mouse Interfacing
25               o Finishing Up
26          + Function Descriptions
27               o Initialization and Wrapup
28               o Causing Output to the Terminal
29               o Low-Level Capability Access
30               o Debugging
31          + Hints, Tips, and Tricks
32               o Some Notes of Caution
33               o Temporarily Leaving ncurses Mode
34               o Using ncurses under xterm
35               o Handling Multiple Terminal Screens
36               o Testing for Terminal Capabilities
37               o Tuning for Speed
38               o Special Features of ncurses
39          + Compatibility with Older Versions
40               o Refresh of Overlapping Windows
41               o Background Erase
42          + XSI Curses Conformance
43     * The Panels Library
44          + Compiling With the Panels Library
45          + Overview of Panels
46          + Panels, Input, and the Standard Screen
47          + Hiding Panels
48          + Miscellaneous Other Facilities
49     * The Menu Library
50          + Compiling with the menu Library
51          + Overview of Menus
52          + Selecting items
53          + Menu Display
54          + Menu Windows
55          + Processing Menu Input
56          + Miscellaneous Other Features
57     * The Forms Library
58          + Compiling with the forms Library
59          + Overview of Forms
60          + Creating and Freeing Fields and Forms
61          + Fetching and Changing Field Attributes
62               o Fetching Size and Location Data
63               o Changing the Field Location
64               o The Justification Attribute
65               o Field Display Attributes
66               o Field Option Bits
67               o Field Status
68               o Field User Pointer
69          + Variable-Sized Fields
70          + Field Validation
71               o TYPE_ALPHA
72               o TYPE_ALNUM
73               o TYPE_ENUM
74               o TYPE_INTEGER
75               o TYPE_NUMERIC
76               o TYPE_REGEXP
77          + Direct Field Buffer Manipulation
78          + Attributes of Forms
79          + Control of Form Display
80          + Input Processing in the Forms Driver
81               o Page Navigation Requests
82               o Inter-Field Navigation Requests
83               o Intra-Field Navigation Requests
84               o Scrolling Requests
85               o Field Editing Requests
86               o Order Requests
87               o Application Commands
88          + Field Change Hooks
89          + Field Change Commands
90          + Form Options
91          + Custom Validation Types
92               o Union Types
93               o New Field Types
94               o Validation Function Arguments
95               o Order Functions For Custom Types
96               o Avoiding Problems
97     _________________________________________________________________
98
99                                 Introduction
100
101   This document is an introduction to programming with curses. It is not
102   an   exhaustive  reference  for  the  curses  Application  Programming
103   Interface  (API);  that  role  is  filled  by the curses manual pages.
104   Rather,  it  is  intended  to  help  C programmers ease into using the
105   package.
106
107   This   document  is  aimed  at  C  applications  programmers  not  yet
108   specifically  familiar with ncurses. If you are already an experienced
109   curses  programmer, you should nevertheless read the sections on Mouse
110   Interfacing,  Debugging, Compatibility with Older Versions, and Hints,
111   Tips,  and  Tricks.  These  will  bring you up to speed on the special
112   features  and  quirks of the ncurses implementation. If you are not so
113   experienced, keep reading.
114
115   The  curses  package  is a subroutine library for terminal-independent
116   screen-painting  and  input-event handling which presents a high level
117   screen  model  to  the programmer, hiding differences between terminal
118   types  and doing automatic optimization of output to change one screen
119   full  of  text into another. Curses uses terminfo, which is a database
120   format  that  can  describe the capabilities of thousands of different
121   terminals.
122
123   The  curses  API  may  seem  something of an archaism on UNIX desktops
124   increasingly  dominated  by  X,  Motif, and Tcl/Tk. Nevertheless, UNIX
125   still  supports  tty lines and X supports xterm(1); the curses API has
126   the advantage of (a) back-portability to character-cell terminals, and
127   (b)  simplicity.  For  an application that does not require bit-mapped
128   graphics  and multiple fonts, an interface implementation using curses
129   will  typically  be  a  great deal simpler and less expensive than one
130   using an X toolkit.
131
132A Brief History of Curses
133
134   Historically, the first ancestor of curses was the routines written to
135   provide  screen-handling  for  the  vi  editor; these used the termcap
136   database  facility  (both  released  in  3BSD) for describing terminal
137   capabilities. These routines were abstracted into a documented library
138   and  first released with the early BSD UNIX versions. All of this work
139   was  done  by  students  at  the  University  of  California (Berkeley
140   campus).  The  curses  library  was  first published in 4.0BSD, a year
141   after 3BSD (i.e., late 1980).
142
143   After  graduation,  one  of  those  students went to work at AT&T Bell
144   Labs,  and  made  an  improved  termcap library called terminfo (i.e.,
145   "libterm"),  and  adapted  the  curses  library  to use this. That was
146   subsequently  released in System V Release 2 (early 1984). Thereafter,
147   other  developers  added  to  the  curses  and terminfo libraries. For
148   instance,  a  student at Cornell University wrote an improved terminfo
149   library  as well as a tool (tic) to compile the terminal descriptions.
150   As  a  general  rule,  AT&T  did  not  identify  the developers in the
151   source-code  or  documentation;  the  tic and infocmp programs are the
152   exceptions.
153
154   System  V  Release  3  (System  III  UNIX)  from  Bell Labs featured a
155   rewritten and much-improved curses library, along with the tic program
156   (late 1986).
157
158   To  recap,  terminfo  is  based  on  Berkeley's  termcap database, but
159   contains  a  number  of  improvements  and  extensions.  Parameterized
160   capabilities  strings  were introduced, making it possible to describe
161   multiple  video  attributes, and colors and to handle far more unusual
162   terminals  than  possible  with  termcap.  In  the later AT&T System V
163   releases,  curses  evolved  to  use  more  facilities  and  offer more
164   capabilities, going far beyond BSD curses in power and flexibility.
165
166Scope of This Document
167
168   This document describes ncurses, a free implementation of the System V
169   curses  API  with  some  clearly  marked  extensions.  It includes the
170   following System V curses features:
171     * Support  for  multiple  screen  highlights  (BSD curses could only
172       handle one "standout" highlight, usually reverse-video).
173     * Support for line- and box-drawing using forms characters.
174     * Recognition of function keys on input.
175     * Color support.
176     * Support  for pads (windows of larger than screen size on which the
177       screen or a subwindow defines a viewport).
178
179   Also,  this  package  makes  use  of  the  insert  and delete line and
180   character  features  of  terminals  so equipped, and determines how to
181   optimally  use  these  features  with  no help from the programmer. It
182   allows  arbitrary  combinations  of  video attributes to be displayed,
183   even  on  terminals  that  leave "magic cookies" on the screen to mark
184   changes in attributes.
185
186   The  ncurses  package  can  also  capture and use event reports from a
187   mouse in some environments (notably, xterm under the X window system).
188   This document includes tips for using the mouse.
189
190   The  ncurses  package  was  originated  by  Pavel Curtis. The original
191   maintainer  of  this  package is Zeyd Ben-Halim <zmbenhal@netcom.com>.
192   Eric S. Raymond <esr@snark.thyrsus.com> wrote many of the new features
193   in  versions  after 1.8.1 and wrote most of this introduction. Juergen
194   Pfeifer  wrote  all  of  the  menu and forms code as well as the Ada95
195   binding.  Ongoing  work  is  being done by Thomas Dickey (maintainer).
196   Contact the current maintainers at bug-ncurses@gnu.org.
197
198   This  document  also describes the panels extension library, similarly
199   modeled  on  the  SVr4  panels  facility.  This  library allows you to
200   associate  backing  store  with each of a stack or deck of overlapping
201   windows,  and  provides  operations  for  moving windows around in the
202   stack that change their visibility in the natural way (handling window
203   overlaps).
204
205   Finally,  this  document  describes  in  detail  the  menus  and forms
206   extension  libraries,  also  cloned  from System V, which support easy
207   construction and sequences of menus and fill-in forms.
208
209Terminology
210
211   In  this  document,  the following terminology is used with reasonable
212   consistency:
213
214   window
215          A  data  structure  describing  a  sub-rectangle  of the screen
216          (possibly  the  entire  screen).  You  can write to a window as
217          though  it  were a miniature screen, scrolling independently of
218          other windows on the physical screen.
219
220   screens
221          A  subset of windows which are as large as the terminal screen,
222          i.e.,  they  start  at the upper left hand corner and encompass
223          the   lower  right  hand  corner.  One  of  these,  stdscr,  is
224          automatically provided for the programmer.
225
226   terminal screen
227          The package's idea of what the terminal display currently looks
228          like, i.e., what the user sees now. This is a special screen.
229
230                              The Curses Library
231
232An Overview of Curses
233
234  Compiling Programs using Curses
235
236   In order to use the library, it is necessary to have certain types and
237   variables defined. Therefore, the programmer must have a line:
238          #include <curses.h>
239
240   at the top of the program source. The screen package uses the Standard
241   I/O   library,  so  <curses.h>  includes  <stdio.h>.  <curses.h>  also
242   includes  <termios.h>,  <termio.h>,  or  <sgtty.h>  depending  on your
243   system.  It is redundant (but harmless) for the programmer to do these
244   includes,  too.  In  linking with curses you need to have -lncurses in
245   your  LDFLAGS  or  on the command line. There is no need for any other
246   libraries.
247
248  Updating the Screen
249
250   In  order  to  update  the  screen  optimally, it is necessary for the
251   routines  to  know  what  the screen currently looks like and what the
252   programmer  wants  it to look like next. For this purpose, a data type
253   (structure)  named WINDOW is defined which describes a window image to
254   the  routines,  including its starting position on the screen (the (y,
255   x)  coordinates  of  the  upper left hand corner) and its size. One of
256   these  (called  curscr,  for current screen) is a screen image of what
257   the  terminal currently looks like. Another screen (called stdscr, for
258   standard screen) is provided by default to make changes on.
259
260   A  window is a purely internal representation. It is used to build and
261   store a potential image of a portion of the terminal. It does not bear
262   any necessary relation to what is really on the terminal screen; it is
263   more like a scratchpad or write buffer.
264
265   To  make  the  section  of  physical  screen corresponding to a window
266   reflect  the  contents  of the window structure, the routine refresh()
267   (or wrefresh() if the window is not stdscr) is called.
268
269   A  given physical screen section may be within the scope of any number
270   of  overlapping  windows.  Also, changes can be made to windows in any
271   order,  without  regard  to  motion  efficiency.  Then,  at  will, the
272   programmer  can  effectively say "make it look like this," and let the
273   package implementation determine the most efficient way to repaint the
274   screen.
275
276  Standard Windows and Function Naming Conventions
277
278   As  hinted  above,  the  routines can use several windows, but two are
279   automatically given: curscr, which knows what the terminal looks like,
280   and  stdscr,  which  is what the programmer wants the terminal to look
281   like  next.  The  user  should  never actually access curscr directly.
282   Changes  should  be  made  to  through  the  API, and then the routine
283   refresh() (or wrefresh()) called.
284
285   Many  functions  are  defined  to  use stdscr as a default screen. For
286   example,  to  add  a  character  to stdscr, one calls addch() with the
287   desired character as argument. To write to a different window. use the
288   routine  waddch()  (for  window-specific  addch())  is  provided. This
289   convention of prepending function names with a "w" when they are to be
290   applied  to specific windows is consistent. The only routines which do
291   not follow it are those for which a window must always be specified.
292
293   In  order  to  move  the  current (y, x) coordinates from one point to
294   another,  the routines move() and wmove() are provided. However, it is
295   often  desirable to first move and then perform some I/O operation. In
296   order  to  avoid  clumsiness, most I/O routines can be preceded by the
297   prefix  "mv"  and  the  desired  (y,  x)  coordinates prepended to the
298   arguments to the function. For example, the calls
299          move(y, x);
300          addch(ch);
301
302   can be replaced by
303          mvaddch(y, x, ch);
304
305   and
306          wmove(win, y, x);
307          waddch(win, ch);
308
309   can be replaced by
310          mvwaddch(win, y, x, ch);
311
312   Note  that the window description pointer (win) comes before the added
313   (y,  x)  coordinates.  If  a function requires a window pointer, it is
314   always the first parameter passed.
315
316  Variables
317
318   The  curses  library  sets  some  variables  describing  the  terminal
319   capabilities.
320      type   name      description
321      ------------------------------------------------------------------
322      int    LINES     number of lines on the terminal
323      int    COLS      number of columns on the terminal
324
325   The  curses.h  also  introduces  some  #define  constants and types of
326   general usefulness:
327
328   bool
329          boolean type, actually a "char" (e.g., bool doneit;)
330
331   TRUE
332          boolean "true" flag (1).
333
334   FALSE
335          boolean "false" flag (0).
336
337   ERR
338          error flag returned by routines on a failure (-1).
339
340   OK
341          error flag returned by routines when things go right.
342
343Using the Library
344
345   Now  we  describe  how  to  actually use the screen package. In it, we
346   assume  all  updating,  reading,  etc.  is  applied  to  stdscr. These
347   instructions  will  work  on  any  window,  providing  you  change the
348   function names and parameters as mentioned above.
349
350   Here is a sample program to motivate the discussion:
351#include <stdlib.h>
352#include <curses.h>
353#include <signal.h>
354
355static void finish(int sig);
356
357int
358main(int argc, char *argv[])
359{
360    int num = 0;
361
362    /* initialize your non-curses data structures here */
363
364    (void) signal(SIGINT, finish);      /* arrange interrupts to terminate */
365
366    (void) initscr();      /* initialize the curses library */
367    keypad(stdscr, TRUE);  /* enable keyboard mapping */
368    (void) nonl();         /* tell curses not to do NL->CR/NL on output */
369    (void) cbreak();       /* take input chars one at a time, no wait for \n */
370    (void) echo();         /* echo input - in color */
371
372    if (has_colors())
373    {
374        start_color();
375
376        /*
377         * Simple color assignment, often all we need.  Color pair 0 cannot
378         * be redefined.  This example uses the same value for the color
379         * pair as for the foreground color, though of course that is not
380         * necessary:
381         */
382        init_pair(1, COLOR_RED,     COLOR_BLACK);
383        init_pair(2, COLOR_GREEN,   COLOR_BLACK);
384        init_pair(3, COLOR_YELLOW,  COLOR_BLACK);
385        init_pair(4, COLOR_BLUE,    COLOR_BLACK);
386        init_pair(5, COLOR_CYAN,    COLOR_BLACK);
387        init_pair(6, COLOR_MAGENTA, COLOR_BLACK);
388        init_pair(7, COLOR_WHITE,   COLOR_BLACK);
389    }
390
391    for (;;)
392    {
393        int c = getch();     /* refresh, accept single keystroke of input */
394        attrset(COLOR_PAIR(num % 8));
395        num++;
396
397        /* process the command keystroke */
398    }
399
400    finish(0);               /* we are done */
401}
402
403static void finish(int sig)
404{
405    endwin();
406
407    /* do your non-curses wrapup here */
408
409    exit(0);
410}
411
412  Starting up
413
414   In  order  to  use  the  screen  package, the routines must know about
415   terminal  characteristics, and the space for curscr and stdscr must be
416   allocated.  These  function initscr() does both these things. Since it
417   must  allocate  space  for  the  windows,  it can overflow memory when
418   attempting  to  do  so.  On the rare occasions this happens, initscr()
419   will  terminate  the  program  with  an  error message. initscr() must
420   always  be  called before any of the routines which affect windows are
421   used.  If  it  is  not,  the  program will core dump as soon as either
422   curscr  or  stdscr are referenced. However, it is usually best to wait
423   to  call  it  until  after  you  are sure you will need it, like after
424   checking  for  startup  errors. Terminal status changing routines like
425   nl() and cbreak() should be called after initscr().
426
427   Once  the  screen windows have been allocated, you can set them up for
428   your  program.  If  you  want  to,  say, allow a screen to scroll, use
429   scrollok().  If you want the cursor to be left in place after the last
430   change,  use  leaveok().  If this is not done, refresh() will move the
431   cursor to the window's current (y, x) coordinates after updating it.
432
433   You  can  create new windows of your own using the functions newwin(),
434   derwin(), and subwin(). The routine delwin() will allow you to get rid
435   of  old windows. All the options described above can be applied to any
436   window.
437
438  Output
439
440   Now  that  we  have set things up, we will want to actually update the
441   terminal.  The basic functions used to change what will go on a window
442   are addch() and move(). addch() adds a character at the current (y, x)
443   coordinates. move() changes the current (y, x) coordinates to whatever
444   you want them to be. It returns ERR if you try to move off the window.
445   As  mentioned above, you can combine the two into mvaddch() to do both
446   things at once.
447
448   The  other  output  functions, such as addstr() and printw(), all call
449   addch() to add characters to the window.
450
451   After  you  have  put on the window what you want there, when you want
452   the  portion  of the terminal covered by the window to be made to look
453   like  it,  you  must  call  refresh().  In  order  to optimize finding
454   changes,  refresh()  assumes  that  any part of the window not changed
455   since  the  last  refresh() of that window has not been changed on the
456   terminal,  i.e., that you have not refreshed a portion of the terminal
457   with  an  overlapping  window.  If  this  is not the case, the routine
458   touchwin() is provided to make it look like the entire window has been
459   changed,  thus  making  refresh()  check  the  whole subsection of the
460   terminal for changes.
461
462   If  you  call wrefresh() with curscr as its argument, it will make the
463   screen  look  like  curscr  thinks  it  looks like. This is useful for
464   implementing  a  command  which would redraw the screen in case it get
465   messed up.
466
467  Input
468
469   The  complementary  function  to  addch() is getch() which, if echo is
470   set, will call addch() to echo the character. Since the screen package
471   needs  to know what is on the terminal at all times, if characters are
472   to  be  echoed, the tty must be in raw or cbreak mode. Since initially
473   the terminal has echoing enabled and is in ordinary "cooked" mode, one
474   or  the  other  has  to changed before calling getch(); otherwise, the
475   program's output will be unpredictable.
476
477   When you need to accept line-oriented input in a window, the functions
478   wgetstr() and friends are available. There is even a wscanw() function
479   that  can  do  scanf()(3)-style  multi-field  parsing on window input.
480   These  pseudo-line-oriented  functions  turn  on  echoing  while  they
481   execute.
482
483   The  example  code  above uses the call keypad(stdscr, TRUE) to enable
484   support  for function-key mapping. With this feature, the getch() code
485   watches  the  input  stream for character sequences that correspond to
486   arrow   and   function   keys.   These   sequences   are  returned  as
487   pseudo-character values. The #define values returned are listed in the
488   curses.h The mapping from sequences to #define values is determined by
489   key_ capabilities in the terminal's terminfo entry.
490
491  Using Forms Characters
492
493   The  addch()  function (and some others, including box() and border())
494   can accept some pseudo-character arguments which are specially defined
495   by  ncurses.  These  are #define values set up in the curses.h header;
496   see there for a complete list (look for the prefix ACS_).
497
498   The  most  useful of the ACS defines are the forms-drawing characters.
499   You  can  use  these to draw boxes and simple graphs on the screen. If
500   the  terminal does not have such characters, curses.h will map them to
501   a recognizable (though ugly) set of ASCII defaults.
502
503  Character Attributes and Color
504
505   The  ncurses  package  supports  screen highlights including standout,
506   reverse-video,  underline, and blink. It also supports color, which is
507   treated as another kind of highlight.
508
509   Highlights   are   encoded,   internally,   as   high   bits   of  the
510   pseudo-character  type  (chtype)  that  curses.h uses to represent the
511   contents of a screen cell. See the curses.h header file for a complete
512   list of highlight mask values (look for the prefix A_).
513
514   There  are two ways to make highlights. One is to logical-or the value
515   of  the  highlights you want into the character argument of an addch()
516   call, or any other output call that takes a chtype argument.
517
518   The  other is to set the current-highlight value. This is logical-ORed
519   with  any  highlight  you  specify the first way. You do this with the
520   functions attron(), attroff(), and attrset(); see the manual pages for
521   details.  Color  is  a special kind of highlight. The package actually
522   thinks  in  terms  of  color  pairs,  combinations  of  foreground and
523   background  colors.  The  sample code above sets up eight color pairs,
524   all  of the guaranteed-available colors on black. Note that each color
525   pair  is, in effect, given the name of its foreground color. Any other
526   range  of  eight  non-conflicting  values  could have been used as the
527   first arguments of the init_pair() values.
528
529   Once  you  have done an init_pair() that creates color-pair N, you can
530   use  COLOR_PAIR(N)  as  a highlight that invokes that particular color
531   combination.  Note  that  COLOR_PAIR(N),  for  constant N, is itself a
532   compile-time constant and can be used in initializers.
533
534  Mouse Interfacing
535
536   The ncurses library also provides a mouse interface.
537
538     NOTE:  this  facility  is  specific  to  ncurses, it is not part of
539     either  the XSI Curses standard, nor of System V Release 4, nor BSD
540     curses.  System  V  Release  4  curses  contains  code with similar
541     interface  definitions, however it is not documented. Other than by
542     disassembling  the library, we have no way to determine exactly how
543     that   mouse   code   works.  Thus,  we  recommend  that  you  wrap
544     mouse-related   code   in   an   #ifdef  using  the  feature  macro
545     NCURSES_MOUSE_VERSION  so  it  will  not  be compiled and linked on
546     non-ncurses systems.
547
548   Presently, mouse event reporting works in the following environments:
549     * xterm and similar programs such as rxvt.
550     * Linux  console,  when  configured with gpm(1), Alessandro Rubini's
551       mouse server.
552     * FreeBSD sysmouse (console)
553     * OS/2 EMX
554
555   The  mouse  interface  is  very  simple.  To  activate it, you use the
556   function  mousemask(),  passing  it  as first argument a bit-mask that
557   specifies  what  kinds  of  events you want your program to be able to
558   see.  It  will  return  the  bit-mask  of  events that actually become
559   visible, which may differ from the argument if the mouse device is not
560   capable of reporting some of the event types you specify.
561
562   Once the mouse is active, your application's command loop should watch
563   for  a  return  value of KEY_MOUSE from wgetch(). When you see this, a
564   mouse  event report has been queued. To pick it off the queue, use the
565   function  getmouse()  (you  must  do  this  before  the next wgetch(),
566   otherwise  another  mouse  event  might come in and make the first one
567   inaccessible).
568
569   Each  call  to  getmouse() fills a structure (the address of which you
570   will  pass  it)  with  mouse  event  data.  The  event  data  includes
571   zero-origin,  screen-relative  character-cell coordinates of the mouse
572   pointer.  It  also  includes  an event mask. Bits in this mask will be
573   set, corresponding to the event type being reported.
574
575   The  mouse  structure  contains  two  additional  fields  which may be
576   significant  in  the  future  as  ncurses  interfaces  to new kinds of
577   pointing  device.  In addition to x and y coordinates, there is a slot
578   for  a  z coordinate; this might be useful with touch-screens that can
579   return  a  pressure  or  duration parameter. There is also a device ID
580   field,  which  could  be used to distinguish between multiple pointing
581   devices.
582
583   The   class  of  visible  events  may  be  changed  at  any  time  via
584   mousemask().  Events  that  can be reported include presses, releases,
585   single-,   double-   and   triple-clicks  (you  can  set  the  maximum
586   button-down  time for clicks). If you do not make clicks visible, they
587   will  be  reported  as  press-release pairs. In some environments, the
588   event  mask  may  include  bits reporting the state of shift, alt, and
589   ctrl keys on the keyboard during the event.
590
591   A  function  to check whether a mouse event fell within a given window
592   is  also  supplied.  You  can  use  this to see whether a given window
593   should consider a mouse event relevant to it.
594
595   Because   mouse   event   reporting  will  not  be  available  in  all
596   environments,  it  would  be unwise to build ncurses applications that
597   require  the  use  of  a  mouse. Rather, you should use the mouse as a
598   shortcut  for point-and-shoot commands your application would normally
599   accept  from  the  keyboard.  Two  of  the  test  games in the ncurses
600   distribution  (bs  and  knight) contain code that illustrates how this
601   can be done.
602
603   See   the   manual   page  curs_mouse(3X)  for  full  details  of  the
604   mouse-interface functions.
605
606  Finishing Up
607
608   In  order to clean up after the ncurses routines, the routine endwin()
609   is  provided.  It  restores tty modes to what they were when initscr()
610   was  first called, and moves the cursor down to the lower-left corner.
611   Thus,  anytime  after  the  call to initscr, endwin() should be called
612   before exiting.
613
614Function Descriptions
615
616   We  describe  the detailed behavior of some important curses functions
617   here, as a supplement to the manual page descriptions.
618
619  Initialization and Wrapup
620
621   initscr()
622          The  first  function  called should almost always be initscr().
623          This  will  determine  the  terminal type and initialize curses
624          data structures. initscr() also arranges that the first call to
625          refresh()  will  clear the screen. If an error occurs a message
626          is  written  to standard error and the program exits. Otherwise
627          it  returns  a pointer to stdscr. A few functions may be called
628          before  initscr (slk_init(), filter(), ripoffline(), use_env(),
629          and, if you are using multiple terminals, newterm().)
630
631   endwin()
632          Your  program  should  always  call  endwin() before exiting or
633          shelling  out  of  the  program. This function will restore tty
634          modes,  move the cursor to the lower left corner of the screen,
635          reset  the  terminal  into  the proper non-visual mode. Calling
636          refresh()  or  doupdate()  after  a  temporary  escape from the
637          program will restore the ncurses screen from before the escape.
638
639   newterm(type, ofp, ifp)
640          A  program  which  outputs to more than one terminal should use
641          newterm() instead of initscr(). newterm() should be called once
642          for each terminal. It returns a variable of type SCREEN * which
643          should  be  saved  as  a  reference  to that terminal. (NOTE: a
644          SCREEN  variable is not a screen in the sense we are describing
645          in  this  introduction,  but a collection of parameters used to
646          assist  in  optimizing the display.) The arguments are the type
647          of the terminal (a string) and FILE pointers for the output and
648          input  of  the  terminal.  If type is NULL then the environment
649          variable  $TERM  is used. endwin() should called once at wrapup
650          time for each terminal opened using this function.
651
652   set_term(new)
653          This  function  is  used  to  switch  to  a  different terminal
654          previously  opened  by  newterm(). The screen reference for the
655          new  terminal is passed as the parameter. The previous terminal
656          is  returned  by  the function. All other calls affect only the
657          current terminal.
658
659   delscreen(sp)
660          The  inverse  of  newterm();  deallocates  the  data structures
661          associated with a given SCREEN reference.
662
663  Causing Output to the Terminal
664
665   refresh() and wrefresh(win)
666          These  functions  must  be called to actually get any output on
667          the   terminal,   as  other  routines  merely  manipulate  data
668          structures.  wrefresh() copies the named window to the physical
669          terminal  screen,  taking into account what is already there in
670          order  to do optimizations. refresh() does a refresh of stdscr.
671          Unless  leaveok()  has been enabled, the physical cursor of the
672          terminal is left at the location of the window's cursor.
673
674   doupdate() and wnoutrefresh(win)
675          These two functions allow multiple updates with more efficiency
676          than  wrefresh.  To use them, it is important to understand how
677          curses  works. In addition to all the window structures, curses
678          keeps  two  data structures representing the terminal screen: a
679          physical screen, describing what is actually on the screen, and
680          a  virtual screen, describing what the programmer wants to have
681          on the screen. wrefresh works by first copying the named window
682          to  the  virtual  screen (wnoutrefresh()), and then calling the
683          routine  to  update  the screen (doupdate()). If the programmer
684          wishes  to output several windows at once, a series of calls to
685          wrefresh will result in alternating calls to wnoutrefresh() and
686          doupdate(),  causing several bursts of output to the screen. By
687          calling  wnoutrefresh() for each window, it is then possible to
688          call  doupdate()  once,  resulting in only one burst of output,
689          with  fewer  total  characters  transmitted (this also avoids a
690          visually annoying flicker at each update).
691
692  Low-Level Capability Access
693
694   setupterm(term, filenum, errret)
695          This  routine is called to initialize a terminal's description,
696          without setting up the curses screen structures or changing the
697          tty-driver mode bits. term is the character string representing
698          the  name  of the terminal being used. filenum is the UNIX file
699          descriptor  of  the terminal to be used for output. errret is a
700          pointer to an integer, in which a success or failure indication
701          is  returned. The values returned can be 1 (all is well), 0 (no
702          such  terminal),  or  -1  (some  problem  locating the terminfo
703          database).
704
705          The  value  of  term can be given as NULL, which will cause the
706          value of TERM in the environment to be used. The errret pointer
707          can  also be given as NULL, meaning no error code is wanted. If
708          errret is defaulted, and something goes wrong, setupterm() will
709          print  an  appropriate  error  message  and  exit,  rather than
710          returning.  Thus,  a simple program can call setupterm(0, 1, 0)
711          and not worry about initialization errors.
712
713          After  the call to setupterm(), the global variable cur_term is
714          set to point to the current structure of terminal capabilities.
715          By  calling  setupterm()  for  each  terminal,  and  saving and
716          restoring  cur_term, it is possible for a program to use two or
717          more  terminals  at  once.  Setupterm()  also  stores the names
718          section  of  the  terminal  description in the global character
719          array ttytype[]. Subsequent calls to setupterm() will overwrite
720          this array, so you will have to save it yourself if need be.
721
722  Debugging
723
724     NOTE: These functions are not part of the standard curses API!
725
726   trace()
727          This  function  can be used to explicitly set a trace level. If
728          the  trace  level  is  nonzero,  execution of your program will
729          generate a file called "trace" in the current working directory
730          containing  a  report  on  the  library's actions. Higher trace
731          levels  enable  more  detailed  (and  verbose) reporting -- see
732          comments  attached  to  TRACE_ defines in the curses.h file for
733          details. (It is also possible to set a trace level by assigning
734          a trace level value to the environment variable NCURSES_TRACE).
735
736   _tracef()
737          This  function  can  be  used  to  output  your  own  debugging
738          information.  It  is  only  available  only  if  you  link with
739          -lncurses_g.  It  can be used the same way as printf(), only it
740          outputs  a  newline after the end of arguments. The output goes
741          to a file called trace in the current directory.
742
743   Trace  logs  can  be difficult to interpret due to the sheer volume of
744   data dumped in them. There is a script called tracemunch included with
745   the  ncurses distribution that can alleviate this problem somewhat; it
746   compacts  long  sequences  of  similar  operations  into more succinct
747   single-line  pseudo-operations.  These pseudo-ops can be distinguished
748   by the fact that they are named in capital letters.
749
750Hints, Tips, and Tricks
751
752   The ncurses manual pages are a complete reference for this library. In
753   the remainder of this document, we discuss various useful methods that
754   may not be obvious from the manual page descriptions.
755
756  Some Notes of Caution
757
758   If  you  find yourself thinking you need to use noraw() or nocbreak(),
759   think  again  and  move carefully. It is probably better design to use
760   getstr()  or one of its relatives to simulate cooked mode. The noraw()
761   and  nocbreak() functions try to restore cooked mode, but they may end
762   up   clobbering   some  control  bits  set  before  you  started  your
763   application.  Also,  they  have always been poorly documented, and are
764   likely   to  hurt  your  application's  usability  with  other  curses
765   libraries.
766
767   Bear  in mind that refresh() is a synonym for wrefresh(stdscr). Do not
768   try  to  mix use of stdscr with use of windows declared by newwin(); a
769   refresh()  call will blow them off the screen. The right way to handle
770   this  is  to  use  subwin(),  or not touch stdscr at all and tile your
771   screen  with  declared windows which you then wnoutrefresh() somewhere
772   in  your  program event loop, with a single doupdate() call to trigger
773   actual repainting.
774
775   You  are  much  less  likely  to  run into problems if you design your
776   screen   layouts   to  use  tiled  rather  than  overlapping  windows.
777   Historically,  curses  support  for overlapping windows has been weak,
778   fragile,  and  poorly  documented.  The  ncurses library is not yet an
779   exception to this rule.
780
781   There  is  a  panels library included in the ncurses distribution that
782   does  a  pretty  good  job  of  strengthening  the overlapping-windows
783   facilities.
784
785   Try to avoid using the global variables LINES and COLS. Use getmaxyx()
786   on  the stdscr context instead. Reason: your code may be ported to run
787   in  an  environment with window resizes, in which case several screens
788   could be open with different sizes.
789
790  Temporarily Leaving NCURSES Mode
791
792   Sometimes  you  will  want  to write a program that spends most of its
793   time  in  screen  mode,  but occasionally returns to ordinary "cooked"
794   mode.  A common reason for this is to support shell-out. This behavior
795   is simple to arrange in ncurses.
796
797   To  leave  ncurses  mode,  call  endwin()  as  you  would  if you were
798   intending  to terminate the program. This will take the screen back to
799   cooked  mode;  you  can  do your shell-out. When you want to return to
800   ncurses  mode,  simply call refresh() or doupdate(). This will repaint
801   the screen.
802
803   There  is  a  boolean function, isendwin(), which code can use to test
804   whether ncurses screen mode is active. It returns TRUE in the interval
805   between an endwin() call and the following refresh(), FALSE otherwise.
806
807   Here is some sample code for shellout:
808    addstr("Shelling out...");
809    def_prog_mode();           /* save current tty modes */
810    endwin();                  /* restore original tty modes */
811    system("sh");              /* run shell */
812    addstr("returned.\n");     /* prepare return message */
813    refresh();                 /* restore save modes, repaint screen */
814
815  Using NCURSES under XTERM
816
817   A  resize  operation  in  X  sends SIGWINCH to the application running
818   under  xterm.  The  easiest way to handle SIGWINCH is to do an endwin,
819   followed  by  an  refresh  and a screen repaint you code yourself. The
820   refresh will pick up the new screen size from the xterm's environment.
821
822   That  is the standard way, of course (it even works with some vendor's
823   curses  implementations). Its drawback is that it clears the screen to
824   reinitialize the display, and does not resize subwindows which must be
825   shrunk.   Ncurses  provides  an  extension  which  works  better,  the
826   resizeterm  function.  That  function  ensures  that  all  windows are
827   limited  to  the new screen dimensions, and pads stdscr with blanks if
828   the screen is larger.
829
830   The ncurses library provides a SIGWINCH signal handler, which pushes a
831   KEY_RESIZE  via the wgetch() calls. When ncurses returns that code, it
832   calls  resizeterm  to update the size of the standard screen's window,
833   repainting that (filling with blanks or truncating as needed). It also
834   resizes other windows, but its effect may be less satisfactory because
835   it  cannot  know  how you want the screen re-painted. You will usually
836   have to write special-purpose code to handle KEY_RESIZE yourself.
837
838  Handling Multiple Terminal Screens
839
840   The initscr() function actually calls a function named newterm() to do
841   most  of  its  work.  If you are writing a program that opens multiple
842   terminals, use newterm() directly.
843
844   For  each call, you will have to specify a terminal type and a pair of
845   file  pointers;  each  call will return a screen reference, and stdscr
846   will be set to the last one allocated. You will switch between screens
847   with  the  set_term  call.  Note  that  you  will  also  have  to call
848   def_shell_mode and def_prog_mode on each tty yourself.
849
850  Testing for Terminal Capabilities
851
852   Sometimes you may want to write programs that test for the presence of
853   various  capabilities before deciding whether to go into ncurses mode.
854   An  easy way to do this is to call setupterm(), then use the functions
855   tigetflag(), tigetnum(), and tigetstr() to do your testing.
856
857   A  particularly  useful  case  of this often comes up when you want to
858   test  whether  a  given  terminal  type  should  be treated as "smart"
859   (cursor-addressable) or "stupid". The right way to test this is to see
860   if the return value of tigetstr("cup") is non-NULL. Alternatively, you
861   can  include  the  term.h  file  and  test  the  value  of  the  macro
862   cursor_address.
863
864  Tuning for Speed
865
866   Use  the  addchstr()  family  of functions for fast screen-painting of
867   text  when  you know the text does not contain any control characters.
868   Try  to  make attribute changes infrequent on your screens. Do not use
869   the immedok() option!
870
871  Special Features of NCURSES
872
873   The  wresize()  function  allows  you to resize a window in place. The
874   associated   resizeterm()  function  simplifies  the  construction  of
875   SIGWINCH handlers, for resizing all windows.
876
877   The define_key() function allows you to define at runtime function-key
878   control  sequences  which  are  not  in  the terminal description. The
879   keyok()   function   allows  you  to  temporarily  enable  or  disable
880   interpretation of any function-key control sequence.
881
882   The use_default_colors() function allows you to construct applications
883   which  can use the terminal's default foreground and background colors
884   as  an  additional "default" color. Several terminal emulators support
885   this feature, which is based on ISO 6429.
886
887   Ncurses  supports  up 16 colors, unlike SVr4 curses which defines only
888   8. While most terminals which provide color allow only 8 colors, about
889   a quarter (including XFree86 xterm) support 16 colors.
890
891Compatibility with Older Versions
892
893   Despite  our  best efforts, there are some differences between ncurses
894   and  the  (undocumented!)  behavior  of  older curses implementations.
895   These  arise from ambiguities or omissions in the documentation of the
896   API.
897
898  Refresh of Overlapping Windows
899
900   If  you  define two windows A and B that overlap, and then alternately
901   scribble  on  and  refresh  them,  the changes made to the overlapping
902   region  under  historic  curses  versions  were  often  not documented
903   precisely.
904
905   To  understand why this is a problem, remember that screen updates are
906   calculated  between  two  representations  of  the entire display. The
907   documentation  says that when you refresh a window, it is first copied
908   to  the  virtual screen, and then changes are calculated to update the
909   physical  screen (and applied to the terminal). But "copied to" is not
910   very specific, and subtle differences in how copying works can produce
911   different behaviors in the case where two overlapping windows are each
912   being refreshed at unpredictable intervals.
913
914   What  happens to the overlapping region depends on what wnoutrefresh()
915   does  with  its  argument  --  what portions of the argument window it
916   copies  to  the virtual screen. Some implementations do "change copy",
917   copying  down  only locations in the window that have changed (or been
918   marked  changed  with wtouchln() and friends). Some implementations do
919   "entire  copy",  copying  all  window  locations to the virtual screen
920   whether or not they have changed.
921
922   The  ncurses  library  itself  has  not always been consistent on this
923   score.  Due  to  a  bug,  versions  1.8.7  to  1.9.8a did entire copy.
924   Versions  1.8.6  and  older,  and  versions 1.9.9 and newer, do change
925   copy.
926
927   For  most  commercial curses implementations, it is not documented and
928   not  known  for sure (at least not to the ncurses maintainers) whether
929   they  do  change  copy or entire copy. We know that System V release 3
930   curses  has  logic in it that looks like an attempt to do change copy,
931   but  the  surrounding  logic and data representations are sufficiently
932   complex,  and  our knowledge sufficiently indirect, that it is hard to
933   know  whether  this  is  reliable.  It  is  not  clear  what  the SVr4
934   documentation  and XSI standard intend. The XSI Curses standard barely
935   mentions  wnoutrefresh();  the  SVr4  documents  seem to be describing
936   entire-copy, but it is possible with some effort and straining to read
937   them the other way.
938
939   It  might  therefore  be unwise to rely on either behavior in programs
940   that  might  have  to  be  linked  with  other curses implementations.
941   Instead,  you  can do an explicit touchwin() before the wnoutrefresh()
942   call to guarantee an entire-contents copy anywhere.
943
944   The  really clean way to handle this is to use the panels library. If,
945   when  you want a screen update, you do update_panels(), it will do all
946   the  necessary  wnoutrefresh() calls for whatever panel stacking order
947   you  have  defined. Then you can do one doupdate() and there will be a
948   single burst of physical I/O that will do all your updates.
949
950  Background Erase
951
952   If you have been using a very old versions of ncurses (1.8.7 or older)
953   you  may be surprised by the behavior of the erase functions. In older
954   versions,  erased  areas of a window were filled with a blank modified
955   by  the  window's  current attribute (as set by wattrset(), wattron(),
956   wattroff() and friends).
957
958   In  newer  versions,  this is not so. Instead, the attribute of erased
959   blanks  is  normal  unless  and  until it is modified by the functions
960   bkgdset() or wbkgdset().
961
962   This change in behavior conforms ncurses to System V Release 4 and the
963   XSI Curses standard.
964
965XSI Curses Conformance
966
967   The  ncurses  library is intended to be base-level conformant with the
968   XSI  Curses  standard  from  X/Open.  Many extended-level features (in
969   fact,  almost all features not directly concerned with wide characters
970   and internationalization) are also supported.
971
972   One  effect  of  XSI  conformance  is the change in behavior described
973   under "Background Erase -- Compatibility with Old Versions".
974
975   Also,  ncurses  meets the XSI requirement that every macro entry point
976   have  a  corresponding  function  which  may  be  linked  (and will be
977   prototype-checked) if the macro definition is disabled with #undef.
978
979                              The Panels Library
980
981   The  ncurses  library  by  itself  provides  good  support  for screen
982   displays in which the windows are tiled (non-overlapping). In the more
983   general  case  that  windows  may overlap, you have to use a series of
984   wnoutrefresh()  calls  followed  by a doupdate(), and be careful about
985   the order you do the window refreshes in. It has to be bottom-upwards,
986   otherwise parts of windows that should be obscured will show through.
987
988   When  your  interface design is such that windows may dive deeper into
989   the  visibility  stack  or  pop  to  the top at runtime, the resulting
990   book-keeping  can  be  tedious  and  difficult to get right. Hence the
991   panels library.
992
993   The  panel  library  first  appeared  in  AT&T  System  V. The version
994   documented here is the panel code distributed with ncurses.
995
996Compiling With the Panels Library
997
998   Your  panels-using modules must import the panels library declarations
999   with
1000          #include <panel.h>
1001
1002   and must be linked explicitly with the panels library using an -lpanel
1003   argument.  Note  that  they  must  also  link the ncurses library with
1004   -lncurses. Many linkers are two-pass and will accept either order, but
1005   it is still good practice to put -lpanel first and -lncurses second.
1006
1007Overview of Panels
1008
1009   A  panel  object  is  a window that is implicitly treated as part of a
1010   deck  including  all  other  panel  objects.  The deck has an implicit
1011   bottom-to-top  visibility order. The panels library includes an update
1012   function (analogous to refresh()) that displays all panels in the deck
1013   in  the proper order to resolve overlaps. The standard window, stdscr,
1014   is considered below all panels.
1015
1016   Details  on  the  panels  functions are available in the man pages. We
1017   will just hit the highlights here.
1018
1019   You  create  a  panel from a window by calling new_panel() on a window
1020   pointer.  It  then  becomes the top of the deck. The panel's window is
1021   available as the value of panel_window() called with the panel pointer
1022   as argument.
1023
1024   You  can  delete  a  panel (removing it from the deck) with del_panel.
1025   This  will  not  deallocate the associated window; you have to do that
1026   yourself.  You can replace a panel's window with a different window by
1027   calling  replace_window.  The new window may be of different size; the
1028   panel  code  will  re-compute  all  overlaps.  This operation does not
1029   change the panel's position in the deck.
1030
1031   To  move  a  panel's window, use move_panel(). The mvwin() function on
1032   the  panel's  window  is not sufficient because it does not update the
1033   panels  library's  representation  of  where  the  windows  are.  This
1034   operation leaves the panel's depth, contents, and size unchanged.
1035
1036   Two   functions   (top_panel(),   bottom_panel())   are  provided  for
1037   rearranging the deck. The first pops its argument window to the top of
1038   the  deck;  the second sends it to the bottom. Either operation leaves
1039   the panel's screen location, contents, and size unchanged.
1040
1041   The  function update_panels() does all the wnoutrefresh() calls needed
1042   to prepare for doupdate() (which you must call yourself, afterwards).
1043
1044   Typically,  you  will want to call update_panels() and doupdate() just
1045   before accepting command input, once in each cycle of interaction with
1046   the  user.  If  you  call  update_panels()  after each and every panel
1047   write,  you  will  generate  a lot of unnecessary refresh activity and
1048   screen flicker.
1049
1050Panels, Input, and the Standard Screen
1051
1052   You should not mix wnoutrefresh() or wrefresh() operations with panels
1053   code;  this will work only if the argument window is either in the top
1054   panel or unobscured by any other panels.
1055
1056   The  stsdcr  window  is  a  special  case.  It is considered below all
1057   panels. Because changes to panels may obscure parts of stdscr, though,
1058   you  should  call update_panels() before doupdate() even when you only
1059   change stdscr.
1060
1061   Note  that  wgetch  automatically  calls  wrefresh.  Therefore, before
1062   requesting  input  from  a  panel window, you need to be sure that the
1063   panel is totally unobscured.
1064
1065   There  is  presently  no  way to display changes to one obscured panel
1066   without repainting all panels.
1067
1068Hiding Panels
1069
1070   It  is  possible  to  remove  a  panel  from the deck temporarily; use
1071   hide_panel  for this. Use show_panel() to render it visible again. The
1072   predicate  function  panel_hidden  tests  whether  or  not  a panel is
1073   hidden.
1074
1075   The panel_update code ignores hidden panels. You cannot do top_panel()
1076   or  bottom_panel  on  a  hidden  panel().  Other panels operations are
1077   applicable.
1078
1079Miscellaneous Other Facilities
1080
1081   It  is possible to navigate the deck using the functions panel_above()
1082   and  panel_below.  Handed a panel pointer, they return the panel above
1083   or  below  that  panel.  Handed  NULL,  they return the bottom-most or
1084   top-most panel.
1085
1086   Every  panel  has  an  associated  user pointer, not used by the panel
1087   code,  to  which  you  can  attach  application data. See the man page
1088   documentation of set_panel_userptr() and panel_userptr for details.
1089
1090                               The Menu Library
1091
1092   A menu is a screen display that assists the user to choose some subset
1093   of  a  given set of items. The menu library is a curses extension that
1094   supports  easy  programming  of  menu  hierarchies  with a uniform but
1095   flexible interface.
1096
1097   The  menu  library  first  appeared  in  AT&T  System  V.  The version
1098   documented here is the menu code distributed with ncurses.
1099
1100Compiling With the menu Library
1101
1102   Your menu-using modules must import the menu library declarations with
1103          #include <menu.h>
1104
1105   and  must  be linked explicitly with the menus library using an -lmenu
1106   argument.  Note  that  they  must  also  link the ncurses library with
1107   -lncurses. Many linkers are two-pass and will accept either order, but
1108   it is still good practice to put -lmenu first and -lncurses second.
1109
1110Overview of Menus
1111
1112   The  menus  created  by  this  library consist of collections of items
1113   including  a  name  string part and a description string part. To make
1114   menus,  you  create  groups  of these items and connect them with menu
1115   frame objects.
1116
1117   The  menu can then by posted, that is written to an associated window.
1118   Actually, each menu has two associated windows; a containing window in
1119   which  the  programmer can scribble titles or borders, and a subwindow
1120   in which the menu items proper are displayed. If this subwindow is too
1121   small  to  display  all the items, it will be a scrollable viewport on
1122   the collection of items.
1123
1124   A  menu may also be unposted (that is, undisplayed), and finally freed
1125   to  make  the  storage  associated with it and its items available for
1126   re-use.
1127
1128   The general flow of control of a menu program looks like this:
1129    1. Initialize curses.
1130    2. Create the menu items, using new_item().
1131    3. Create the menu using new_menu().
1132    4. Post the menu using post_menu().
1133    5. Refresh the screen.
1134    6. Process user requests via an input loop.
1135    7. Unpost the menu using unpost_menu().
1136    8. Free the menu, using free_menu().
1137    9. Free the items using free_item().
1138   10. Terminate curses.
1139
1140Selecting items
1141
1142   Menus  may  be  multi-valued  or  (the default) single-valued (see the
1143   manual  page  menu_opts(3x)  to  see  how to change the default). Both
1144   types always have a current item.
1145
1146   From  a  single-valued  menu you can read the selected value simply by
1147   looking  at  the  current  item. From a multi-valued menu, you get the
1148   selected  set  by  looping through the items applying the item_value()
1149   predicate  function.  Your  menu-processing  code can use the function
1150   set_item_value() to flag the items in the select set.
1151
1152   Menu   items   can  be  made  unselectable  using  set_item_opts()  or
1153   item_opts_off()  with  the  O_SELECTABLE  argument.  This  is the only
1154   option  so  far  defined for menus, but it is good practice to code as
1155   though other option bits might be on.
1156
1157Menu Display
1158
1159   The  menu  library  calculates a minimum display size for your window,
1160   based on the following variables:
1161     * The number and maximum length of the menu items
1162     * Whether the O_ROWMAJOR option is enabled
1163     * Whether display of descriptions is enabled
1164     * Whatever menu format may have been set by the programmer
1165     * The  length of the menu mark string used for highlighting selected
1166       items
1167
1168   The  function  set_menu_format() allows you to set the maximum size of
1169   the viewport or menu page that will be used to display menu items. You
1170   can retrieve any format associated with a menu with menu_format(). The
1171   default format is rows=16, columns=1.
1172
1173   The actual menu page may be smaller than the format size. This depends
1174   on  the item number and size and whether O_ROWMAJOR is on. This option
1175   (on  by  default) causes menu items to be displayed in a "raster-scan"
1176   pattern, so that if more than one item will fit horizontally the first
1177   couple  of  items  are side-by-side in the top row. The alternative is
1178   column-major  display,  which  tries to put the first several items in
1179   the first column.
1180
1181   As  mentioned above, a menu format not large enough to allow all items
1182   to  fit  on-screen  will  result  in a menu display that is vertically
1183   scrollable.
1184
1185   You  can  scroll  it  with  requests to the menu driver, which will be
1186   described in the section on menu input handling.
1187
1188   Each  menu  has a mark string used to visually tag selected items; see
1189   the menu_mark(3x) manual page for details. The mark string length also
1190   influences the menu page size.
1191
1192   The  function  scale_menu()  returns the minimum display size that the
1193   menu  code  computes  from  all  these  factors.  There are other menu
1194   display  attributes  including  a  select  attribute, an attribute for
1195   selectable  items,  an  attribute  for  unselectable  items, and a pad
1196   character used to separate item name text from description text. These
1197   have  reasonable  defaults which the library allows you to change (see
1198   the menu_attribs(3x) manual page.
1199
1200Menu Windows
1201
1202   Each  menu has, as mentioned previously, a pair of associated windows.
1203   Both these windows are painted when the menu is posted and erased when
1204   the menu is unposted.
1205
1206   The  outer  or  frame  window  is  not  otherwise  touched by the menu
1207   routines. It exists so the programmer can associate a title, a border,
1208   or  perhaps  help text with the menu and have it properly refreshed or
1209   erased at post/unpost time. The inner window or subwindow is where the
1210   current menu page is displayed.
1211
1212   By  default,  both  windows  are  stdscr.  You  can  set them with the
1213   functions in menu_win(3x).
1214
1215   When  you  call post_menu(), you write the menu to its subwindow. When
1216   you  call  unpost_menu(), you erase the subwindow, However, neither of
1217   these  actually  modifies  the  screen. To do that, call wrefresh() or
1218   some equivalent.
1219
1220Processing Menu Input
1221
1222   The  main  loop of your menu-processing code should call menu_driver()
1223   repeatedly.  The first argument of this routine is a menu pointer; the
1224   second  is  a  menu  command  code. You should write an input-fetching
1225   routine that maps input characters to menu command codes, and pass its
1226   output  to  menu_driver(). The menu command codes are fully documented
1227   in menu_driver(3x).
1228
1229   The  simplest  group of command codes is REQ_NEXT_ITEM, REQ_PREV_ITEM,
1230   REQ_FIRST_ITEM,     REQ_LAST_ITEM,     REQ_UP_ITEM,     REQ_DOWN_ITEM,
1231   REQ_LEFT_ITEM,  REQ_RIGHT_ITEM.  These  change  the currently selected
1232   item.  These  requests may cause scrolling of the menu page if it only
1233   partially displayed.
1234
1235   There  are  explicit  requests  for  scrolling  which  also change the
1236   current  item  (because  the  select location does not change, but the
1237   item    there   does).   These   are   REQ_SCR_DLINE,   REQ_SCR_ULINE,
1238   REQ_SCR_DPAGE, and REQ_SCR_UPAGE.
1239
1240   The  REQ_TOGGLE_ITEM  selects or deselects the current item. It is for
1241   use  in multi-valued menus; if you use it with O_ONEVALUE on, you will
1242   get an error return (E_REQUEST_DENIED).
1243
1244   Each  menu  has  an associated pattern buffer. The menu_driver() logic
1245   tries  to  accumulate  printable  ASCII  characters  passed in in that
1246   buffer;  when  it  matches a prefix of an item name, that item (or the
1247   next  matching  item)  is selected. If appending a character yields no
1248   new  match,  that  character  is  deleted from the pattern buffer, and
1249   menu_driver() returns E_NO_MATCH.
1250
1251   Some  requests  change the pattern buffer directly: REQ_CLEAR_PATTERN,
1252   REQ_BACK_PATTERN,  REQ_NEXT_MATCH,  REQ_PREV_MATCH. The latter two are
1253   useful  when  pattern  buffer  input  matches  more than one item in a
1254   multi-valued menu.
1255
1256   Each  successful  scroll or item navigation request clears the pattern
1257   buffer.  It is also possible to set the pattern buffer explicitly with
1258   set_menu_pattern().
1259
1260   Finally,  menu  driver  requests  above  the  constant MAX_COMMAND are
1261   considered   application-specific  commands.  The  menu_driver()  code
1262   ignores them and returns E_UNKNOWN_COMMAND.
1263
1264Miscellaneous Other Features
1265
1266   Various  menu  options can affect the processing and visual appearance
1267   and input processing of menus. See menu_opts(3x) for details.
1268
1269   It  is possible to change the current item from application code; this
1270   is  useful  if  you  want to write your own navigation requests. It is
1271   also  possible  to explicitly set the top row of the menu display. See
1272   mitem_current(3x).  If  your  application  needs  to  change  the menu
1273   subwindow  cursor for any reason, pos_menu_cursor() will restore it to
1274   the correct location for continuing menu driver processing.
1275
1276   It  is  possible  to set hooks to be called at menu initialization and
1277   wrapup   time,   and   whenever   the   selected   item  changes.  See
1278   menu_hook(3x).
1279
1280   Each  item, and each menu, has an associated user pointer on which you
1281   can hang application data. See mitem_userptr(3x) and menu_userptr(3x).
1282
1283                               The Forms Library
1284
1285   The  form library is a curses extension that supports easy programming
1286   of on-screen forms for data entry and program control.
1287
1288   The  form  library  first  appeared  in  AT&T  System  V.  The version
1289   documented here is the form code distributed with ncurses.
1290
1291Compiling With the form Library
1292
1293   Your form-using modules must import the form library declarations with
1294          #include <form.h>
1295
1296   and  must  be linked explicitly with the forms library using an -lform
1297   argument.  Note  that  they  must  also  link the ncurses library with
1298   -lncurses. Many linkers are two-pass and will accept either order, but
1299   it is still good practice to put -lform first and -lncurses second.
1300
1301Overview of Forms
1302
1303   A  form  is  a  collection of fields; each field may be either a label
1304   (explanatory  text)  or  a  data-entry  location.  Long  forms  may be
1305   segmented into pages; each entry to a new page clears the screen.
1306
1307   To  make forms, you create groups of fields and connect them with form
1308   frame objects; the form library makes this relatively simple.
1309
1310   Once  defined,  a form can be posted, that is written to an associated
1311   window.  Actually,  each form has two associated windows; a containing
1312   window  in  which the programmer can scribble titles or borders, and a
1313   subwindow in which the form fields proper are displayed.
1314
1315   As  the  form  user  fills out the posted form, navigation and editing
1316   keys  support  movement between fields, editing keys support modifying
1317   field,  and plain text adds to or changes data in a current field. The
1318   form  library  allows you (the forms designer) to bind each navigation
1319   and  editing  key  to any keystroke accepted by curses Fields may have
1320   validation  conditions on them, so that they check input data for type
1321   and  value.  The form library supplies a rich set of pre-defined field
1322   types, and makes it relatively easy to define new ones.
1323
1324   Once its transaction is completed (or aborted), a form may be unposted
1325   (that  is,  undisplayed),  and  finally  freed  to  make  the  storage
1326   associated with it and its items available for re-use.
1327
1328   The general flow of control of a form program looks like this:
1329    1. Initialize curses.
1330    2. Create the form fields, using new_field().
1331    3. Create the form using new_form().
1332    4. Post the form using post_form().
1333    5. Refresh the screen.
1334    6. Process user requests via an input loop.
1335    7. Unpost the form using unpost_form().
1336    8. Free the form, using free_form().
1337    9. Free the fields using free_field().
1338   10. Terminate curses.
1339
1340   Note  that  this  looks  much  like  a  menu program; the form library
1341   handles  tasks  which  are in many ways similar, and its interface was
1342   obviously  designed  to  resemble  that  of  the menu library wherever
1343   possible.
1344
1345   In  forms  programs,  however, the "process user requests" is somewhat
1346   more   complicated   than  for  menus.  Besides  menu-like  navigation
1347   operations, the menu driver loop has to support field editing and data
1348   validation.
1349
1350Creating and Freeing Fields and Forms
1351
1352   The basic function for creating fields is new_field():
1353FIELD *new_field(int height, int width,   /* new field size */
1354                 int top, int left,       /* upper left corner */
1355                 int offscreen,           /* number of offscreen rows */
1356                 int nbuf);               /* number of working buffers */
1357
1358   Menu  items  always  occupy  a  single  row, but forms fields may have
1359   multiple  rows.  So  new_field()  requires  you to specify a width and
1360   height  (the  first  two  arguments,  which  mist both be greater than
1361   zero).
1362
1363   You must also specify the location of the field's upper left corner on
1364   the  screen  (the  third  and  fourth arguments, which must be zero or
1365   greater).  Note  that  these  coordinates  are  relative  to  the form
1366   subwindow,  which will coincide with stdscr by default but need not be
1367   stdscr if you have done an explicit set_form_win() call.
1368
1369   The  fifth argument allows you to specify a number of off-screen rows.
1370   If  this  is zero, the entire field will always be displayed. If it is
1371   nonzero,  the  form  will  be  scrollable,  with  only one screen-full
1372   (initially  the  top  part) displayed at any given time. If you make a
1373   field  dynamic and grow it so it will no longer fit on the screen, the
1374   form  will  become  scrollable  even  if  the  offscreen  argument was
1375   initially zero.
1376
1377   The  forms library allocates one working buffer per field; the size of
1378   each buffer is ((height + offscreen)*width + 1, one character for each
1379   position in the field plus a NUL terminator. The sixth argument is the
1380   number  of  additional  data  buffers  to allocate for the field; your
1381   application can use them for its own purposes.
1382FIELD *dup_field(FIELD *field,            /* field to copy */
1383                 int top, int left);      /* location of new copy */
1384
1385   The  function  dup_field()  duplicates  an  existing  field  at  a new
1386   location.  Size  and  buffering information are copied; some attribute
1387   flags  and  status  bits  are  not  (see  the  form_field_new(3X)  for
1388   details).
1389FIELD *link_field(FIELD *field,           /* field to copy */
1390                  int top, int left);     /* location of new copy */
1391
1392   The  function  link_field() also duplicates an existing field at a new
1393   location.  The difference from dup_field() is that it arranges for the
1394   new field's buffer to be shared with the old one.
1395
1396   Besides  the obvious use in making a field editable from two different
1397   form pages, linked fields give you a way to hack in dynamic labels. If
1398   you  declare  several fields linked to an original, and then make them
1399   inactive,  changes  from  the original will still be propagated to the
1400   linked fields.
1401
1402   As  with duplicated fields, linked fields have attribute bits separate
1403   from the original.
1404
1405   As  you  might  guess,  all these field-allocations return NULL if the
1406   field  allocation  is  not  possible  due to an out-of-memory error or
1407   out-of-bounds arguments.
1408
1409   To connect fields to a form, use
1410FORM *new_form(FIELD **fields);
1411
1412   This  function  expects  to  see  a  NULL-terminated  array  of  field
1413   pointers.  Said fields are connected to a newly-allocated form object;
1414   its address is returned (or else NULL if the allocation fails).
1415
1416   Note  that  new_field()  does  not copy the pointer array into private
1417   storage;  if you modify the contents of the pointer array during forms
1418   processing,  all manner of bizarre things might happen. Also note that
1419   any given field may only be connected to one form.
1420
1421   The  functions  free_field() and free_form are available to free field
1422   and  form objects. It is an error to attempt to free a field connected
1423   to a form, but not vice-versa; thus, you will generally free your form
1424   objects first.
1425
1426Fetching and Changing Field Attributes
1427
1428   Each  form  field  has  a  number  of  location  and  size  attributes
1429   associated  with  it. There are other field attributes used to control
1430   display and editing of the field. Some (for example, the O_STATIC bit)
1431   involve  sufficient  complications  to be covered in sections of their
1432   own later on. We cover the functions used to get and set several basic
1433   attributes here.
1434
1435   When a field is created, the attributes not specified by the new_field
1436   function  are  copied  from  an  invisible  system  default  field. In
1437   attribute-setting  and -fetching functions, the argument NULL is taken
1438   to mean this field. Changes to it persist as defaults until your forms
1439   application terminates.
1440
1441  Fetching Size and Location Data
1442
1443   You can retrieve field sizes and locations through:
1444int field_info(FIELD *field,              /* field from which to fetch */
1445               int *height, *int width,   /* field size */
1446               int *top, int *left,       /* upper left corner */
1447               int *offscreen,            /* number of offscreen rows */
1448               int *nbuf);                /* number of working buffers */
1449
1450   This  function is a sort of inverse of new_field(); instead of setting
1451   size  and  location attributes of a new field, it fetches them from an
1452   existing one.
1453
1454  Changing the Field Location
1455
1456   It is possible to move a field's location on the screen:
1457int move_field(FIELD *field,              /* field to alter */
1458               int top, int left);        /* new upper-left corner */
1459
1460   You can, of course. query the current location through field_info().
1461
1462  The Justification Attribute
1463
1464   One-line  fields  may be unjustified, justified right, justified left,
1465   or centered. Here is how you manipulate this attribute:
1466int set_field_just(FIELD *field,          /* field to alter */
1467                   int justmode);         /* mode to set */
1468
1469int field_just(FIELD *field);             /* fetch mode of field */
1470
1471   The   mode   values  accepted  and  returned  by  this  functions  are
1472   preprocessor  macros NO_JUSTIFICATION, JUSTIFY_RIGHT, JUSTIFY_LEFT, or
1473   JUSTIFY_CENTER.
1474
1475  Field Display Attributes
1476
1477   For  each  field,  you  can  set  a  foreground  attribute for entered
1478   characters,  a  background  attribute  for the entire field, and a pad
1479   character  for the unfilled portion of the field. You can also control
1480   pagination of the form.
1481
1482   This  group of four field attributes controls the visual appearance of
1483   the  field on the screen, without affecting in any way the data in the
1484   field buffer.
1485int set_field_fore(FIELD *field,          /* field to alter */
1486                   chtype attr);          /* attribute to set */
1487
1488chtype field_fore(FIELD *field);          /* field to query */
1489
1490int set_field_back(FIELD *field,          /* field to alter */
1491                   chtype attr);          /* attribute to set */
1492
1493chtype field_back(FIELD *field);          /* field to query */
1494
1495int set_field_pad(FIELD *field,           /* field to alter */
1496                 int pad);                /* pad character to set */
1497
1498chtype field_pad(FIELD *field);
1499
1500int set_new_page(FIELD *field,            /* field to alter */
1501                 int flag);               /* TRUE to force new page */
1502
1503chtype new_page(FIELD *field);            /* field to query */
1504
1505   The attributes set and returned by the first four functions are normal
1506   curses(3x)  display  attribute  values  (A_STANDOUT, A_BOLD, A_REVERSE
1507   etc).  The page bit of a field controls whether it is displayed at the
1508   start of a new form screen.
1509
1510  Field Option Bits
1511
1512   There  is  also a large collection of field option bits you can set to
1513   control  various  aspects of forms processing. You can manipulate them
1514   with these functions:
1515int set_field_opts(FIELD *field,          /* field to alter */
1516                   int attr);             /* attribute to set */
1517
1518int field_opts_on(FIELD *field,           /* field to alter */
1519                  int attr);              /* attributes to turn on */
1520
1521int field_opts_off(FIELD *field,          /* field to alter */
1522                   int attr);             /* attributes to turn off */
1523
1524int field_opts(FIELD *field);             /* field to query */
1525
1526   By default, all options are on. Here are the available option bits:
1527
1528   O_VISIBLE
1529          Controls  whether  the  field  is visible on the screen. Can be
1530          used  during form processing to hide or pop up fields depending
1531          on the value of parent fields.
1532
1533   O_ACTIVE
1534          Controls  whether  the  field is active during forms processing
1535          (i.e.  visited  by  form  navigation keys). Can be used to make
1536          labels  or  derived  fields with buffer values alterable by the
1537          forms application, not the user.
1538
1539   O_PUBLIC
1540          Controls  whether data is displayed during field entry. If this
1541          option  is  turned  off on a field, the library will accept and
1542          edit  data  in that field, but it will not be displayed and the
1543          visible  field  cursor  will  not  move.  You  can turn off the
1544          O_PUBLIC bit to define password fields.
1545
1546   O_EDIT
1547          Controls  whether  the  field's data can be modified. When this
1548          option  is off, all editing requests except REQ_PREV_CHOICE and
1549          REQ_NEXT_CHOICE  will fail. Such read-only fields may be useful
1550          for help messages.
1551
1552   O_WRAP
1553          Controls word-wrapping in multi-line fields. Normally, when any
1554          character  of  a  (blank-separated) word reaches the end of the
1555          current  line,  the  entire  word  is  wrapped to the next line
1556          (assuming there is one). When this option is off, the word will
1557          be split across the line break.
1558
1559   O_BLANK
1560          Controls  field  blanking.  When  this option is on, entering a
1561          character  at  the first field position erases the entire field
1562          (except for the just-entered character).
1563
1564   O_AUTOSKIP
1565          Controls  automatic  skip  to  next  field when this one fills.
1566          Normally,  when  the  forms user tries to type more data into a
1567          field  than will fit, the editing location jumps to next field.
1568          When this option is off, the user's cursor will hang at the end
1569          of  the  field.  This  option is ignored in dynamic fields that
1570          have not reached their size limit.
1571
1572   O_NULLOK
1573          Controls   whether  validation  is  applied  to  blank  fields.
1574          Normally,  it  is not; the user can leave a field blank without
1575          invoking  the usual validation check on exit. If this option is
1576          off on a field, exit from it will invoke a validation check.
1577
1578   O_PASSOK
1579          Controls whether validation occurs on every exit, or only after
1580          the  field  is  modified.  Normally the latter is true. Setting
1581          O_PASSOK  may be useful if your field's validation function may
1582          change during forms processing.
1583
1584   O_STATIC
1585          Controls  whether the field is fixed to its initial dimensions.
1586          If  you  turn  this  off,  the  field  becomes dynamic and will
1587          stretch to fit entered data.
1588
1589   A  field's  options  cannot  be  changed  while the field is currently
1590   selected.  However,  options  may be changed on posted fields that are
1591   not current.
1592
1593   The option values are bit-masks and can be composed with logical-or in
1594   the obvious way.
1595
1596Field Status
1597
1598   Every field has a status flag, which is set to FALSE when the field is
1599   created  and  TRUE when the value in field buffer 0 changes. This flag
1600   can be queried and set directly:
1601int set_field_status(FIELD *field,      /* field to alter */
1602                   int status);         /* mode to set */
1603
1604int field_status(FIELD *field);         /* fetch mode of field */
1605
1606   Setting  this  flag under program control can be useful if you use the
1607   same form repeatedly, looking for modified fields each time.
1608
1609   Calling  field_status()  on  a  field not currently selected for input
1610   will return a correct value. Calling field_status() on a field that is
1611   currently  selected for input may not necessarily give a correct field
1612   status value, because entered data is not necessarily copied to buffer
1613   zero  before the exit validation check. To guarantee that the returned
1614   status  value  reflects reality, call field_status() either (1) in the
1615   field's  exit validation check routine, (2) from the field's or form's
1616   initialization   or   termination   hooks,   or   (3)   just  after  a
1617   REQ_VALIDATION request has been processed by the forms driver.
1618
1619Field User Pointer
1620
1621   Each  field  structure contains one character pointer slot that is not
1622   used  by  the forms library. It is intended to be used by applications
1623   to store private per-field data. You can manipulate it with:
1624int set_field_userptr(FIELD *field,       /* field to alter */
1625                   char *userptr);        /* mode to set */
1626
1627char *field_userptr(FIELD *field);        /* fetch mode of field */
1628
1629   (Properly,  this  user  pointer field ought to have (void *) type. The
1630   (char *) type is retained for System V compatibility.)
1631
1632   It  is  valid  to  set  the  user pointer of the default field (with a
1633   set_field_userptr()  call  passed  a  NULL  field pointer.) When a new
1634   field  is  created,  the  default-field  user  pointer  is  copied  to
1635   initialize the new field's user pointer.
1636
1637Variable-Sized Fields
1638
1639   Normally,  a  field  is fixed at the size specified for it at creation
1640   time.  If,  however, you turn off its O_STATIC bit, it becomes dynamic
1641   and  will  automatically  resize  itself  to accommodate data as it is
1642   entered.  If the field has extra buffers associated with it, they will
1643   grow right along with the main input buffer.
1644
1645   A  one-line  dynamic  field  will have a fixed height (1) but variable
1646   width, scrolling horizontally to display data within the field area as
1647   originally  dimensioned  and  located. A multi-line dynamic field will
1648   have  a  fixed  width, but variable height (number of rows), scrolling
1649   vertically  to  display  data  within  the  field  area  as originally
1650   dimensioned and located.
1651
1652   Normally,  a dynamic field is allowed to grow without limit. But it is
1653   possible  to set an upper limit on the size of a dynamic field. You do
1654   it with this function:
1655int set_max_field(FIELD *field,     /* field to alter (may not be NULL) */
1656                   int max_size);   /* upper limit on field size */
1657
1658   If the field is one-line, max_size is taken to be a column size limit;
1659   if  it  is multi-line, it is taken to be a line size limit. To disable
1660   any  limit,  use  an argument of zero. The growth limit can be changed
1661   whether or not the O_STATIC bit is on, but has no effect until it is.
1662
1663   The following properties of a field change when it becomes dynamic:
1664     * If  there  is  no  growth limit, there is no final position of the
1665       field; therefore O_AUTOSKIP and O_NL_OVERLOAD are ignored.
1666     * Field justification will be ignored (though whatever justification
1667       is set up will be retained internally and can be queried).
1668     * The  dup_field() and link_field() calls copy dynamic-buffer sizes.
1669       If  the  O_STATIC  option  is set on one of a collection of links,
1670       buffer  resizing  will occur only when the field is edited through
1671       that link.
1672     * The  call  field_info()  will retrieve the original static size of
1673       the  field;  use  dynamic_field_info()  to  get the actual dynamic
1674       size.
1675
1676Field Validation
1677
1678   By  default,  a  field will accept any data that will fit in its input
1679   buffer.  However,  it  is  possible  to  attach a validation type to a
1680   field.  If  you  do  this,  any  attempt  to  leave the field while it
1681   contains  data that does not match the validation type will fail. Some
1682   validation  types also have a character-validity check for each time a
1683   character is entered in the field.
1684
1685   A   field's   validation   check   (if   any)   is   not  called  when
1686   set_field_buffer()  modifies the input buffer, nor when that buffer is
1687   changed through a linked field.
1688
1689   The  form library provides a rich set of pre-defined validation types,
1690   and  gives  you  the capability to define custom ones of your own. You
1691   can  examine and change field validation attributes with the following
1692   functions:
1693int set_field_type(FIELD *field,          /* field to alter */
1694                   FIELDTYPE *ftype,      /* type to associate */
1695                   ...);                  /* additional arguments*/
1696
1697FIELDTYPE *field_type(FIELD *field);      /* field to query */
1698
1699   The  validation  type  of  a  field  is considered an attribute of the
1700   field.  As  with  other field attributes, Also, doing set_field_type()
1701   with  a  NULL  field  default  will  change  the  system  default  for
1702   validation of newly-created fields.
1703
1704   Here are the pre-defined validation types:
1705
1706  TYPE_ALPHA
1707
1708   This  field  type  accepts  alphabetic  data; no blanks, no digits, no
1709   special  characters  (this  is checked at character-entry time). It is
1710   set up with:
1711int set_field_type(FIELD *field,          /* field to alter */
1712                   TYPE_ALPHA,            /* type to associate */
1713                   int width);            /* maximum width of field */
1714
1715   The  width  argument  sets a minimum width of data. Typically you will
1716   want  to  set this to the field width; if it is greater than the field
1717   width,  the validation check will always fail. A minimum width of zero
1718   makes field completion optional.
1719
1720  TYPE_ALNUM
1721
1722   This  field  type  accepts  alphabetic  data and digits; no blanks, no
1723   special  characters  (this  is checked at character-entry time). It is
1724   set up with:
1725int set_field_type(FIELD *field,          /* field to alter */
1726                   TYPE_ALNUM,            /* type to associate */
1727                   int width);            /* maximum width of field */
1728
1729   The  width  argument sets a minimum width of data. As with TYPE_ALPHA,
1730   typically  you  will  want  to  set  this to the field width; if it is
1731   greater than the field width, the validation check will always fail. A
1732   minimum width of zero makes field completion optional.
1733
1734  TYPE_ENUM
1735
1736   This  type  allows  you  to  restrict  a  field's values to be among a
1737   specified  set  of  string  values (for example, the two-letter postal
1738   codes for U.S. states). It is set up with:
1739int set_field_type(FIELD *field,          /* field to alter */
1740                   TYPE_ENUM,             /* type to associate */
1741                   char **valuelist;      /* list of possible values */
1742                   int checkcase;         /* case-sensitive? */
1743                   int checkunique);      /* must specify uniquely? */
1744
1745   The  valuelist parameter must point at a NULL-terminated list of valid
1746   strings.  The  checkcase  argument, if true, makes comparison with the
1747   string case-sensitive.
1748
1749   When  the user exits a TYPE_ENUM field, the validation procedure tries
1750   to  complete  the  data  in the buffer to a valid entry. If a complete
1751   choice  string has been entered, it is of course valid. But it is also
1752   possible to enter a prefix of a valid string and have it completed for
1753   you.
1754
1755   By  default,  if  you enter such a prefix and it matches more than one
1756   value  in  the  string list, the prefix will be completed to the first
1757   matching value. But the checkunique argument, if true, requires prefix
1758   matches to be unique in order to be valid.
1759
1760   The   REQ_NEXT_CHOICE   and  REQ_PREV_CHOICE  input  requests  can  be
1761   particularly useful with these fields.
1762
1763  TYPE_INTEGER
1764
1765   This field type accepts an integer. It is set up as follows:
1766int set_field_type(FIELD *field,          /* field to alter */
1767                   TYPE_INTEGER,          /* type to associate */
1768                   int padding,           /* # places to zero-pad to */
1769                   int vmin, int vmax);   /* valid range */
1770
1771   Valid  characters consist of an optional leading minus and digits. The
1772   range check is performed on exit. If the range maximum is less than or
1773   equal to the minimum, the range is ignored.
1774
1775   If the value passes its range check, it is padded with as many leading
1776   zero digits as necessary to meet the padding argument.
1777
1778   A TYPE_INTEGER value buffer can conveniently be interpreted with the C
1779   library function atoi(3).
1780
1781  TYPE_NUMERIC
1782
1783   This field type accepts a decimal number. It is set up as follows:
1784int set_field_type(FIELD *field,              /* field to alter */
1785                   TYPE_NUMERIC,              /* type to associate */
1786                   int padding,               /* # places of precision */
1787                   double vmin, double vmax); /* valid range */
1788
1789   Valid  characters  consist  of  an  optional leading minus and digits.
1790   possibly  including a decimal point. If your system supports locale's,
1791   the  decimal  point  character  used  must  be the one defined by your
1792   locale.  The range check is performed on exit. If the range maximum is
1793   less than or equal to the minimum, the range is ignored.
1794
1795   If  the  value  passes  its  range  check,  it  is padded with as many
1796   trailing zero digits as necessary to meet the padding argument.
1797
1798   A TYPE_NUMERIC value buffer can conveniently be interpreted with the C
1799   library function atof(3).
1800
1801  TYPE_REGEXP
1802
1803   This  field type accepts data matching a regular expression. It is set
1804   up as follows:
1805int set_field_type(FIELD *field,          /* field to alter */
1806                   TYPE_REGEXP,           /* type to associate */
1807                   char *regexp);         /* expression to match */
1808
1809   The  syntax  for  regular expressions is that of regcomp(3). The check
1810   for regular-expression match is performed on exit.
1811
1812Direct Field Buffer Manipulation
1813
1814   The chief attribute of a field is its buffer contents. When a form has
1815   been  completed,  your  application usually needs to know the state of
1816   each field buffer. You can find this out with:
1817char *field_buffer(FIELD *field,          /* field to query */
1818                   int bufindex);         /* number of buffer to query */
1819
1820   Normally,  the state of the zero-numbered buffer for each field is set
1821   by the user's editing actions on that field. It is sometimes useful to
1822   be  able  to set the value of the zero-numbered (or some other) buffer
1823   from your application:
1824int set_field_buffer(FIELD *field,        /* field to alter */
1825                   int bufindex,          /* number of buffer to alter */
1826                   char *value);          /* string value to set */
1827
1828   If  the  field  is  not  large  enough  and  cannot  be  resized  to a
1829   sufficiently large size to contain the specified value, the value will
1830   be truncated to fit.
1831
1832   Calling  field_buffer() with a null field pointer will raise an error.
1833   Calling  field_buffer()  on  a  field not currently selected for input
1834   will return a correct value. Calling field_buffer() on a field that is
1835   currently  selected for input may not necessarily give a correct field
1836   buffer value, because entered data is not necessarily copied to buffer
1837   zero  before the exit validation check. To guarantee that the returned
1838   buffer  value  reflects  on-screen reality, call field_buffer() either
1839   (1) in the field's exit validation check routine, (2) from the field's
1840   or  form's  initialization  or  termination hooks, or (3) just after a
1841   REQ_VALIDATION request has been processed by the forms driver.
1842
1843Attributes of Forms
1844
1845   As  with  field  attributes,  form attributes inherit a default from a
1846   system default form structure. These defaults can be queried or set by
1847   of these functions using a form-pointer argument of NULL.
1848
1849   The principal attribute of a form is its field list. You can query and
1850   change this list with:
1851int set_form_fields(FORM *form,           /* form to alter */
1852                    FIELD **fields);      /* fields to connect */
1853
1854char *form_fields(FORM *form);            /* fetch fields of form */
1855
1856int field_count(FORM *form);              /* count connect fields */
1857
1858   The  second  argument  of  set_form_fields()  may be a NULL-terminated
1859   field pointer array like the one required by new_form(). In that case,
1860   the  old  fields  of  the  form  are  disconnected  but not freed (and
1861   eligible  to  be  connected  to  other forms), then the new fields are
1862   connected.
1863
1864   It  may  also  be  null, in which case the old fields are disconnected
1865   (and not freed) but no new ones are connected.
1866
1867   The   field_count()  function  simply  counts  the  number  of  fields
1868   connected  to a given from. It returns -1 if the form-pointer argument
1869   is NULL.
1870
1871Control of Form Display
1872
1873   In  the  overview section, you saw that to display a form you normally
1874   start  by  defining  its size (and fields), posting it, and refreshing
1875   the  screen.  There  is  an  hidden  step before posting, which is the
1876   association  of  the  form  with  a  frame window (actually, a pair of
1877   windows)  within  which  it  will  be displayed. By default, the forms
1878   library associates every form with the full-screen window stdscr.
1879
1880   By making this step explicit, you can associate a form with a declared
1881   frame window on your screen display. This can be useful if you want to
1882   adapt  the  form  display  to different screen sizes, dynamically tile
1883   forms  on  the  screen,  or  use a form as part of an interface layout
1884   managed by panels.
1885
1886   The  two  windows associated with each form have the same functions as
1887   their  analogues  in  the menu library. Both these windows are painted
1888   when the form is posted and erased when the form is unposted.
1889
1890   The  outer  or  frame  window  is  not  otherwise  touched by the form
1891   routines. It exists so the programmer can associate a title, a border,
1892   or  perhaps  help text with the form and have it properly refreshed or
1893   erased at post/unpost time. The inner window or subwindow is where the
1894   current form page is actually displayed.
1895
1896   In order to declare your own frame window for a form, you will need to
1897   know  the  size  of  the  form's  bounding rectangle. You can get this
1898   information with:
1899int scale_form(FORM *form,                /* form to query */
1900               int *rows,                 /* form rows */
1901               int *cols);                /* form cols */
1902
1903   The form dimensions are passed back in the locations pointed to by the
1904   arguments.  Once  you have this information, you can use it to declare
1905   of windows, then use one of these functions:
1906int set_form_win(FORM *form,              /* form to alter */
1907                 WINDOW *win);            /* frame window to connect */
1908
1909WINDOW *form_win(FORM *form);             /* fetch frame window of form */
1910
1911int set_form_sub(FORM *form,              /* form to alter */
1912                 WINDOW *win);            /* form subwindow to connect */
1913
1914WINDOW *form_sub(FORM *form);             /* fetch form subwindow of form */
1915
1916   Note  that curses operations, including refresh(), on the form, should
1917   be done on the frame window, not the form subwindow.
1918
1919   It  is  possible  to  check  from  your  application  whether all of a
1920   scrollable  field is actually displayed within the menu subwindow. Use
1921   these functions:
1922int data_ahead(FORM *form);               /* form to be queried */
1923
1924int data_behind(FORM *form);              /* form to be queried */
1925
1926   The  function  data_ahead()  returns  TRUE if (a) the current field is
1927   one-line  and  has  undisplayed data off to the right, (b) the current
1928   field is multi-line and there is data off-screen below it.
1929
1930   The function data_behind() returns TRUE if the first (upper left hand)
1931   character position is off-screen (not being displayed).
1932
1933   Finally,  there  is  a function to restore the form window's cursor to
1934   the value expected by the forms driver:
1935int pos_form_cursor(FORM *)               /* form to be queried */
1936
1937   If your application changes the form window cursor, call this function
1938   before   handing  control  back  to  the  forms  driver  in  order  to
1939   re-synchronize it.
1940
1941Input Processing in the Forms Driver
1942
1943   The function form_driver() handles virtualized input requests for form
1944   navigation, editing, and validation requests, just as menu_driver does
1945   for menus (see the section on menu input handling).
1946int form_driver(FORM *form,               /* form to pass input to */
1947                int request);             /* form request code */
1948
1949   Your  input  virtualization  function  needs  to  take  input and then
1950   convert  it  to  either an alphanumeric character (which is treated as
1951   data  to  be  entered  in  the  currently-selected  field), or a forms
1952   processing request.
1953
1954   The   forms   driver  provides  hooks  (through  input-validation  and
1955   field-termination  functions)  with  which  your  application code can
1956   check that the input taken by the driver matched what was expected.
1957
1958  Page Navigation Requests
1959
1960   These  requests  cause  page-level  moves through the form, triggering
1961   display of a new form screen.
1962
1963   REQ_NEXT_PAGE
1964          Move to the next form page.
1965
1966   REQ_PREV_PAGE
1967          Move to the previous form page.
1968
1969   REQ_FIRST_PAGE
1970          Move to the first form page.
1971
1972   REQ_LAST_PAGE
1973          Move to the last form page.
1974
1975   These  requests  treat the list as cyclic; that is, REQ_NEXT_PAGE from
1976   the last page goes to the first, and REQ_PREV_PAGE from the first page
1977   goes to the last.
1978
1979  Inter-Field Navigation Requests
1980
1981   These requests handle navigation between fields on the same page.
1982
1983   REQ_NEXT_FIELD
1984          Move to next field.
1985
1986   REQ_PREV_FIELD
1987          Move to previous field.
1988
1989   REQ_FIRST_FIELD
1990          Move to the first field.
1991
1992   REQ_LAST_FIELD
1993          Move to the last field.
1994
1995   REQ_SNEXT_FIELD
1996          Move to sorted next field.
1997
1998   REQ_SPREV_FIELD
1999          Move to sorted previous field.
2000
2001   REQ_SFIRST_FIELD
2002          Move to the sorted first field.
2003
2004   REQ_SLAST_FIELD
2005          Move to the sorted last field.
2006
2007   REQ_LEFT_FIELD
2008          Move left to field.
2009
2010   REQ_RIGHT_FIELD
2011          Move right to field.
2012
2013   REQ_UP_FIELD
2014          Move up to field.
2015
2016   REQ_DOWN_FIELD
2017          Move down to field.
2018
2019   These  requests treat the list of fields on a page as cyclic; that is,
2020   REQ_NEXT_FIELD   from   the   last   field  goes  to  the  first,  and
2021   REQ_PREV_FIELD from the first field goes to the last. The order of the
2022   fields for these (and the REQ_FIRST_FIELD and REQ_LAST_FIELD requests)
2023   is simply the order of the field pointers in the form array (as set up
2024   by new_form() or set_form_fields()
2025
2026   It  is also possible to traverse the fields as if they had been sorted
2027   in  screen-position  order,  so  the  sequence  goes left-to-right and
2028   top-to-bottom.   To   do   this,   use   the   second  group  of  four
2029   sorted-movement requests.
2030
2031   Finally, it is possible to move between fields using visual directions
2032   up,  down, right, and left. To accomplish this, use the third group of
2033   four requests. Note, however, that the position of a form for purposes
2034   of these requests is its upper-left corner.
2035
2036   For   example,  suppose  you  have  a  multi-line  field  B,  and  two
2037   single-line fields A and C on the same line with B, with A to the left
2038   of  B  and  C  to the right of B. A REQ_MOVE_RIGHT from A will go to B
2039   only  if  A, B, and C all share the same first line; otherwise it will
2040   skip over B to C.
2041
2042  Intra-Field Navigation Requests
2043
2044   These  requests drive movement of the edit cursor within the currently
2045   selected field.
2046
2047   REQ_NEXT_CHAR
2048          Move to next character.
2049
2050   REQ_PREV_CHAR
2051          Move to previous character.
2052
2053   REQ_NEXT_LINE
2054          Move to next line.
2055
2056   REQ_PREV_LINE
2057          Move to previous line.
2058
2059   REQ_NEXT_WORD
2060          Move to next word.
2061
2062   REQ_PREV_WORD
2063          Move to previous word.
2064
2065   REQ_BEG_FIELD
2066          Move to beginning of field.
2067
2068   REQ_END_FIELD
2069          Move to end of field.
2070
2071   REQ_BEG_LINE
2072          Move to beginning of line.
2073
2074   REQ_END_LINE
2075          Move to end of line.
2076
2077   REQ_LEFT_CHAR
2078          Move left in field.
2079
2080   REQ_RIGHT_CHAR
2081          Move right in field.
2082
2083   REQ_UP_CHAR
2084          Move up in field.
2085
2086   REQ_DOWN_CHAR
2087          Move down in field.
2088
2089   Each  word  is  separated  from  the  previous  and next characters by
2090   whitespace. The commands to move to beginning and end of line or field
2091   look for the first or last non-pad character in their ranges.
2092
2093  Scrolling Requests
2094
2095   Fields  that  are dynamic and have grown and fields explicitly created
2096   with   offscreen   rows   are   scrollable.   One-line  fields  scroll
2097   horizontally;  multi-line  fields scroll vertically. Most scrolling is
2098   triggered by editing and intra-field movement (the library scrolls the
2099   field  to  keep  the  cursor  visible).  It  is possible to explicitly
2100   request scrolling with the following requests:
2101
2102   REQ_SCR_FLINE
2103          Scroll vertically forward a line.
2104
2105   REQ_SCR_BLINE
2106          Scroll vertically backward a line.
2107
2108   REQ_SCR_FPAGE
2109          Scroll vertically forward a page.
2110
2111   REQ_SCR_BPAGE
2112          Scroll vertically backward a page.
2113
2114   REQ_SCR_FHPAGE
2115          Scroll vertically forward half a page.
2116
2117   REQ_SCR_BHPAGE
2118          Scroll vertically backward half a page.
2119
2120   REQ_SCR_FCHAR
2121          Scroll horizontally forward a character.
2122
2123   REQ_SCR_BCHAR
2124          Scroll horizontally backward a character.
2125
2126   REQ_SCR_HFLINE
2127          Scroll horizontally one field width forward.
2128
2129   REQ_SCR_HBLINE
2130          Scroll horizontally one field width backward.
2131
2132   REQ_SCR_HFHALF
2133          Scroll horizontally one half field width forward.
2134
2135   REQ_SCR_HBHALF
2136          Scroll horizontally one half field width backward.
2137
2138   For scrolling purposes, a page of a field is the height of its visible
2139   part.
2140
2141  Editing Requests
2142
2143   When  you pass the forms driver an ASCII character, it is treated as a
2144   request  to add the character to the field's data buffer. Whether this
2145   is  an  insertion  or  a  replacement depends on the field's edit mode
2146   (insertion is the default.
2147
2148   The following requests support editing the field and changing the edit
2149   mode:
2150
2151   REQ_INS_MODE
2152          Set insertion mode.
2153
2154   REQ_OVL_MODE
2155          Set overlay mode.
2156
2157   REQ_NEW_LINE
2158          New line request (see below for explanation).
2159
2160   REQ_INS_CHAR
2161          Insert space at character location.
2162
2163   REQ_INS_LINE
2164          Insert blank line at character location.
2165
2166   REQ_DEL_CHAR
2167          Delete character at cursor.
2168
2169   REQ_DEL_PREV
2170          Delete previous word at cursor.
2171
2172   REQ_DEL_LINE
2173          Delete line at cursor.
2174
2175   REQ_DEL_WORD
2176          Delete word at cursor.
2177
2178   REQ_CLR_EOL
2179          Clear to end of line.
2180
2181   REQ_CLR_EOF
2182          Clear to end of field.
2183
2184   REQ_CLEAR_FIELD
2185          Clear entire field.
2186
2187   The   behavior  of  the  REQ_NEW_LINE  and  REQ_DEL_PREV  requests  is
2188   complicated  and  partly  controlled  by  a pair of forms options. The
2189   special  cases  are triggered when the cursor is at the beginning of a
2190   field, or on the last line of the field.
2191
2192   First, we consider REQ_NEW_LINE:
2193
2194   The  normal  behavior  of  REQ_NEW_LINE in insert mode is to break the
2195   current line at the position of the edit cursor, inserting the portion
2196   of  the  current  line  after  the  cursor as a new line following the
2197   current  and  moving the cursor to the beginning of that new line (you
2198   may think of this as inserting a newline in the field buffer).
2199
2200   The  normal  behavior  of REQ_NEW_LINE in overlay mode is to clear the
2201   current  line from the position of the edit cursor to end of line. The
2202   cursor is then moved to the beginning of the next line.
2203
2204   However, REQ_NEW_LINE at the beginning of a field, or on the last line
2205   of  a  field,  instead  does a REQ_NEXT_FIELD. O_NL_OVERLOAD option is
2206   off, this special action is disabled.
2207
2208   Now, let us consider REQ_DEL_PREV:
2209
2210   The  normal  behavior  of  REQ_DEL_PREV  is  to  delete  the  previous
2211   character.  If  insert mode is on, and the cursor is at the start of a
2212   line,  and  the  text  on  that  line will fit on the previous one, it
2213   instead  appends  the contents of the current line to the previous one
2214   and  deletes  the  current  line  (you may think of this as deleting a
2215   newline from the field buffer).
2216
2217   However,  REQ_DEL_PREV  at the beginning of a field is instead treated
2218   as a REQ_PREV_FIELD.
2219
2220   If  the  O_BS_OVERLOAD  option is off, this special action is disabled
2221   and the forms driver just returns E_REQUEST_DENIED.
2222
2223   See  Form  Options for discussion of how to set and clear the overload
2224   options.
2225
2226  Order Requests
2227
2228   If the type of your field is ordered, and has associated functions for
2229   getting  the  next and previous values of the type from a given value,
2230   there are requests that can fetch that value into the field buffer:
2231
2232   REQ_NEXT_CHOICE
2233          Place the successor value of the current value in the buffer.
2234
2235   REQ_PREV_CHOICE
2236          Place the predecessor value of the current value in the buffer.
2237
2238   Of the built-in field types, only TYPE_ENUM has built-in successor and
2239   predecessor  functions.  When you define a field type of your own (see
2240   Custom   Validation   Types),  you  can  associate  our  own  ordering
2241   functions.
2242
2243  Application Commands
2244
2245   Form  requests  are  represented  as  integers  above the curses value
2246   greater   than  KEY_MAX  and  less  than  or  equal  to  the  constant
2247   MAX_COMMAND.  If  your  input-virtualization  routine  returns a value
2248   above MAX_COMMAND, the forms driver will ignore it.
2249
2250Field Change Hooks
2251
2252   It  is  possible  to  set  function  hooks to be executed whenever the
2253   current  field  or  form  changes. Here are the functions that support
2254   this:
2255typedef void    (*HOOK)();       /* pointer to function returning void */
2256
2257int set_form_init(FORM *form,    /* form to alter */
2258                  HOOK hook);    /* initialization hook */
2259
2260HOOK form_init(FORM *form);      /* form to query */
2261
2262int set_form_term(FORM *form,    /* form to alter */
2263                  HOOK hook);    /* termination hook */
2264
2265HOOK form_term(FORM *form);      /* form to query */
2266
2267int set_field_init(FORM *form,   /* form to alter */
2268                  HOOK hook);    /* initialization hook */
2269
2270HOOK field_init(FORM *form);     /* form to query */
2271
2272int set_field_term(FORM *form,   /* form to alter */
2273                  HOOK hook);    /* termination hook */
2274
2275HOOK field_term(FORM *form);     /* form to query */
2276
2277   These functions allow you to either set or query four different hooks.
2278   In  each  of  the  set  functions,  the  second argument should be the
2279   address  of a hook function. These functions differ only in the timing
2280   of the hook call.
2281
2282   form_init
2283          This  hook  is called when the form is posted; also, just after
2284          each page change operation.
2285
2286   field_init
2287          This  hook  is called when the form is posted; also, just after
2288          each field change
2289
2290   field_term
2291          This  hook is called just after field validation; that is, just
2292          before the field is altered. It is also called when the form is
2293          unposted.
2294
2295   form_term
2296          This  hook  is  called  when  the  form is unposted; also, just
2297          before each page change operation.
2298
2299   Calls to these hooks may be triggered
2300    1. When user editing requests are processed by the forms driver
2301    2. When the current page is changed by set_current_field() call
2302    3. When the current field is changed by a set_form_page() call
2303
2304   See Field Change Commands for discussion of the latter two cases.
2305
2306   You  can  set  a default hook for all fields by passing one of the set
2307   functions a NULL first argument.
2308
2309   You  can  disable  any of these hooks by (re)setting them to NULL, the
2310   default value.
2311
2312Field Change Commands
2313
2314   Normally,  navigation  through  the  form will be driven by the user's
2315   input  requests.  But  sometimes  it  is useful to be able to move the
2316   focus  for  editing  and viewing under control of your application, or
2317   ask  which  field it currently is in. The following functions help you
2318   accomplish this:
2319int set_current_field(FORM *form,         /* form to alter */
2320                      FIELD *field);      /* field to shift to */
2321
2322FIELD *current_field(FORM *form);         /* form to query */
2323
2324int field_index(FORM *form,               /* form to query */
2325                FIELD *field);            /* field to get index of */
2326
2327   The function field_index() returns the index of the given field in the
2328   given   form's   field  array  (the  array  passed  to  new_form()  or
2329   set_form_fields()).
2330
2331   The  initial  current field of a form is the first active field on the
2332   first page. The function set_form_fields() resets this.
2333
2334   It is also possible to move around by pages.
2335int set_form_page(FORM *form,             /* form to alter */
2336                  int page);              /* page to go to (0-origin) */
2337
2338int form_page(FORM *form);                /* return form's current page */
2339
2340   The   initial  page  of  a  newly-created  form  is  0.  The  function
2341   set_form_fields() resets this.
2342
2343Form Options
2344
2345   Like  fields,  forms may have control option bits. They can be changed
2346   or queried with these functions:
2347int set_form_opts(FORM *form,             /* form to alter */
2348                  int attr);              /* attribute to set */
2349
2350int form_opts_on(FORM *form,              /* form to alter */
2351                 int attr);               /* attributes to turn on */
2352
2353int form_opts_off(FORM *form,             /* form to alter */
2354                  int attr);              /* attributes to turn off */
2355
2356int form_opts(FORM *form);                /* form to query */
2357
2358   By default, all options are on. Here are the available option bits:
2359
2360   O_NL_OVERLOAD
2361          Enable  overloading  of  REQ_NEW_LINE  as  described in Editing
2362          Requests. The value of this option is ignored on dynamic fields
2363          that  have  not  reached  their  size limit; these have no last
2364          line,  so  the  circumstances  for  triggering a REQ_NEXT_FIELD
2365          never arise.
2366
2367   O_BS_OVERLOAD
2368          Enable  overloading  of  REQ_DEL_PREV  as  described in Editing
2369          Requests.
2370
2371   The option values are bit-masks and can be composed with logical-or in
2372   the obvious way.
2373
2374Custom Validation Types
2375
2376   The  form library gives you the capability to define custom validation
2377   types  of  your  own.  Further,  the  optional additional arguments of
2378   set_field_type effectively allow you to parameterize validation types.
2379   Most  of the complications in the validation-type interface have to do
2380   with the handling of the additional arguments within custom validation
2381   functions.
2382
2383  Union Types
2384
2385   The  simplest  way  to create a custom data type is to compose it from
2386   two preexisting ones:
2387FIELD *link_fieldtype(FIELDTYPE *type1,
2388                      FIELDTYPE *type2);
2389
2390   This  function creates a field type that will accept any of the values
2391   legal  for  either  of  its  argument field types (which may be either
2392   predefined  or  programmer-defined).  If a set_field_type() call later
2393   requires  arguments,  the new composite type expects all arguments for
2394   the  first  type,  than  all arguments for the second. Order functions
2395   (see  Order Requests) associated with the component types will work on
2396   the  composite;  what it does is check the validation function for the
2397   first  type,  then  for  the  second,  to  figure what type the buffer
2398   contents should be treated as.
2399
2400  New Field Types
2401
2402   To  create  a field type from scratch, you need to specify one or both
2403   of the following things:
2404     * A  character-validation function, to check each character as it is
2405       entered.
2406     * A field-validation function to be applied on exit from the field.
2407
2408   Here is how you do that:
2409typedef int     (*HOOK)();       /* pointer to function returning int */
2410
2411FIELDTYPE *new_fieldtype(HOOK f_validate, /* field validator */
2412                         HOOK c_validate) /* character validator */
2413
2414int free_fieldtype(FIELDTYPE *ftype);     /* type to free */
2415
2416   At least one of the arguments of new_fieldtype() must be non-NULL. The
2417   forms  driver  will  automatically  call  the  new  type's  validation
2418   functions at appropriate points in processing a field of the new type.
2419
2420   The  function  free_fieldtype()  deallocates  the  argument fieldtype,
2421   freeing all storage associated with it.
2422
2423   Normally,  a field validator is called when the user attempts to leave
2424   the  field.  Its  first argument is a field pointer, from which it can
2425   get  to  field buffer 0 and test it. If the function returns TRUE, the
2426   operation  succeeds; if it returns FALSE, the edit cursor stays in the
2427   field.
2428
2429   A  character  validator  gets  the  character  passed  in  as  a first
2430   argument.  It  too should return TRUE if the character is valid, FALSE
2431   otherwise.
2432
2433  Validation Function Arguments
2434
2435   Your  field-  and  character-  validation  functions  will be passed a
2436   second  argument  as  well.  This  second argument is the address of a
2437   structure  (which  we  will  call  a  pile)  built  from  any  of  the
2438   field-type-specific  arguments  passed to set_field_type(). If no such
2439   arguments  are  defined for the field type, this pile pointer argument
2440   will be NULL.
2441
2442   In order to arrange for such arguments to be passed to your validation
2443   functions,  you  must  associate  a  small  set  of storage-management
2444   functions with the type. The forms driver will use these to synthesize
2445   a  pile from the trailing arguments of each set_field_type() argument,
2446   and a pointer to the pile will be passed to the validation functions.
2447
2448   Here is how you make the association:
2449typedef char    *(*PTRHOOK)();    /* pointer to function returning (char *) */
2450typedef void    (*VOIDHOOK)();    /* pointer to function returning void */
2451
2452int set_fieldtype_arg(FIELDTYPE *type,    /* type to alter */
2453                      PTRHOOK make_str,   /* make structure from args */
2454                      PTRHOOK copy_str,   /* make copy of structure */
2455                      VOIDHOOK free_str); /* free structure storage */
2456
2457   Here is how the storage-management hooks are used:
2458
2459   make_str
2460          This  function  is  called  by  set_field_type().  It  gets one
2461          argument,  a  va_list  of the type-specific arguments passed to
2462          set_field_type().  It is expected to return a pile pointer to a
2463          data structure that encapsulates those arguments.
2464
2465   copy_str
2466          This function is called by form library functions that allocate
2467          new  field  instances.  It  is expected to take a pile pointer,
2468          copy  the  pile to allocated storage, and return the address of
2469          the pile copy.
2470
2471   free_str
2472          This   function  is  called  by  field-  and  type-deallocation
2473          routines  in the library. It takes a pile pointer argument, and
2474          is expected to free the storage of that pile.
2475
2476   The  make_str  and  copy_str  functions  may  return  NULL  to  signal
2477   allocation  failure.  The  library  routines  will that call them will
2478   return  error  indication  when  this  happens.  Thus, your validation
2479   functions  should  never  see  a  NULL file pointer and need not check
2480   specially for it.
2481
2482  Order Functions For Custom Types
2483
2484   Some  custom  field  types are simply ordered in the same well-defined
2485   way  that  TYPE_ENUM  is.  For  such  types,  it is possible to define
2486   successor and predecessor functions to support the REQ_NEXT_CHOICE and
2487   REQ_PREV_CHOICE requests. Here is how:
2488typedef int     (*INTHOOK)();     /* pointer to function returning int */
2489
2490int set_fieldtype_arg(FIELDTYPE *type,    /* type to alter */
2491                      INTHOOK succ,       /* get successor value */
2492                      INTHOOK pred);      /* get predecessor value */
2493
2494   The  successor  and  predecessor  arguments  will  each  be passed two
2495   arguments;  a field pointer, and a pile pointer (as for the validation
2496   functions).  They  are  expected to use the function field_buffer() to
2497   read  the current value, and set_field_buffer() on buffer 0 to set the
2498   next  or  previous  value.  Either  hook  may  return TRUE to indicate
2499   success  (a legal next or previous value was set) or FALSE to indicate
2500   failure.
2501
2502  Avoiding Problems
2503
2504   The  interface  for  defining  custom types is complicated and tricky.
2505   Rather  than attempting to create a custom type entirely from scratch,
2506   you  should start by studying the library source code for whichever of
2507   the pre-defined types seems to be closest to what you want.
2508
2509   Use  that code as a model, and evolve it towards what you really want.
2510   You  will avoid many problems and annoyances that way. The code in the
2511   ncurses  library  has  been  specifically  exempted  from  the package
2512   copyright to support this.
2513
2514   If  your  custom  type  defines  order  functions,  have  do something
2515   intuitive  with  a  blank  field.  A  useful convention is to make the
2516   successor   of  a  blank  field  the  types  minimum  value,  and  its
2517   predecessor the maximum.
2518