1terminfo(5)                      File Formats                      terminfo(5)
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NAME

6       terminfo - terminal capability data base
7

SYNOPSIS

9       /usr/share/terminfo/*/*
10

DESCRIPTION

12       Terminfo  is  a data base describing terminals, used by screen-oriented
13       programs such as nvi(1), rogue(1) and  libraries  such  as  curses(3X).
14       Terminfo describes terminals by giving a set of capabilities which they
15       have, by specifying how to perform screen operations, and by specifying
16       padding  requirements  and  initialization  sequences.   This describes
17       ncurses version 6.1 (patch 20180923).
18
19   Terminfo Entry Syntax
20       Entries in terminfo consist of a sequence of fields:
21
22       ·   Each field ends with a comma “,” (embedded commas  may  be  escaped
23           with a backslash or written as “\054”).
24
25       ·   White space between fields is ignored.
26
27       ·   The first field in a terminfo entry begins in the first column.
28
29       ·   Newlines  and  leading  whitespace (spaces or tabs) may be used for
30           formatting entries for readability.  These are removed from  parsed
31           entries.
32
33           The  infocmp  -f and -W options rely on this to format if-then-else
34           expressions, or to enforce maximum line-width.  The resulting  for‐
35           matted terminal description can be read by tic.
36
37       ·   The  first  field for each terminal gives the names which are known
38           for the terminal, separated by “|” characters.
39
40           The first name given is the most common abbreviation for the termi‐
41           nal  (its  primary name), the last name given should be a long name
42           fully identifying the terminal (see longname(3X)), and  all  others
43           are treated as synonyms (aliases) for the primary terminal name.
44
45           X/Open  Curses  advises  that  all  names but the last should be in
46           lower case and contain no blanks; the last name  may  well  contain
47           upper case and blanks for readability.
48
49           This  implementation  is not so strict; it allows mixed case in the
50           primary name and aliases.  If the last name has no embedded blanks,
51           it  allows  that  to  be both an alias and a verbose name (but will
52           warn about this ambiguity).
53
54       ·   Lines beginning with a “#” in the first column are treated as  com‐
55           ments.
56
57           While comment lines are legal at any point, the output of captoinfo
58           and infotocap (aliases for tic) will move comments  so  they  occur
59           only between entries.
60
61       Terminal  names  (except  for the last, verbose entry) should be chosen
62       using the following conventions.  The particular piece of hardware mak‐
63       ing  up the terminal should have a root name, thus “hp2621”.  This name
64       should not contain hyphens.  Modes that the hardware can be in, or user
65       preferences,  should be indicated by appending a hyphen and a mode suf‐
66       fix.  Thus, a vt100 in 132 column mode would be vt100-w.  The following
67       suffixes should be used where possible:
68
69            Suffix                  Meaning                   Example
70            -nn      Number of lines on the screen            aaa-60
71            -np      Number of pages of memory                c100-4p
72            -am      With automargins (usually the default)   vt100-am
73            -m       Mono mode; suppress color                ansi-m
74            -mc      Magic cookie; spaces when highlighting   wy30-mc
75            -na      No arrow keys (leave them in local)      c100-na
76            -nam     Without automatic margins                vt100-nam
77            -nl      No status line                           att4415-nl
78            -ns      No status line                           hp2626-ns
79            -rv      Reverse video                            c100-rv
80            -s       Enable status line                       vt100-s
81            -vb      Use visible bell instead of beep         wy370-vb
82            -w       Wide mode (> 80 columns, usually 132)    vt100-w
83
84       For more on terminal naming conventions, see the term(7) manual page.
85
86   Terminfo Capabilities Syntax
87       The  terminfo  entry  consists  of several capabilities, i.e., features
88       that the terminal has, or methods for exercising  the  terminal's  fea‐
89       tures.
90
91       After the first field (giving the name(s) of the terminal entry), there
92       should be one or more capability fields.  These are boolean, numeric or
93       string names with corresponding values:
94
95       ·   Boolean  capabilities  are  true  when  present, false when absent.
96           There is no explicit value for boolean capabilities.
97
98       ·   Numeric capabilities  have  a  “#”  following  the  name,  then  an
99           unsigned decimal integer value.
100
101       ·   String  capabilities  have a “=” following the name, then an string
102           of characters making up the capability value.
103
104           String capabilities can be split into multiple lines, just  as  the
105           fields  comprising  a  terminal  entry  can  be split into multiple
106           lines.  While blanks between fields are  ignored,  blanks  embedded
107           within  a string value are retained, except for leading blanks on a
108           line.
109
110       Any capability can be canceled,  i.e.,  suppressed  from  the  terminal
111       entry, by following its name with “@” rather than a capability value.
112
113   Similar Terminals
114       If  there  are  two  very  similar  terminals, one (the variant) can be
115       defined as being just like the other (the  base)  with  certain  excep‐
116       tions.  In the definition of the variant, the string capability use can
117       be given with the name of the base terminal:
118
119       ·   The capabilities given before use override those in the  base  type
120           named by use.
121
122       ·   If  there are multiple use capabilities, they are merged in reverse
123           order.  That is, the rightmost use reference  is  processed  first,
124           then the one to its left, and so forth.
125
126       ·   Capabilities  given  explicitly in the entry override those brought
127           in by use references.
128
129       A capability can be canceled by placing xx@ to the left of the use ref‐
130       erence  that  imports it, where xx is the capability.  For example, the
131       entry
132
133              2621-nl, smkx@, rmkx@, use=2621,
134
135       defines a 2621-nl that does not have the smkx or rmkx capabilities, and
136       hence  does  not  turn  on the function key labels when in visual mode.
137       This is useful for different modes for a  terminal,  or  for  different
138       user preferences.
139
140       An entry included via use can contain canceled capabilities, which have
141       the same effect as if those cancels were inline in the  using  terminal
142       entry.
143
144   Predefined Capabilities
145       The  following  is  a  complete table of the capabilities included in a
146       terminfo description block and available to  terminfo-using  code.   In
147       each line of the table,
148
149       The  variable  is  the  name  by  which the programmer (at the terminfo
150       level) accesses the capability.
151
152       The capname is the short name used in the text of the database, and  is
153       used  by  a  person updating the database.  Whenever possible, capnames
154       are chosen to be the same as or similar to the ANSI X3.64-1979 standard
155       (now  superseded  by  ECMA-48,  which  uses  identical  or very similar
156       names).  Semantics are also intended to match those of  the  specifica‐
157       tion.
158
159       The  termcap code is the old termcap capability name (some capabilities
160       are new, and have names which termcap did not originate).
161
162       Capability names have no hard length limit, but an informal limit of  5
163       characters has been adopted to keep them short and to allow the tabs in
164       the source file Caps to line up nicely.
165
166       Finally, the description field attempts to convey the semantics of  the
167       capability.  You may find some codes in the description field:
168
169       (P)    indicates that padding may be specified
170
171       #[1-9] in  the  description  field  indicates that the string is passed
172              through tparm with parms as given (#i).
173
174       (P*)   indicates that padding may vary in proportion to the  number  of
175              lines affected
176
177       (#i)   indicates the ith parameter.
178
179
180       These are the boolean capabilities:
181
182
183                  Variable            Cap-      TCap       Description
184                  Booleans            name      Code
185          auto_left_margin            bw        bw     cub1 wraps from col‐
186                                                       umn 0 to last column
187          auto_right_margin           am        am     terminal has auto‐
188                                                       matic margins
189          back_color_erase            bce       ut     screen erased with
190                                                       background color
191          can_change                  ccc       cc     terminal can re-
192                                                       define existing col‐
193                                                       ors
194          ceol_standout_glitch        xhp       xs     standout not erased
195                                                       by overwriting (hp)
196          col_addr_glitch             xhpa      YA     only positive motion
197                                                       for hpa/mhpa caps
198
199          cpi_changes_res             cpix      YF     changing character
200                                                       pitch changes reso‐
201                                                       lution
202          cr_cancels_micro_mode       crxm      YB     using cr turns off
203                                                       micro mode
204          dest_tabs_magic_smso        xt        xt     tabs destructive,
205                                                       magic so char
206                                                       (t1061)
207          eat_newline_glitch          xenl      xn     newline ignored
208                                                       after 80 cols (con‐
209                                                       cept)
210          erase_overstrike            eo        eo     can erase over‐
211                                                       strikes with a blank
212          generic_type                gn        gn     generic line type
213          hard_copy                   hc        hc     hardcopy terminal
214          hard_cursor                 chts      HC     cursor is hard to
215                                                       see
216          has_meta_key                km        km     Has a meta key
217                                                       (i.e., sets 8th-bit)
218          has_print_wheel             daisy     YC     printer needs opera‐
219                                                       tor to change char‐
220                                                       acter set
221          has_status_line             hs        hs     has extra status
222                                                       line
223          hue_lightness_saturation    hls       hl     terminal uses only
224                                                       HLS color notation
225                                                       (Tektronix)
226          insert_null_glitch          in        in     insert mode distin‐
227                                                       guishes nulls
228          lpi_changes_res             lpix      YG     changing line pitch
229                                                       changes resolution
230          memory_above                da        da     display may be
231                                                       retained above the
232                                                       screen
233          memory_below                db        db     display may be
234                                                       retained below the
235                                                       screen
236          move_insert_mode            mir       mi     safe to move while
237                                                       in insert mode
238          move_standout_mode          msgr      ms     safe to move while
239                                                       in standout mode
240          needs_xon_xoff              nxon      nx     padding will not
241                                                       work, xon/xoff
242                                                       required
243          no_esc_ctlc                 xsb       xb     beehive (f1=escape,
244                                                       f2=ctrl C)
245          no_pad_char                 npc       NP     pad character does
246                                                       not exist
247          non_dest_scroll_region      ndscr     ND     scrolling region is
248                                                       non-destructive
249          non_rev_rmcup               nrrmc     NR     smcup does not
250                                                       reverse rmcup
251          over_strike                 os        os     terminal can over‐
252                                                       strike
253          prtr_silent                 mc5i      5i     printer will not
254                                                       echo on screen
255          row_addr_glitch             xvpa      YD     only positive motion
256                                                       for vpa/mvpa caps
257          semi_auto_right_margin      sam       YE     printing in last
258                                                       column causes cr
259          status_line_esc_ok          eslok     es     escape can be used
260                                                       on the status line
261          tilde_glitch                hz        hz     cannot print ~'s
262                                                       (Hazeltine)
263
264
265          transparent_underline       ul        ul     underline character
266                                                       overstrikes
267          xon_xoff                    xon       xo     terminal uses
268                                                       xon/xoff handshaking
269
270       These are the numeric capabilities:
271
272
273                  Variable            Cap-      TCap       Description
274                   Numeric            name      Code
275          columns                     cols      co     number of columns in
276                                                       a line
277          init_tabs                   it        it     tabs initially every
278                                                       # spaces
279          label_height                lh        lh     rows in each label
280          label_width                 lw        lw     columns in each
281                                                       label
282          lines                       lines     li     number of lines on
283                                                       screen or page
284          lines_of_memory             lm        lm     lines of memory if >
285                                                       line. 0 means varies
286          magic_cookie_glitch         xmc       sg     number of blank
287                                                       characters left by
288                                                       smso or rmso
289          max_attributes              ma        ma     maximum combined
290                                                       attributes terminal
291                                                       can handle
292          max_colors                  colors    Co     maximum number of
293                                                       colors on screen
294          max_pairs                   pairs     pa     maximum number of
295                                                       color-pairs on the
296                                                       screen
297          maximum_windows             wnum      MW     maximum number of
298                                                       definable windows
299          no_color_video              ncv       NC     video attributes
300                                                       that cannot be used
301                                                       with colors
302          num_labels                  nlab      Nl     number of labels on
303                                                       screen
304          padding_baud_rate           pb        pb     lowest baud rate
305                                                       where padding needed
306          virtual_terminal            vt        vt     virtual terminal
307                                                       number (CB/unix)
308          width_status_line           wsl       ws     number of columns in
309                                                       status line
310
311       The following numeric capabilities  are  present  in  the  SVr4.0  term
312       structure,  but  are  not yet documented in the man page.  They came in
313       with SVr4's printer support.
314
315
316                  Variable            Cap-      TCap       Description
317                   Numeric            name      Code
318          bit_image_entwining         bitwin    Yo     number of passes for
319                                                       each bit-image row
320          bit_image_type              bitype    Yp     type of bit-image
321                                                       device
322          buffer_capacity             bufsz     Ya     numbers of bytes
323                                                       buffered before
324                                                       printing
325          buttons                     btns      BT     number of buttons on
326                                                       mouse
327          dot_horz_spacing            spinh     Yc     spacing of dots hor‐
328                                                       izontally in dots
329                                                       per inch
330
331          dot_vert_spacing            spinv     Yb     spacing of pins ver‐
332                                                       tically in pins per
333                                                       inch
334          max_micro_address           maddr     Yd     maximum value in
335                                                       micro_..._address
336          max_micro_jump              mjump     Ye     maximum value in
337                                                       parm_..._micro
338          micro_col_size              mcs       Yf     character step size
339                                                       when in micro mode
340          micro_line_size             mls       Yg     line step size when
341                                                       in micro mode
342          number_of_pins              npins     Yh     numbers of pins in
343                                                       print-head
344          output_res_char             orc       Yi     horizontal resolu‐
345                                                       tion in units per
346                                                       line
347          output_res_horz_inch        orhi      Yk     horizontal resolu‐
348                                                       tion in units per
349                                                       inch
350          output_res_line             orl       Yj     vertical resolution
351                                                       in units per line
352          output_res_vert_inch        orvi      Yl     vertical resolution
353                                                       in units per inch
354          print_rate                  cps       Ym     print rate in char‐
355                                                       acters per second
356          wide_char_size              widcs     Yn     character step size
357                                                       when in double wide
358                                                       mode
359
360       These are the string capabilities:
361
362
363                  Variable            Cap-      TCap       Description
364                   String             name      Code
365          acs_chars                   acsc      ac     graphics charset
366                                                       pairs, based on
367                                                       vt100
368          back_tab                    cbt       bt     back tab (P)
369          bell                        bel       bl     audible signal
370                                                       (bell) (P)
371          carriage_return             cr        cr     carriage return (P*)
372                                                       (P*)
373          change_char_pitch           cpi       ZA     Change number of
374                                                       characters per inch
375                                                       to #1
376          change_line_pitch           lpi       ZB     Change number of
377                                                       lines per inch to #1
378          change_res_horz             chr       ZC     Change horizontal
379                                                       resolution to #1
380          change_res_vert             cvr       ZD     Change vertical res‐
381                                                       olution to #1
382          change_scroll_region        csr       cs     change region to
383                                                       line #1 to line #2
384                                                       (P)
385          char_padding                rmp       rP     like ip but when in
386                                                       insert mode
387          clear_all_tabs              tbc       ct     clear all tab stops
388                                                       (P)
389          clear_margins               mgc       MC     clear right and left
390                                                       soft margins
391          clear_screen                clear     cl     clear screen and
392                                                       home cursor (P*)
393          clr_bol                     el1       cb     Clear to beginning
394                                                       of line
395
396
397          clr_eol                     el        ce     clear to end of line
398                                                       (P)
399          clr_eos                     ed        cd     clear to end of
400                                                       screen (P*)
401          column_address              hpa       ch     horizontal position
402                                                       #1, absolute (P)
403          command_character           cmdch     CC     terminal settable
404                                                       cmd character in
405                                                       prototype !?
406          create_window               cwin      CW     define a window #1
407                                                       from #2,#3 to #4,#5
408          cursor_address              cup       cm     move to row #1 col‐
409                                                       umns #2
410          cursor_down                 cud1      do     down one line
411          cursor_home                 home      ho     home cursor (if no
412                                                       cup)
413          cursor_invisible            civis     vi     make cursor invisi‐
414                                                       ble
415          cursor_left                 cub1      le     move left one space
416          cursor_mem_address          mrcup     CM     memory relative cur‐
417                                                       sor addressing, move
418                                                       to row #1 columns #2
419          cursor_normal               cnorm     ve     make cursor appear
420                                                       normal (undo
421                                                       civis/cvvis)
422          cursor_right                cuf1      nd     non-destructive
423                                                       space (move right
424                                                       one space)
425          cursor_to_ll                ll        ll     last line, first
426                                                       column (if no cup)
427          cursor_up                   cuu1      up     up one line
428          cursor_visible              cvvis     vs     make cursor very
429                                                       visible
430          define_char                 defc      ZE     Define a character
431                                                       #1, #2 dots wide,
432                                                       descender #3
433          delete_character            dch1      dc     delete character
434                                                       (P*)
435          delete_line                 dl1       dl     delete line (P*)
436          dial_phone                  dial      DI     dial number #1
437          dis_status_line             dsl       ds     disable status line
438          display_clock               dclk      DK     display clock
439          down_half_line              hd        hd     half a line down
440          ena_acs                     enacs     eA     enable alternate
441                                                       char set
442          enter_alt_charset_mode      smacs     as     start alternate
443                                                       character set (P)
444          enter_am_mode               smam      SA     turn on automatic
445                                                       margins
446          enter_blink_mode            blink     mb     turn on blinking
447          enter_bold_mode             bold      md     turn on bold (extra
448                                                       bright) mode
449          enter_ca_mode               smcup     ti     string to start pro‐
450                                                       grams using cup
451          enter_delete_mode           smdc      dm     enter delete mode
452          enter_dim_mode              dim       mh     turn on half-bright
453                                                       mode
454          enter_doublewide_mode       swidm     ZF     Enter double-wide
455                                                       mode
456          enter_draft_quality         sdrfq     ZG     Enter draft-quality
457                                                       mode
458          enter_insert_mode           smir      im     enter insert mode
459          enter_italics_mode          sitm      ZH     Enter italic mode
460          enter_leftward_mode         slm       ZI     Start leftward car‐
461                                                       riage motion
462
463          enter_micro_mode            smicm     ZJ     Start micro-motion
464                                                       mode
465          enter_near_letter_quality   snlq      ZK     Enter NLQ mode
466          enter_normal_quality        snrmq     ZL     Enter normal-quality
467                                                       mode
468          enter_protected_mode        prot      mp     turn on protected
469                                                       mode
470          enter_reverse_mode          rev       mr     turn on reverse
471                                                       video mode
472          enter_secure_mode           invis     mk     turn on blank mode
473                                                       (characters invisi‐
474                                                       ble)
475          enter_shadow_mode           sshm      ZM     Enter shadow-print
476                                                       mode
477          enter_standout_mode         smso      so     begin standout mode
478          enter_subscript_mode        ssubm     ZN     Enter subscript mode
479          enter_superscript_mode      ssupm     ZO     Enter superscript
480                                                       mode
481          enter_underline_mode        smul      us     begin underline mode
482          enter_upward_mode           sum       ZP     Start upward car‐
483                                                       riage motion
484          enter_xon_mode              smxon     SX     turn on xon/xoff
485                                                       handshaking
486          erase_chars                 ech       ec     erase #1 characters
487                                                       (P)
488          exit_alt_charset_mode       rmacs     ae     end alternate char‐
489                                                       acter set (P)
490          exit_am_mode                rmam      RA     turn off automatic
491                                                       margins
492          exit_attribute_mode         sgr0      me     turn off all
493                                                       attributes
494          exit_ca_mode                rmcup     te     strings to end pro‐
495                                                       grams using cup
496          exit_delete_mode            rmdc      ed     end delete mode
497          exit_doublewide_mode        rwidm     ZQ     End double-wide mode
498          exit_insert_mode            rmir      ei     exit insert mode
499          exit_italics_mode           ritm      ZR     End italic mode
500          exit_leftward_mode          rlm       ZS     End left-motion mode
501          exit_micro_mode             rmicm     ZT     End micro-motion
502                                                       mode
503          exit_shadow_mode            rshm      ZU     End shadow-print
504                                                       mode
505          exit_standout_mode          rmso      se     exit standout mode
506          exit_subscript_mode         rsubm     ZV     End subscript mode
507          exit_superscript_mode       rsupm     ZW     End superscript mode
508          exit_underline_mode         rmul      ue     exit underline mode
509          exit_upward_mode            rum       ZX     End reverse charac‐
510                                                       ter motion
511          exit_xon_mode               rmxon     RX     turn off xon/xoff
512                                                       handshaking
513          fixed_pause                 pause     PA     pause for 2-3 sec‐
514                                                       onds
515          flash_hook                  hook      fh     flash switch hook
516          flash_screen                flash     vb     visible bell (may
517                                                       not move cursor)
518          form_feed                   ff        ff     hardcopy terminal
519                                                       page eject (P*)
520          from_status_line            fsl       fs     return from status
521                                                       line
522          goto_window                 wingo     WG     go to window #1
523          hangup                      hup       HU     hang-up phone
524          init_1string                is1       i1     initialization
525                                                       string
526          init_2string                is2       is     initialization
527                                                       string
528
529          init_3string                is3       i3     initialization
530                                                       string
531          init_file                   if        if     name of initializa‐
532                                                       tion file
533          init_prog                   iprog     iP     path name of program
534                                                       for initialization
535          initialize_color            initc     Ic     initialize color #1
536                                                       to (#2,#3,#4)
537          initialize_pair             initp     Ip     Initialize color
538                                                       pair #1 to
539                                                       fg=(#2,#3,#4),
540                                                       bg=(#5,#6,#7)
541          insert_character            ich1      ic     insert character (P)
542          insert_line                 il1       al     insert line (P*)
543          insert_padding              ip        ip     insert padding after
544                                                       inserted character
545          key_a1                      ka1       K1     upper left of keypad
546          key_a3                      ka3       K3     upper right of key‐
547                                                       pad
548          key_b2                      kb2       K2     center of keypad
549          key_backspace               kbs       kb     backspace key
550          key_beg                     kbeg      @1     begin key
551          key_btab                    kcbt      kB     back-tab key
552          key_c1                      kc1       K4     lower left of keypad
553          key_c3                      kc3       K5     lower right of key‐
554                                                       pad
555          key_cancel                  kcan      @2     cancel key
556          key_catab                   ktbc      ka     clear-all-tabs key
557          key_clear                   kclr      kC     clear-screen or
558                                                       erase key
559          key_close                   kclo      @3     close key
560          key_command                 kcmd      @4     command key
561          key_copy                    kcpy      @5     copy key
562          key_create                  kcrt      @6     create key
563          key_ctab                    kctab     kt     clear-tab key
564          key_dc                      kdch1     kD     delete-character key
565          key_dl                      kdl1      kL     delete-line key
566          key_down                    kcud1     kd     down-arrow key
567          key_eic                     krmir     kM     sent by rmir or smir
568                                                       in insert mode
569          key_end                     kend      @7     end key
570          key_enter                   kent      @8     enter/send key
571          key_eol                     kel       kE     clear-to-end-of-line
572                                                       key
573          key_eos                     ked       kS     clear-to-end-of-
574                                                       screen key
575          key_exit                    kext      @9     exit key
576          key_f0                      kf0       k0     F0 function key
577          key_f1                      kf1       k1     F1 function key
578          key_f10                     kf10      k;     F10 function key
579          key_f11                     kf11      F1     F11 function key
580          key_f12                     kf12      F2     F12 function key
581          key_f13                     kf13      F3     F13 function key
582          key_f14                     kf14      F4     F14 function key
583          key_f15                     kf15      F5     F15 function key
584          key_f16                     kf16      F6     F16 function key
585          key_f17                     kf17      F7     F17 function key
586          key_f18                     kf18      F8     F18 function key
587          key_f19                     kf19      F9     F19 function key
588          key_f2                      kf2       k2     F2 function key
589          key_f20                     kf20      FA     F20 function key
590          key_f21                     kf21      FB     F21 function key
591          key_f22                     kf22      FC     F22 function key
592          key_f23                     kf23      FD     F23 function key
593          key_f24                     kf24      FE     F24 function key
594
595          key_f25                     kf25      FF     F25 function key
596          key_f26                     kf26      FG     F26 function key
597          key_f27                     kf27      FH     F27 function key
598          key_f28                     kf28      FI     F28 function key
599          key_f29                     kf29      FJ     F29 function key
600          key_f3                      kf3       k3     F3 function key
601          key_f30                     kf30      FK     F30 function key
602          key_f31                     kf31      FL     F31 function key
603          key_f32                     kf32      FM     F32 function key
604          key_f33                     kf33      FN     F33 function key
605          key_f34                     kf34      FO     F34 function key
606          key_f35                     kf35      FP     F35 function key
607          key_f36                     kf36      FQ     F36 function key
608          key_f37                     kf37      FR     F37 function key
609          key_f38                     kf38      FS     F38 function key
610          key_f39                     kf39      FT     F39 function key
611          key_f4                      kf4       k4     F4 function key
612          key_f40                     kf40      FU     F40 function key
613          key_f41                     kf41      FV     F41 function key
614          key_f42                     kf42      FW     F42 function key
615          key_f43                     kf43      FX     F43 function key
616          key_f44                     kf44      FY     F44 function key
617          key_f45                     kf45      FZ     F45 function key
618          key_f46                     kf46      Fa     F46 function key
619          key_f47                     kf47      Fb     F47 function key
620          key_f48                     kf48      Fc     F48 function key
621          key_f49                     kf49      Fd     F49 function key
622          key_f5                      kf5       k5     F5 function key
623          key_f50                     kf50      Fe     F50 function key
624          key_f51                     kf51      Ff     F51 function key
625          key_f52                     kf52      Fg     F52 function key
626          key_f53                     kf53      Fh     F53 function key
627          key_f54                     kf54      Fi     F54 function key
628          key_f55                     kf55      Fj     F55 function key
629          key_f56                     kf56      Fk     F56 function key
630          key_f57                     kf57      Fl     F57 function key
631          key_f58                     kf58      Fm     F58 function key
632          key_f59                     kf59      Fn     F59 function key
633          key_f6                      kf6       k6     F6 function key
634          key_f60                     kf60      Fo     F60 function key
635          key_f61                     kf61      Fp     F61 function key
636          key_f62                     kf62      Fq     F62 function key
637          key_f63                     kf63      Fr     F63 function key
638          key_f7                      kf7       k7     F7 function key
639          key_f8                      kf8       k8     F8 function key
640          key_f9                      kf9       k9     F9 function key
641          key_find                    kfnd      @0     find key
642          key_help                    khlp      %1     help key
643          key_home                    khome     kh     home key
644          key_ic                      kich1     kI     insert-character key
645          key_il                      kil1      kA     insert-line key
646          key_left                    kcub1     kl     left-arrow key
647          key_ll                      kll       kH     lower-left key (home
648                                                       down)
649          key_mark                    kmrk      %2     mark key
650          key_message                 kmsg      %3     message key
651          key_move                    kmov      %4     move key
652          key_next                    knxt      %5     next key
653          key_npage                   knp       kN     next-page key
654          key_open                    kopn      %6     open key
655          key_options                 kopt      %7     options key
656          key_ppage                   kpp       kP     previous-page key
657          key_previous                kprv      %8     previous key
658          key_print                   kprt      %9     print key
659          key_redo                    krdo      %0     redo key
660
661          key_reference               kref      &1     reference key
662          key_refresh                 krfr      &2     refresh key
663          key_replace                 krpl      &3     replace key
664          key_restart                 krst      &4     restart key
665          key_resume                  kres      &5     resume key
666          key_right                   kcuf1     kr     right-arrow key
667          key_save                    ksav      &6     save key
668          key_sbeg                    kBEG      &9     shifted begin key
669          key_scancel                 kCAN      &0     shifted cancel key
670          key_scommand                kCMD      *1     shifted command key
671          key_scopy                   kCPY      *2     shifted copy key
672          key_screate                 kCRT      *3     shifted create key
673          key_sdc                     kDC       *4     shifted delete-char‐
674                                                       acter key
675          key_sdl                     kDL       *5     shifted delete-line
676                                                       key
677          key_select                  kslt      *6     select key
678          key_send                    kEND      *7     shifted end key
679          key_seol                    kEOL      *8     shifted clear-to-
680                                                       end-of-line key
681          key_sexit                   kEXT      *9     shifted exit key
682          key_sf                      kind      kF     scroll-forward key
683          key_sfind                   kFND      *0     shifted find key
684          key_shelp                   kHLP      #1     shifted help key
685          key_shome                   kHOM      #2     shifted home key
686          key_sic                     kIC       #3     shifted insert-char‐
687                                                       acter key
688          key_sleft                   kLFT      #4     shifted left-arrow
689                                                       key
690          key_smessage                kMSG      %a     shifted message key
691          key_smove                   kMOV      %b     shifted move key
692          key_snext                   kNXT      %c     shifted next key
693          key_soptions                kOPT      %d     shifted options key
694          key_sprevious               kPRV      %e     shifted previous key
695          key_sprint                  kPRT      %f     shifted print key
696          key_sr                      kri       kR     scroll-backward key
697          key_sredo                   kRDO      %g     shifted redo key
698          key_sreplace                kRPL      %h     shifted replace key
699          key_sright                  kRIT      %i     shifted right-arrow
700                                                       key
701          key_srsume                  kRES      %j     shifted resume key
702          key_ssave                   kSAV      !1     shifted save key
703          key_ssuspend                kSPD      !2     shifted suspend key
704          key_stab                    khts      kT     set-tab key
705          key_sundo                   kUND      !3     shifted undo key
706          key_suspend                 kspd      &7     suspend key
707          key_undo                    kund      &8     undo key
708          key_up                      kcuu1     ku     up-arrow key
709          keypad_local                rmkx      ke     leave 'key‐
710                                                       board_transmit' mode
711          keypad_xmit                 smkx      ks     enter 'key‐
712                                                       board_transmit' mode
713          lab_f0                      lf0       l0     label on function
714                                                       key f0 if not f0
715          lab_f1                      lf1       l1     label on function
716                                                       key f1 if not f1
717          lab_f10                     lf10      la     label on function
718                                                       key f10 if not f10
719          lab_f2                      lf2       l2     label on function
720                                                       key f2 if not f2
721          lab_f3                      lf3       l3     label on function
722                                                       key f3 if not f3
723          lab_f4                      lf4       l4     label on function
724                                                       key f4 if not f4
725
726
727          lab_f5                      lf5       l5     label on function
728                                                       key f5 if not f5
729          lab_f6                      lf6       l6     label on function
730                                                       key f6 if not f6
731          lab_f7                      lf7       l7     label on function
732                                                       key f7 if not f7
733          lab_f8                      lf8       l8     label on function
734                                                       key f8 if not f8
735          lab_f9                      lf9       l9     label on function
736                                                       key f9 if not f9
737          label_format                fln       Lf     label format
738          label_off                   rmln      LF     turn off soft labels
739          label_on                    smln      LO     turn on soft labels
740          meta_off                    rmm       mo     turn off meta mode
741          meta_on                     smm       mm     turn on meta mode
742                                                       (8th-bit on)
743          micro_column_address        mhpa      ZY     Like column_address
744                                                       in micro mode
745          micro_down                  mcud1     ZZ     Like cursor_down in
746                                                       micro mode
747          micro_left                  mcub1     Za     Like cursor_left in
748                                                       micro mode
749          micro_right                 mcuf1     Zb     Like cursor_right in
750                                                       micro mode
751          micro_row_address           mvpa      Zc     Like row_address #1
752                                                       in micro mode
753          micro_up                    mcuu1     Zd     Like cursor_up in
754                                                       micro mode
755          newline                     nel       nw     newline (behave like
756                                                       cr followed by lf)
757          order_of_pins               porder    Ze     Match software bits
758                                                       to print-head pins
759          orig_colors                 oc        oc     Set all color pairs
760                                                       to the original ones
761          orig_pair                   op        op     Set default pair to
762                                                       its original value
763          pad_char                    pad       pc     padding char
764                                                       (instead of null)
765          parm_dch                    dch       DC     delete #1 characters
766                                                       (P*)
767          parm_delete_line            dl        DL     delete #1 lines (P*)
768          parm_down_cursor            cud       DO     down #1 lines (P*)
769          parm_down_micro             mcud      Zf     Like parm_down_cur‐
770                                                       sor in micro mode
771          parm_ich                    ich       IC     insert #1 characters
772                                                       (P*)
773          parm_index                  indn      SF     scroll forward #1
774                                                       lines (P)
775          parm_insert_line            il        AL     insert #1 lines (P*)
776          parm_left_cursor            cub       LE     move #1 characters
777                                                       to the left (P)
778          parm_left_micro             mcub      Zg     Like parm_left_cur‐
779                                                       sor in micro mode
780          parm_right_cursor           cuf       RI     move #1 characters
781                                                       to the right (P*)
782          parm_right_micro            mcuf      Zh     Like parm_right_cur‐
783                                                       sor in micro mode
784          parm_rindex                 rin       SR     scroll back #1 lines
785                                                       (P)
786          parm_up_cursor              cuu       UP     up #1 lines (P*)
787          parm_up_micro               mcuu      Zi     Like parm_up_cursor
788                                                       in micro mode
789          pkey_key                    pfkey     pk     program function key
790                                                       #1 to type string #2
791
792
793          pkey_local                  pfloc     pl     program function key
794                                                       #1 to execute string
795                                                       #2
796          pkey_xmit                   pfx       px     program function key
797                                                       #1 to transmit
798                                                       string #2
799          plab_norm                   pln       pn     program label #1 to
800                                                       show string #2
801          print_screen                mc0       ps     print contents of
802                                                       screen
803          prtr_non                    mc5p      pO     turn on printer for
804                                                       #1 bytes
805          prtr_off                    mc4       pf     turn off printer
806          prtr_on                     mc5       po     turn on printer
807          pulse                       pulse     PU     select pulse dialing
808          quick_dial                  qdial     QD     dial number #1 with‐
809                                                       out checking
810          remove_clock                rmclk     RC     remove clock
811          repeat_char                 rep       rp     repeat char #1 #2
812                                                       times (P*)
813          req_for_input               rfi       RF     send next input char
814                                                       (for ptys)
815          reset_1string               rs1       r1     reset string
816          reset_2string               rs2       r2     reset string
817          reset_3string               rs3       r3     reset string
818          reset_file                  rf        rf     name of reset file
819          restore_cursor              rc        rc     restore cursor to
820                                                       position of last
821                                                       save_cursor
822          row_address                 vpa       cv     vertical position #1
823                                                       absolute (P)
824          save_cursor                 sc        sc     save current cursor
825                                                       position (P)
826          scroll_forward              ind       sf     scroll text up (P)
827          scroll_reverse              ri        sr     scroll text down (P)
828          select_char_set             scs       Zj     Select character
829                                                       set, #1
830          set_attributes              sgr       sa     define video
831                                                       attributes #1-#9
832                                                       (PG9)
833          set_background              setb      Sb     Set background color
834                                                       #1
835          set_bottom_margin           smgb      Zk     Set bottom margin at
836                                                       current line
837          set_bottom_margin_parm      smgbp     Zl     Set bottom margin at
838                                                       line #1 or (if smgtp
839                                                       is not given) #2
840                                                       lines from bottom
841          set_clock                   sclk      SC     set clock, #1 hrs #2
842                                                       mins #3 secs
843          set_color_pair              scp       sp     Set current color
844                                                       pair to #1
845          set_foreground              setf      Sf     Set foreground color
846                                                       #1
847          set_left_margin             smgl      ML     set left soft margin
848                                                       at current col‐
849                                                       umn.     See smgl.
850                                                       (ML is not in BSD
851                                                       termcap).
852          set_left_margin_parm        smglp     Zm     Set left (right)
853                                                       margin at column #1
854          set_right_margin            smgr      MR     set right soft mar‐
855                                                       gin at current col‐
856                                                       umn
857
858
859          set_right_margin_parm       smgrp     Zn     Set right margin at
860                                                       column #1
861          set_tab                     hts       st     set a tab in every
862                                                       row, current columns
863          set_top_margin              smgt      Zo     Set top margin at
864                                                       current line
865          set_top_margin_parm         smgtp     Zp     Set top (bottom)
866                                                       margin at row #1
867          set_window                  wind      wi     current window is
868                                                       lines #1-#2 cols
869                                                       #3-#4
870          start_bit_image             sbim      Zq     Start printing bit
871                                                       image graphics
872          start_char_set_def          scsd      Zr     Start character set
873                                                       definition #1, with
874                                                       #2 characters in the
875                                                       set
876          stop_bit_image              rbim      Zs     Stop printing bit
877                                                       image graphics
878          stop_char_set_def           rcsd      Zt     End definition of
879                                                       character set #1
880          subscript_characters        subcs     Zu     List of subscript‐
881                                                       able characters
882          superscript_characters      supcs     Zv     List of superscript‐
883                                                       able characters
884          tab                         ht        ta     tab to next 8-space
885                                                       hardware tab stop
886          these_cause_cr              docr      Zw     Printing any of
887                                                       these characters
888                                                       causes CR
889          to_status_line              tsl       ts     move to status line,
890                                                       column #1
891          tone                        tone      TO     select touch tone
892                                                       dialing
893          underline_char              uc        uc     underline char and
894                                                       move past it
895          up_half_line                hu        hu     half a line up
896          user0                       u0        u0     User string #0
897          user1                       u1        u1     User string #1
898          user2                       u2        u2     User string #2
899          user3                       u3        u3     User string #3
900          user4                       u4        u4     User string #4
901          user5                       u5        u5     User string #5
902          user6                       u6        u6     User string #6
903          user7                       u7        u7     User string #7
904          user8                       u8        u8     User string #8
905          user9                       u9        u9     User string #9
906          wait_tone                   wait      WA     wait for dial-tone
907          xoff_character              xoffc     XF     XOFF character
908          xon_character               xonc      XN     XON character
909          zero_motion                 zerom     Zx     No motion for subse‐
910                                                       quent character
911
912       The following string capabilities are present in the SVr4.0 term struc‐
913       ture, but were originally not documented in the man page.
914
915
916                  Variable            Cap-       TCap      Description
917                   String             name       Code
918          alt_scancode_esc            scesa      S8     Alternate escape
919                                                        for scancode emu‐
920                                                        lation
921          bit_image_carriage_return   bicr       Yv     Move to beginning
922                                                        of same row
923
924
925          bit_image_newline           binel      Zz     Move to next row
926                                                        of the bit image
927          bit_image_repeat            birep      Xy     Repeat bit image
928                                                        cell #1 #2 times
929          char_set_names              csnm       Zy     Produce #1'th item
930                                                        from list of char‐
931                                                        acter set names
932          code_set_init               csin       ci     Init sequence for
933                                                        multiple codesets
934          color_names                 colornm    Yw     Give name for
935                                                        color #1
936          define_bit_image_region     defbi      Yx     Define rectangular
937                                                        bit image region
938          device_type                 devt       dv     Indicate lan‐
939                                                        guage/codeset sup‐
940                                                        port
941          display_pc_char             dispc      S1     Display PC charac‐
942                                                        ter #1
943          end_bit_image_region        endbi      Yy     End a bit-image
944                                                        region
945          enter_pc_charset_mode       smpch      S2     Enter PC character
946                                                        display mode
947          enter_scancode_mode         smsc       S4     Enter PC scancode
948                                                        mode
949          exit_pc_charset_mode        rmpch      S3     Exit PC character
950                                                        display mode
951          exit_scancode_mode          rmsc       S5     Exit PC scancode
952                                                        mode
953          get_mouse                   getm       Gm     Curses should get
954                                                        button events,
955                                                        parameter #1 not
956                                                        documented.
957          key_mouse                   kmous      Km     Mouse event has
958                                                        occurred
959          mouse_info                  minfo      Mi     Mouse status
960                                                        information
961          pc_term_options             pctrm      S6     PC terminal
962                                                        options
963          pkey_plab                   pfxl       xl     Program function
964                                                        key #1 to type
965                                                        string #2 and show
966                                                        string #3
967          req_mouse_pos               reqmp      RQ     Request mouse
968                                                        position
969          scancode_escape             scesc      S7     Escape for scan‐
970                                                        code emulation
971          set0_des_seq                s0ds       s0     Shift to codeset 0
972                                                        (EUC set 0, ASCII)
973          set1_des_seq                s1ds       s1     Shift to codeset 1
974          set2_des_seq                s2ds       s2     Shift to codeset 2
975          set3_des_seq                s3ds       s3     Shift to codeset 3
976          set_a_background            setab      AB     Set background
977                                                        color to #1, using
978                                                        ANSI escape
979          set_a_foreground            setaf      AF     Set foreground
980                                                        color to #1, using
981                                                        ANSI escape
982          set_color_band              setcolor   Yz     Change to ribbon
983                                                        color #1
984          set_lr_margin               smglr      ML     Set both left and
985                                                        right margins to
986                                                        #1, #2.  (ML is
987                                                        not in BSD term‐
988                                                        cap).
989
990
991          set_page_length             slines     YZ     Set page length to
992                                                        #1 lines
993          set_tb_margin               smgtb      MT     Sets both top and
994                                                        bottom margins to
995                                                        #1, #2
996
997        The XSI Curses standard added these hardcopy capabilities.  They  were
998        used  in  some post-4.1 versions of System V curses, e.g., Solaris 2.5
999        and IRIX 6.x.  Except for YI, the ncurses termcap names for  them  are
1000        invented.   According to the XSI Curses standard, they have no termcap
1001        names.  If your compiled terminfo entries use these, they may  not  be
1002        binary-compatible with System V terminfo entries after SVr4.1; beware!
1003
1004
1005                  Variable            Cap-      TCap       Description
1006                   String             name      Code
1007          enter_horizontal_hl_mode    ehhlm     Xh     Enter horizontal
1008                                                       highlight mode
1009          enter_left_hl_mode          elhlm     Xl     Enter left highlight
1010                                                       mode
1011          enter_low_hl_mode           elohlm    Xo     Enter low highlight
1012                                                       mode
1013          enter_right_hl_mode         erhlm     Xr     Enter right high‐
1014                                                       light mode
1015          enter_top_hl_mode           ethlm     Xt     Enter top highlight
1016                                                       mode
1017          enter_vertical_hl_mode      evhlm     Xv     Enter vertical high‐
1018                                                       light mode
1019          set_a_attributes            sgr1      sA     Define second set of
1020                                                       video attributes
1021                                                       #1-#6
1022          set_pglen_inch              slength   YI     Set page length to
1023                                                       #1 hundredth of an
1024                                                       inch (some implemen‐
1025                                                       tations use sL for
1026                                                       termcap).
1027
1028   User-Defined Capabilities
1029       The  preceding  section  listed the predefined capabilities.  They deal
1030       with some special features for terminals no longer (or possibly  never)
1031       produced.   Occasionally  there are special features of newer terminals
1032       which are awkward or impossible to represent by reusing the  predefined
1033       capabilities.
1034
1035       ncurses  addresses  this  limitation by allowing user-defined capabili‐
1036       ties.  The tic and infocmp programs provide the -x option for this pur‐
1037       pose.  When -x is set, tic treats unknown capabilities as user-defined.
1038       That is, if tic encounters a capability name which it does  not  recog‐
1039       nize,  it  infers  its type (boolean, number or string) from the syntax
1040       and  makes  an  extended  table  entry  for   that   capability.    The
1041       use_extended_names(3X)  function  makes  this information conditionally
1042       available to applications.  The ncurses library provides the data leav‐
1043       ing most of the behavior to applications:
1044
1045       ·   User-defined  capability  strings  whose  name  begins with “k” are
1046           treated as function keys.
1047
1048       ·   The types (boolean,  number,  string)  determined  by  tic  can  be
1049           inferred by successful calls on tigetflag, etc.
1050
1051       ·   If the capability name happens to be two characters, the capability
1052           is also available through the termcap interface.
1053
1054       While termcap is said to be extensible because it does not use a prede‐
1055       fined set of capabilities, in practice it has been limited to the capa‐
1056       bilities defined by terminfo implementations.  As a rule,  user-defined
1057       capabilities intended for use by termcap applications should be limited
1058       to booleans and numbers to avoid  running  past  the  1023  byte  limit
1059       assumed by termcap implementations and their applications.  In particu‐
1060       lar, providing extended sets of function keys  (past  the  60  numbered
1061       keys  and  the  handful  of  special named keys) is best done using the
1062       longer names available using terminfo.
1063
1064   A Sample Entry
1065       The following entry, describing an ANSI-standard terminal, is represen‐
1066       tative  of  what a terminfo entry for a modern terminal typically looks
1067       like.
1068
1069       ansi|ansi/pc-term compatible with color,
1070               am, mc5i, mir, msgr,
1071               colors#8, cols#80, it#8, lines#24, ncv#3, pairs#64,
1072               acsc=+\020\,\021-\030.^Y0\333`\004a\261f\370g\361h\260
1073                    j\331k\277l\332m\300n\305o~p\304q\304r\304s_t\303
1074                    u\264v\301w\302x\263y\363z\362{\343|\330}\234~\376,
1075               bel=^G, blink=\E[5m, bold=\E[1m, cbt=\E[Z, clear=\E[H\E[J,
1076               cr=^M, cub=\E[%p1%dD, cub1=\E[D, cud=\E[%p1%dB, cud1=\E[B,
1077               cuf=\E[%p1%dC, cuf1=\E[C, cup=\E[%i%p1%d;%p2%dH,
1078               cuu=\E[%p1%dA, cuu1=\E[A, dch=\E[%p1%dP, dch1=\E[P,
1079               dl=\E[%p1%dM, dl1=\E[M, ech=\E[%p1%dX, ed=\E[J, el=\E[K,
1080               el1=\E[1K, home=\E[H, hpa=\E[%i%p1%dG, ht=\E[I, hts=\EH,
1081               ich=\E[%p1%d@, il=\E[%p1%dL, il1=\E[L, ind=^J,
1082               indn=\E[%p1%dS, invis=\E[8m, kbs=^H, kcbt=\E[Z, kcub1=\E[D,
1083               kcud1=\E[B, kcuf1=\E[C, kcuu1=\E[A, khome=\E[H, kich1=\E[L,
1084               mc4=\E[4i, mc5=\E[5i, nel=\r\E[S, op=\E[39;49m,
1085               rep=%p1%c\E[%p2%{1}%-%db, rev=\E[7m, rin=\E[%p1%dT,
1086               rmacs=\E[10m, rmpch=\E[10m, rmso=\E[m, rmul=\E[m,
1087               s0ds=\E(B, s1ds=\E)B, s2ds=\E*B, s3ds=\E+B,
1088               setab=\E[4%p1%dm, setaf=\E[3%p1%dm,
1089               sgr=\E[0;10%?%p1%t;7%;
1090                          %?%p2%t;4%;
1091                          %?%p3%t;7%;
1092                          %?%p4%t;5%;
1093                          %?%p6%t;1%;
1094                          %?%p7%t;8%;
1095                          %?%p9%t;11%;m,
1096               sgr0=\E[0;10m, smacs=\E[11m, smpch=\E[11m, smso=\E[7m,
1097               smul=\E[4m, tbc=\E[3g, u6=\E[%i%d;%dR, u7=\E[6n,
1098               u8=\E[?%[;0123456789]c, u9=\E[c, vpa=\E[%i%p1%dd,
1099
1100       Entries may continue onto multiple lines by placing white space at  the
1101       beginning  of  each line except the first.  Comments may be included on
1102       lines beginning with “#”.  Capabilities in terminfo are of three types:
1103
1104       ·   Boolean capabilities which indicate that the terminal has some par‐
1105           ticular feature,
1106
1107       ·   numeric capabilities giving the size of the terminal or the size of
1108           particular delays, and
1109
1110       ·   string capabilities, which give a sequence which  can  be  used  to
1111           perform particular terminal operations.
1112
1113   Types of Capabilities
1114       All capabilities have names.  For instance, the fact that ANSI-standard
1115       terminals have automatic margins (i.e., an automatic return  and  line-
1116       feed  when the end of a line is reached) is indicated by the capability
1117       am.  Hence the description of ansi includes am.   Numeric  capabilities
1118       are  followed  by  the  character  “#” and then a positive value.  Thus
1119       cols, which indicates the number of columns the terminal has, gives the
1120       value  “80” for ansi.  Values for numeric capabilities may be specified
1121       in decimal, octal or hexadecimal, using the C programming language con‐
1122       ventions (e.g., 255, 0377 and 0xff or 0xFF).
1123
1124       Finally,  string  valued capabilities, such as el (clear to end of line
1125       sequence) are given by the two-character  code,  an  “=”,  and  then  a
1126       string ending at the next following “,”.
1127
1128       A number of escape sequences are provided in the string valued capabil‐
1129       ities for easy encoding of characters there:
1130
1131       ·   Both \E and \e map to an ESCAPE character,
1132
1133       ·   ^x maps to a control-x for any appropriate x, and
1134
1135       ·   the sequences
1136
1137             \n, \l, \r, \t, \b, \f, and \s
1138
1139           produce
1140
1141             newline, line-feed, return, tab, backspace, form-feed, and space,
1142
1143           respectively.
1144
1145       X/Open Curses does not say what “appropriate x” might be.  In practice,
1146       that  is a printable ASCII graphic character.  The special case “^?” is
1147       interpreted as DEL (127).  In all other cases, the character  value  is
1148       AND'd  with 0x1f, mapping to ASCII control codes in the range 0 through
1149       31.
1150
1151       Other escapes include
1152
1153       ·   \^ for ^,
1154
1155       ·   \\ for \,
1156
1157       ·   \, for comma,
1158
1159       ·   \: for :,
1160
1161       ·   and \0 for null.
1162
1163           \0 will produce \200, which does not terminate a string but behaves
1164           as  a null character on most terminals, providing CS7 is specified.
1165           See stty(1).
1166
1167           The reason for this quirk is to maintain  binary  compatibility  of
1168           the  compiled  terminfo files with other implementations, e.g., the
1169           SVr4 systems, which document this.   Compiled  terminfo  files  use
1170           null-terminated  strings,  with  no  lengths.  Modifying this would
1171           require a new binary format, which would not work with other imple‐
1172           mentations.
1173
1174       Finally, characters may be given as three octal digits after a \.
1175
1176       A  delay  in  milliseconds  may appear anywhere in a string capability,
1177       enclosed in $<..> brackets, as in el=\EK$<5>,  and  padding  characters
1178       are supplied by tputs(3X) to provide this delay.
1179
1180       ·   The delay must be a number with at most one decimal place of preci‐
1181           sion; it may be followed by suffixes “*” or “/” or both.
1182
1183       ·   A “*” indicates that the padding required is  proportional  to  the
1184           number  of lines affected by the operation, and the amount given is
1185           the per-affected-unit padding required.  (In  the  case  of  insert
1186           character, the factor is still the number of lines affected.)
1187
1188           Normally, padding is advisory if the device has the xon capability;
1189           it is used for cost computation but does not trigger delays.
1190
1191       ·   A “/” suffix indicates that the padding is mandatory and  forces  a
1192           delay of the given number of milliseconds even on devices for which
1193           xon is present to indicate flow control.
1194
1195       Sometimes individual capabilities must be commented out.  To  do  this,
1196       put  a  period before the capability name.  For example, see the second
1197       ind in the example above.
1198
1199   Fetching Compiled Descriptions
1200       The ncurses library  searches  for  terminal  descriptions  in  several
1201       places.   It  uses only the first description found.  The library has a
1202       compiled-in list of places to search which can be overridden  by  envi‐
1203       ronment  variables.   Before  starting  to  search,  ncurses eliminates
1204       duplicates in its search list.
1205
1206       ·   If the environment variable TERMINFO is set, it is  interpreted  as
1207           the pathname of a directory containing the compiled description you
1208           are working on.  Only that directory is searched.
1209
1210       ·   If TERMINFO is not set, ncurses will instead look in the  directory
1211           $HOME/.terminfo for a compiled description.
1212
1213       ·   Next,  if  the  environment  variable TERMINFO_DIRS is set, ncurses
1214           will interpret the contents of that variable as a  list  of  colon-
1215           separated directories (or database files) to be searched.
1216
1217           An  empty directory name (i.e., if the variable begins or ends with
1218           a colon, or contains adjacent colons) is interpreted as the  system
1219           location /usr/share/terminfo.
1220
1221       ·   Finally, ncurses searches these compiled-in locations:
1222
1223           ·   a list of directories (no default value), and
1224
1225           ·   the  system  terminfo  directory, /usr/share/terminfo (the com‐
1226               piled-in default).
1227
1228   Preparing Descriptions
1229       We now outline how to prepare  descriptions  of  terminals.   The  most
1230       effective  way  to  prepare  a terminal description is by imitating the
1231       description of a similar  terminal  in  terminfo  and  to  build  up  a
1232       description gradually, using partial descriptions with vi or some other
1233       screen-oriented program to check that they are correct.  Be aware  that
1234       a  very  unusual terminal may expose deficiencies in the ability of the
1235       terminfo file to describe it or bugs in the screen-handling code of the
1236       test program.
1237
1238       To  get the padding for insert line right (if the terminal manufacturer
1239       did not document it) a severe test is to edit  a  large  file  at  9600
1240       baud, delete 16 or so lines from the middle of the screen, then hit the
1241       “u” key several times quickly.  If the terminal messes up, more padding
1242       is usually needed.  A similar test can be used for insert character.
1243
1244   Basic Capabilities
1245       The  number  of  columns  on each line for the terminal is given by the
1246       cols numeric capability.  If the terminal is a CRT, then the number  of
1247       lines  on the screen is given by the lines capability.  If the terminal
1248       wraps around to the beginning of the next  line  when  it  reaches  the
1249       right  margin,  then it should have the am capability.  If the terminal
1250       can clear its screen, leaving the cursor in  the  home  position,  then
1251       this  is  given  by the clear string capability.  If the terminal over‐
1252       strikes (rather than clearing a position when  a  character  is  struck
1253       over)  then  it  should  have  the os capability.  If the terminal is a
1254       printing terminal, with no soft copy unit, give it both hc and os.  (os
1255       applies  to  storage scope terminals, such as TEKTRONIX 4010 series, as
1256       well as hard copy and APL terminals.)  If there is a code to  move  the
1257       cursor to the left edge of the current row, give this as cr.  (Normally
1258       this will be carriage return, control M.)  If there is a code  to  pro‐
1259       duce an audible signal (bell, beep, etc) give this as bel.
1260
1261       If there is a code to move the cursor one position to the left (such as
1262       backspace) that capability should be given as cub1.   Similarly,  codes
1263       to  move  to the right, up, and down should be given as cuf1, cuu1, and
1264       cud1.  These local cursor motions should not alter the text  they  pass
1265       over,  for  example,  you  would  not normally use “cuf1= ” because the
1266       space would erase the character moved over.
1267
1268       A very important point here is that the local cursor motions encoded in
1269       terminfo  are  undefined  at  the left and top edges of a CRT terminal.
1270       Programs should never attempt to backspace around the left edge, unless
1271       bw  is given, and never attempt to go up locally off the top.  In order
1272       to scroll text up, a program will go to the bottom left corner  of  the
1273       screen and send the ind (index) string.
1274
1275       To  scroll  text  down,  a  program  goes to the top left corner of the
1276       screen and sends the ri (reverse index) string.  The strings ind and ri
1277       are undefined when not on their respective corners of the screen.
1278
1279       Parameterized  versions  of  the  scrolling  sequences are indn and rin
1280       which have the same semantics as ind and ri except that they  take  one
1281       parameter,  and scroll that many lines.  They are also undefined except
1282       at the appropriate edge of the screen.
1283
1284       The am capability tells whether the cursor sticks at the right edge  of
1285       the  screen when text is output, but this does not necessarily apply to
1286       a cuf1 from the last column.  The only local motion  which  is  defined
1287       from  the  left  edge is if bw is given, then a cub1 from the left edge
1288       will move to the right edge of the previous row.  If bw is  not  given,
1289       the  effect  is undefined.  This is useful for drawing a box around the
1290       edge of the screen, for example.  If the terminal has switch selectable
1291       automatic  margins,  the terminfo file usually assumes that this is on;
1292       i.e., am.  If the terminal has a command which moves to the first  col‐
1293       umn  of  the next line, that command can be given as nel (newline).  It
1294       does not matter if the command clears  the  remainder  of  the  current
1295       line,  so  if the terminal has no cr and lf it may still be possible to
1296       craft a working nel out of one or both of them.
1297
1298       These capabilities suffice to describe hard-copy and “glass-tty” termi‐
1299       nals.  Thus the model 33 teletype is described as
1300
1301       33|tty33|tty|model 33 teletype,
1302               bel=^G, cols#72, cr=^M, cud1=^J, hc, ind=^J, os,
1303
1304       while the Lear Siegler ADM-3 is described as
1305
1306       adm3|3|lsi adm3,
1307               am, bel=^G, clear=^Z, cols#80, cr=^M, cub1=^H, cud1=^J,
1308               ind=^J, lines#24,
1309
1310   Parameterized Strings
1311       Cursor  addressing and other strings requiring parameters in the termi‐
1312       nal are described by a parameterized string  capability,  with  printf-
1313       like escapes such as %x in it.  For example, to address the cursor, the
1314       cup capability is given, using two parameters: the row  and  column  to
1315       address  to.  (Rows and columns are numbered from zero and refer to the
1316       physical screen visible to the user, not to any unseen memory.)  If the
1317       terminal  has  memory relative cursor addressing, that can be indicated
1318       by mrcup.
1319
1320       The parameter mechanism uses a stack and special % codes to  manipulate
1321       it.   Typically  a  sequence  will  push one of the parameters onto the
1322       stack and then print it in some format.  Print (e.g., "%d") is  a  spe‐
1323       cial case.  Other operations, including "%t" pop their operand from the
1324       stack.  It is noted that more complex operations are  often  necessary,
1325       e.g., in the sgr string.
1326
1327       The % encodings have the following meanings:
1328
1329       %%   outputs “%”
1330
1331       %[[:]flags][width[.precision]][doxXs]
1332            as  in  printf, flags are [-+#] and space.  Use a “:” to allow the
1333            next character to be a “-” flag, avoiding interpreting "%-" as  an
1334            operator.
1335
1336       %c   print pop() like %c in printf
1337
1338       %s   print pop() like %s in printf
1339
1340       %p[1-9]
1341            push i'th parameter
1342
1343       %P[a-z]
1344            set dynamic variable [a-z] to pop()
1345
1346       %g[a-z]/
1347            get dynamic variable [a-z] and push it
1348
1349       %P[A-Z]
1350            set static variable [a-z] to pop()
1351
1352       %g[A-Z]
1353            get static variable [a-z] and push it
1354
1355            The  terms  "static"  and "dynamic" are misleading.  Historically,
1356            these are simply two different sets of variables, whose values are
1357            not  reset  between calls to tparm(3X).  However, that fact is not
1358            documented in other implementations.  Relying on it will adversely
1359            impact portability to other implementations.
1360
1361       %'c' char constant c
1362
1363       %{nn}
1364            integer constant nn
1365
1366       %l   push strlen(pop)
1367
1368       %+, %-, %*, %/, %m
1369            arithmetic (%m is mod): push(pop() op pop())
1370
1371       %&, %|, %^
1372            bit operations (AND, OR and exclusive-OR): push(pop() op pop())
1373
1374       %=, %>, %<
1375            logical operations: push(pop() op pop())
1376
1377       %A, %O
1378            logical AND and OR operations (for conditionals)
1379
1380       %!, %~
1381            unary operations (logical and bit complement): push(op pop())
1382
1383       %i   add 1 to first two parameters (for ANSI terminals)
1384
1385       %? expr %t thenpart %e elsepart %;
1386            This forms an if-then-else.  The %e elsepart is optional.  Usually
1387            the %? expr part pushes a value onto the stack,  and  %t  pops  it
1388            from  the  stack,  testing if it is nonzero (true).  If it is zero
1389            (false), control passes to the %e (else) part.
1390
1391            It is possible to form else-if's a la Algol 68:
1392            %? c1 %t b1 %e c2 %t b2 %e c3 %t b3 %e c4 %t b4 %e %;
1393
1394            where ci are conditions, bi are bodies.
1395
1396            Use the -f option of tic or infocmp to see the  structure  of  if-
1397            then-else's.  Some strings, e.g., sgr can be very complicated when
1398            written on one line.  The -f option splits the string  into  lines
1399            with the parts indented.
1400
1401       Binary  operations  are  in postfix form with the operands in the usual
1402       order.  That is, to get x-5 one would use "%gx%{5}%-".  %P and %g vari‐
1403       ables are persistent across escape-string evaluations.
1404
1405       Consider  the HP2645, which, to get to row 3 and column 12, needs to be
1406       sent \E&a12c03Y padded for 6 milliseconds.  Note that the order of  the
1407       rows  and  columns  is  inverted  here, and that the row and column are
1408       printed   as   two   digits.     Thus    its    cup    capability    is
1409       “cup=6\E&%p2%2dc%p1%2dY”.
1410
1411       The  Microterm ACT-IV needs the current row and column sent preceded by
1412       a  ^T,  with  the  row   and   column   simply   encoded   in   binary,
1413       “cup=^T%p1%c%p2%c”.   Terminals  which  use  “%c”  need  to  be able to
1414       backspace the cursor (cub1), and to move the cursor up one line on  the
1415       screen  (cuu1).   This  is  necessary  because it is not always safe to
1416       transmit \n ^D and \r, as the system may change or discard them.   (The
1417       library  routines  dealing with terminfo set tty modes so that tabs are
1418       never expanded, so \t is safe to send.  This turns out to be  essential
1419       for the Ann Arbor 4080.)
1420
1421       A  final example is the LSI ADM-3a, which uses row and column offset by
1422       a blank character, thus “cup=\E=%p1%' '%+%c%p2%' '%+%c”.  After sending
1423       “\E=”,  this  pushes  the first parameter, pushes the ASCII value for a
1424       space (32), adds them (pushing the sum on the stack in place of the two
1425       previous  values) and outputs that value as a character.  Then the same
1426       is done for the second parameter.  More complex arithmetic is  possible
1427       using the stack.
1428
1429   Cursor Motions
1430       If  the  terminal has a fast way to home the cursor (to very upper left
1431       corner of screen) then this can be given as home; similarly a fast  way
1432       of  getting  to the lower left-hand corner can be given as ll; this may
1433       involve going up with cuu1 from the home position, but a program should
1434       never do this itself (unless ll does) because it can make no assumption
1435       about the effect of moving up from the home position.   Note  that  the
1436       home  position is the same as addressing to (0,0): to the top left cor‐
1437       ner of the screen, not of memory.  (Thus, the \EH sequence on HP termi‐
1438       nals cannot be used for home.)
1439
1440       If the terminal has row or column absolute cursor addressing, these can
1441       be given as single  parameter  capabilities  hpa  (horizontal  position
1442       absolute)  and  vpa  (vertical position absolute).  Sometimes these are
1443       shorter than the more general  two  parameter  sequence  (as  with  the
1444       hp2645)  and can be used in preference to cup.  If there are parameter‐
1445       ized local motions (e.g., move n spaces to  the  right)  these  can  be
1446       given  as cud, cub, cuf, and cuu with a single parameter indicating how
1447       many spaces to move.  These are primarily useful if the  terminal  does
1448       not have cup, such as the TEKTRONIX 4025.
1449
1450       If  the  terminal  needs to be in a special mode when running a program
1451       that uses these capabilities, the codes to enter and exit this mode can
1452       be  given as smcup and rmcup.  This arises, for example, from terminals
1453       like the Concept with more than one page of memory.   If  the  terminal
1454       has only memory relative cursor addressing and not screen relative cur‐
1455       sor addressing, a one screen-sized window must be fixed into the termi‐
1456       nal  for cursor addressing to work properly.  This is also used for the
1457       TEKTRONIX 4025, where smcup sets the command character to  be  the  one
1458       used  by  terminfo.   If the smcup sequence will not restore the screen
1459       after an rmcup sequence is output (to the  state  prior  to  outputting
1460       rmcup), specify nrrmc.
1461
1462   Area Clears
1463       If  the  terminal can clear from the current position to the end of the
1464       line, leaving the cursor where it is, this should be given as  el.   If
1465       the  terminal  can  clear from the beginning of the line to the current
1466       position inclusive, leaving the cursor where  it  is,  this  should  be
1467       given  as  el1.  If the terminal can clear from the current position to
1468       the end of the display, then this should be given as ed.   Ed  is  only
1469       defined from the first column of a line.  (Thus, it can be simulated by
1470       a request to delete a large number of lines, if a true ed is not avail‐
1471       able.)
1472
1473   Insert/delete line and vertical motions
1474       If  the  terminal  can  open a new blank line before the line where the
1475       cursor is, this should be given as il1; this  is  done  only  from  the
1476       first  position  of  a  line.  The cursor must then appear on the newly
1477       blank line.  If the terminal can delete the line which  the  cursor  is
1478       on,  then this should be given as dl1; this is done only from the first
1479       position on the line to be deleted.  Versions of il1 and dl1 which take
1480       a single parameter and insert or delete that many lines can be given as
1481       il and dl.
1482
1483       If the terminal has a settable scrolling region (like  the  vt100)  the
1484       command  to  set  this  can be described with the csr capability, which
1485       takes two parameters: the top and bottom lines of the scrolling region.
1486       The cursor position is, alas, undefined after using this command.
1487
1488       It  is possible to get the effect of insert or delete line using csr on
1489       a properly chosen region; the sc and rc (save and restore cursor)  com‐
1490       mands  may  be  useful for ensuring that your synthesized insert/delete
1491       string does not move the cursor.  (Note that  the  ncurses(3X)  library
1492       does   this   synthesis   automatically,   so   you  need  not  compose
1493       insert/delete strings for an entry with csr).
1494
1495       Yet another way to construct insert and delete might be to use a combi‐
1496       nation  of  index  with the memory-lock feature found on some terminals
1497       (like the HP-700/90 series, which however also has insert/delete).
1498
1499       Inserting lines at the top or bottom of the screen  can  also  be  done
1500       using  ri  or  ind on many terminals without a true insert/delete line,
1501       and is often faster even on terminals with those features.
1502
1503       The boolean non_dest_scroll_region should be set if each scrolling win‐
1504       dow  is  effectively a view port on a screen-sized canvas.  To test for
1505       this capability, create a scrolling region in the middle of the screen,
1506       write  something  to the bottom line, move the cursor to the top of the
1507       region, and do ri followed by dl1 or ind.  If the data scrolled off the
1508       bottom  of  the  region  by  the  ri re-appears, then scrolling is non-
1509       destructive.  System V and XSI Curses expect that ind,  ri,  indn,  and
1510       rin  will  simulate destructive scrolling; their documentation cautions
1511       you not to define csr unless this is true.  This curses  implementation
1512       is more liberal and will do explicit erases after scrolling if ndsrc is
1513       defined.
1514
1515       If the terminal has the ability to define a window as part  of  memory,
1516       which  all  commands  affect,  it  should be given as the parameterized
1517       string wind.  The four parameters are the starting and ending lines  in
1518       memory and the starting and ending columns in memory, in that order.
1519
1520       If the terminal can retain display memory above, then the da capability
1521       should be given; if display memory  can  be  retained  below,  then  db
1522       should  be given.  These indicate that deleting a line or scrolling may
1523       bring non-blank lines up from below or that scrolling back with ri  may
1524       bring down non-blank lines.
1525
1526   Insert/Delete Character
1527       There  are  two  basic  kinds  of intelligent terminals with respect to
1528       insert/delete character which can be  described  using  terminfo.   The
1529       most  common insert/delete character operations affect only the charac‐
1530       ters on the current line and shift characters off the end of  the  line
1531       rigidly.  Other terminals, such as the Concept 100 and the Perkin Elmer
1532       Owl, make a distinction between typed and untyped blanks on the screen,
1533       shifting  upon  an  insert  or  delete  only to an untyped blank on the
1534       screen which is either eliminated, or expanded to two untyped blanks.
1535
1536       You can determine the kind of terminal you have by clearing the  screen
1537       and  then  typing  text separated by cursor motions.  Type “abc    def”
1538       using local cursor motions (not  spaces)  between  the  “abc”  and  the
1539       “def”.   Then position the cursor before the “abc” and put the terminal
1540       in insert mode.  If typing characters causes the rest of  the  line  to
1541       shift  rigidly  and  characters to fall off the end, then your terminal
1542       does not distinguish between blanks  and  untyped  positions.   If  the
1543       “abc”  shifts over to the “def” which then move together around the end
1544       of the current line and onto the next as you insert, you have the  sec‐
1545       ond  type  of terminal, and should give the capability in, which stands
1546       for “insert null”.
1547
1548       While these are two logically  separate  attributes  (one  line  versus
1549       multi-line  insert  mode,  and  special treatment of untyped spaces) we
1550       have seen no terminals whose insert mode cannot be described  with  the
1551       single attribute.
1552
1553       Terminfo  can  describe  both  terminals which have an insert mode, and
1554       terminals which send a simple sequence to open a blank position on  the
1555       current line.  Give as smir the sequence to get into insert mode.  Give
1556       as rmir the sequence to leave  insert  mode.   Now  give  as  ich1  any
1557       sequence  needed  to  be  sent  just before sending the character to be
1558       inserted.  Most terminals with a true insert mode will not  give  ich1;
1559       terminals  which  send a sequence to open a screen position should give
1560       it here.
1561
1562       If your terminal has both, insert mode is usually preferable  to  ich1.
1563       Technically,  you  should  not  give  both unless the terminal actually
1564       requires both to be used in combination.  Accordingly, some  non-curses
1565       applications  get  confused if both are present; the symptom is doubled
1566       characters in an update using insert.  This requirement  is  now  rare;
1567       most  ich  sequences do not require previous smir, and most smir insert
1568       modes do not require ich1 before each character.   Therefore,  the  new
1569       curses  actually  assumes this is the case and uses either rmir/smir or
1570       ich/ich1 as appropriate (but not both).  If you have to write an  entry
1571       to  be  used  under  new curses for a terminal old enough to need both,
1572       include the rmir/smir sequences in ich1.
1573
1574       If post insert padding is needed, give this as a number of milliseconds
1575       in  ip (a string option).  Any other sequence which may need to be sent
1576       after an insert of a single character may also be given in ip.  If your
1577       terminal  needs  both  to be placed into an “insert mode” and a special
1578       code to precede each inserted character, then both smir/rmir  and  ich1
1579       can  be  given,  and  both  will be used.  The ich capability, with one
1580       parameter, n, will repeat the effects of ich1 n times.
1581
1582       If padding is necessary between characters typed while  not  in  insert
1583       mode, give this as a number of milliseconds padding in rmp.
1584
1585       It  is  occasionally  necessary  to move around while in insert mode to
1586       delete characters on the same line (e.g., if there is a tab  after  the
1587       insertion  position).   If  your terminal allows motion while in insert
1588       mode you can give the capability mir to  speed  up  inserting  in  this
1589       case.   Omitting  mir  will affect only speed.  Some terminals (notably
1590       Datamedia's) must not have mir because of the  way  their  insert  mode
1591       works.
1592
1593       Finally,  you  can  specify dch1 to delete a single character, dch with
1594       one parameter, n, to delete n characters, and  delete  mode  by  giving
1595       smdc  and  rmdc  to  enter  and exit delete mode (any mode the terminal
1596       needs to be placed in for dch1 to work).
1597
1598       A command to erase n characters  (equivalent  to  outputting  n  blanks
1599       without moving the cursor) can be given as ech with one parameter.
1600
1601   Highlighting, Underlining, and Visible Bells
1602       If your terminal has one or more kinds of display attributes, these can
1603       be represented in a number of different ways.  You  should  choose  one
1604       display  form  as  standout  mode,  representing a good, high contrast,
1605       easy-on-the-eyes, format for  highlighting  error  messages  and  other
1606       attention  getters.   (If  you  have a choice, reverse video plus half-
1607       bright is good, or reverse video alone.)  The sequences  to  enter  and
1608       exit  standout  mode  are given as smso and rmso, respectively.  If the
1609       code to change into or out of standout mode  leaves  one  or  even  two
1610       blank  spaces  on  the screen, as the TVI 912 and Teleray 1061 do, then
1611       xmc should be given to tell how many spaces are left.
1612
1613       Codes to begin underlining and end underlining can be given as smul and
1614       rmul respectively.  If the terminal has a code to underline the current
1615       character and move the cursor one space  to  the  right,  such  as  the
1616       Microterm Mime, this can be given as uc.
1617
1618       Other  capabilities  to  enter various highlighting modes include blink
1619       (blinking) bold (bold or extra bright) dim (dim or  half-bright)  invis
1620       (blanking  or invisible text) prot (protected) rev (reverse video) sgr0
1621       (turn off all attribute modes) smacs  (enter  alternate  character  set
1622       mode) and rmacs (exit alternate character set mode).  Turning on any of
1623       these modes singly may or may not turn off other modes.
1624
1625       If there is a sequence to set arbitrary  combinations  of  modes,  this
1626       should  be  given  as  sgr (set attributes), taking 9 parameters.  Each
1627       parameter is either 0 or nonzero, as the corresponding attribute is  on
1628       or  off.  The 9 parameters are, in order: standout, underline, reverse,
1629       blink, dim, bold, blank, protect, alternate  character  set.   Not  all
1630       modes need be supported by sgr, only those for which corresponding sep‐
1631       arate attribute commands exist.
1632
1633       For example, the DEC vt220 supports most of the modes:
1634
1635               tparm parameter      attribute        escape sequence
1636
1637               none                 none             \E[0m
1638               p1                   standout         \E[0;1;7m
1639               p2                   underline        \E[0;4m
1640               p3                   reverse          \E[0;7m
1641               p4                   blink            \E[0;5m
1642               p5                   dim              not available
1643               p6                   bold             \E[0;1m
1644               p7                   invis            \E[0;8m
1645               p8                   protect          not used
1646               p9                   altcharset       ^O (off) ^N (on)
1647
1648       We begin each escape sequence by turning off any existing modes,  since
1649       there  is  no quick way to determine whether they are active.  Standout
1650       is set up to be the combination of reverse and bold.  The vt220  termi‐
1651       nal  has  a protect mode, though it is not commonly used in sgr because
1652       it protects characters on the screen from  the  host's  erasures.   The
1653       altcharset  mode  also  is  different  in  that  it is either ^O or ^N,
1654       depending on whether it is off or on.  If all modes are turned on,  the
1655       resulting sequence is \E[0;1;4;5;7;8m^N.
1656
1657       Some  sequences are common to different modes.  For example, ;7 is out‐
1658       put when either p1 or p3 is  true,  that  is,  if  either  standout  or
1659       reverse modes are turned on.
1660
1661       Writing out the above sequences, along with their dependencies yields
1662
1663            sequence             when to output      terminfo translation
1664
1665            \E[0                 always              \E[0
1666            ;1                   if p1 or p6         %?%p1%p6%|%t;1%;
1667            ;4                   if p2               %?%p2%|%t;4%;
1668            ;5                   if p4               %?%p4%|%t;5%;
1669            ;7                   if p1 or p3         %?%p1%p3%|%t;7%;
1670            ;8                   if p7               %?%p7%|%t;8%;
1671            m                    always              m
1672            ^N or ^O             if p9 ^N, else ^O   %?%p9%t^N%e^O%;
1673
1674       Putting this all together into the sgr sequence gives:
1675
1676           sgr=\E[0%?%p1%p6%|%t;1%;%?%p2%t;4%;%?%p4%t;5%;
1677               %?%p1%p3%|%t;7%;%?%p7%t;8%;m%?%p9%t\016%e\017%;,
1678
1679       Remember  that  if  you specify sgr, you must also specify sgr0.  Also,
1680       some implementations rely on sgr being given if sgr0 is, Not  all  ter‐
1681       minfo  entries  necessarily have an sgr string, however.  Many terminfo
1682       entries are derived from termcap entries which have no sgr string.  The
1683       only drawback to adding an sgr string is that termcap also assumes that
1684       sgr0 does not exit alternate character set mode.
1685
1686       Terminals with the “magic cookie” glitch (xmc) deposit  special  “cook‐
1687       ies” when they receive mode-setting sequences, which affect the display
1688       algorithm rather than having extra bits for each character.  Some  ter‐
1689       minals,  such  as  the  HP 2621, automatically leave standout mode when
1690       they move to a new line or the cursor  is  addressed.   Programs  using
1691       standout  mode  should  exit  standout mode before moving the cursor or
1692       sending a newline, unless the msgr capability,  asserting  that  it  is
1693       safe to move in standout mode, is present.
1694
1695       If  the  terminal has a way of flashing the screen to indicate an error
1696       quietly (a bell replacement) then this can be given as flash;  it  must
1697       not move the cursor.
1698
1699       If  the cursor needs to be made more visible than normal when it is not
1700       on the bottom line (to make, for example, a non-blinking underline into
1701       an  easier  to  find block or blinking underline) give this sequence as
1702       cvvis.  If there is a way to make the cursor completely invisible, give
1703       that  as  civis.  The capability cnorm should be given which undoes the
1704       effects of both of these modes.
1705
1706       If your terminal correctly generates  underlined  characters  (with  no
1707       special  codes  needed)  even  though  it does not overstrike, then you
1708       should give the capability ul.  If  a  character  overstriking  another
1709       leaves  both  characters  on the screen, specify the capability os.  If
1710       overstrikes are erasable with a blank, then this should be indicated by
1711       giving eo.
1712
1713   Keypad and Function Keys
1714       If  the  terminal  has  a keypad that transmits codes when the keys are
1715       pressed, this information can be given.  Note that it is  not  possible
1716       to handle terminals where the keypad only works in local (this applies,
1717       for example, to the unshifted HP 2621 keys).  If the keypad can be  set
1718       to transmit or not transmit, give these codes as smkx and rmkx.  Other‐
1719       wise the keypad is assumed to always transmit.
1720
1721       The codes sent by the left arrow, right arrow, up  arrow,  down  arrow,
1722       and  home  keys  can  be given as kcub1, kcuf1, kcuu1, kcud1, and khome
1723       respectively.  If there are function keys such as f0, f1, ..., f10, the
1724       codes  they  send  can  be given as kf0, kf1, ..., kf10.  If these keys
1725       have labels other than the default f0 through f10, the  labels  can  be
1726       given as lf0, lf1, ..., lf10.
1727
1728       The codes transmitted by certain other special keys can be given:
1729
1730       ·   kll (home down),
1731
1732       ·   kbs (backspace),
1733
1734       ·   ktbc (clear all tabs),
1735
1736       ·   kctab (clear the tab stop in this column),
1737
1738       ·   kclr (clear screen or erase key),
1739
1740       ·   kdch1 (delete character),
1741
1742       ·   kdl1 (delete line),
1743
1744       ·   krmir (exit insert mode),
1745
1746       ·   kel (clear to end of line),
1747
1748       ·   ked (clear to end of screen),
1749
1750       ·   kich1 (insert character or enter insert mode),
1751
1752       ·   kil1 (insert line),
1753
1754       ·   knp (next page),
1755
1756       ·   kpp (previous page),
1757
1758       ·   kind (scroll forward/down),
1759
1760       ·   kri (scroll backward/up),
1761
1762       ·   khts (set a tab stop in this column).
1763
1764       In  addition,  if  the  keypad has a 3 by 3 array of keys including the
1765       four arrow keys, the other five keys can be given  as  ka1,  ka3,  kb2,
1766       kc1,  and  kc3.   These  keys  are  useful when the effects of a 3 by 3
1767       directional pad are needed.
1768
1769       Strings to program function keys can be given as pfkey, pfloc, and pfx.
1770       A  string to program screen labels should be specified as pln.  Each of
1771       these strings takes two parameters: the function key number to  program
1772       (from 0 to 10) and the string to program it with.  Function key numbers
1773       out of this range may program undefined keys in  a  terminal  dependent
1774       manner.   The  difference between the capabilities is that pfkey causes
1775       pressing the given key to be the same as  the  user  typing  the  given
1776       string;  pfloc  causes  the  string  to  be executed by the terminal in
1777       local; and pfx causes the string to be transmitted to the computer.
1778
1779       The capabilities nlab, lw and lh  define  the  number  of  programmable
1780       screen  labels  and  their  width and height.  If there are commands to
1781       turn the labels on and off, give them in smln and rmln.  smln  is  nor‐
1782       mally  output  after  one  or  more pln sequences to make sure that the
1783       change becomes visible.
1784
1785   Tabs and Initialization
1786       If the terminal has hardware tabs, the command to advance to  the  next
1787       tab  stop can be given as ht (usually control I).  A “back-tab” command
1788       which moves leftward to the preceding tab stop can be given as cbt.  By
1789       convention, if the teletype modes indicate that tabs are being expanded
1790       by the computer rather than being sent to the terminal, programs should
1791       not use ht or cbt even if they are present, since the user may not have
1792       the tab stops properly set.  If the terminal has  hardware  tabs  which
1793       are  initially  set every n spaces when the terminal is powered up, the
1794       numeric parameter it is given, showing the number of  spaces  the  tabs
1795       are  set  to.   This  is normally used by the tset command to determine
1796       whether to set the mode for hardware tab expansion, and whether to  set
1797       the tab stops.  If the terminal has tab stops that can be saved in non-
1798       volatile memory, the terminfo description  can  assume  that  they  are
1799       properly set.
1800
1801       Other  capabilities  include  is1, is2, and is3, initialization strings
1802       for the terminal, iprog, the path name of a program to be run  to  ini‐
1803       tialize  the  terminal, and if, the name of a file containing long ini‐
1804       tialization strings.  These strings are expected to  set  the  terminal
1805       into  modes consistent with the rest of the terminfo description.  They
1806       are normally sent to the terminal, by the init option of the tput  pro‐
1807       gram,  each time the user logs in.  They will be printed in the follow‐
1808       ing order:
1809
1810              run the program
1811                     iprog
1812
1813              output is1 is2
1814
1815              set the margins using
1816                     mgc, smgl and smgr
1817
1818              set tabs using
1819                     tbc and hts
1820
1821              print the file
1822                     if
1823
1824              and finally
1825                     output is3.
1826
1827       Most initialization is done with is2.  Special terminal  modes  can  be
1828       set  up  without duplicating strings by putting the common sequences in
1829       is2 and special cases in is1 and is3.
1830
1831       A set of sequences that does a harder  reset  from  a  totally  unknown
1832       state can be given as rs1, rs2, rf and rs3, analogous to is1 , is2 , if
1833       and is3 respectively.  These strings are output by the  reset  program,
1834       which is used when the terminal gets into a wedged state.  Commands are
1835       normally placed in rs1, rs2 rs3 and rf only if  they  produce  annoying
1836       effects on the screen and are not necessary when logging in.  For exam‐
1837       ple, the command to set the vt100 into 80-column mode would normally be
1838       part  of is2, but it causes an annoying glitch of the screen and is not
1839       normally needed since the terminal is  usually  already  in  80  column
1840       mode.
1841
1842       The  reset  program  writes  strings including iprog, etc., in the same
1843       order as the init program, using rs1, etc., instead of  is1,  etc.   If
1844       any  of  rs1, rs2, rs3, or rf reset capability strings are missing, the
1845       reset program falls back upon the corresponding initialization capabil‐
1846       ity string.
1847
1848       If  there are commands to set and clear tab stops, they can be given as
1849       tbc (clear all tab stops) and hts (set a tab stop in the current column
1850       of  every  row).   If a more complex sequence is needed to set the tabs
1851       than can be described by this, the sequence can be placed in is2 or if.
1852
1853   Delays and Padding
1854       Many older and slower terminals do not support either XON/XOFF  or  DTR
1855       handshaking,  including  hard copy terminals and some very archaic CRTs
1856       (including, for example, DEC VT100s).  These may require padding  char‐
1857       acters after certain cursor motions and screen changes.
1858
1859       If the terminal uses xon/xoff handshaking for flow control (that is, it
1860       automatically emits ^S back to the host  when  its  input  buffers  are
1861       close  to  full),  set xon.  This capability suppresses the emission of
1862       padding.  You can also set it for memory-mapped console devices  effec‐
1863       tively  that  do  not  have  a speed limit.  Padding information should
1864       still be included so that routines can make better decisions about rel‐
1865       ative costs, but actual pad characters will not be transmitted.
1866
1867       If pb (padding baud rate) is given, padding is suppressed at baud rates
1868       below the value of pb.  If the entry has no  padding  baud  rate,  then
1869       whether padding is emitted or not is completely controlled by xon.
1870
1871       If  the  terminal requires other than a null (zero) character as a pad,
1872       then this can be given as pad.  Only the first  character  of  the  pad
1873       string is used.
1874
1875   Status Lines
1876       Some  terminals  have an extra “status line” which is not normally used
1877       by software (and thus not counted in the terminal's lines capability).
1878
1879       The simplest case is a status line which is cursor-addressable but  not
1880       part of the main scrolling region on the screen; the Heathkit H19 has a
1881       status line of this kind, as would  a  24-line  VT100  with  a  23-line
1882       scrolling region set up on initialization.  This situation is indicated
1883       by the hs capability.
1884
1885       Some terminals with status lines need special sequences to  access  the
1886       status  line.  These may be expressed as a string with single parameter
1887       tsl which takes the cursor to a given zero-origin column on the  status
1888       line.   The  capability fsl must return to the main-screen cursor posi‐
1889       tions before the last tsl.  You may need to embed the string values  of
1890       sc  (save  cursor) and rc (restore cursor) in tsl and fsl to accomplish
1891       this.
1892
1893       The status line is normally assumed to be the same width as  the  width
1894       of  the  terminal.   If  this  is  untrue,  you can specify it with the
1895       numeric capability wsl.
1896
1897       A command to erase or blank the status line may be specified as dsl.
1898
1899       The boolean capability eslok specifies  that  escape  sequences,  tabs,
1900       etc., work ordinarily in the status line.
1901
1902       The  ncurses implementation does not yet use any of these capabilities.
1903       They are documented here in case they ever become important.
1904
1905   Line Graphics
1906       Many terminals have alternate character sets useful for  forms-drawing.
1907       Terminfo and curses have built-in support for most of the drawing char‐
1908       acters supported by the VT100,  with  some  characters  from  the  AT&T
1909       4410v1  added.   This  alternate  character set may be specified by the
1910       acsc capability.
1911
1912         Glyph                       ACS            Ascii     acsc     acsc
1913         Name                        Name           Default   Char     Value
1914         ────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
1915         arrow pointing right        ACS_RARROW     >         +        0x2b
1916         arrow pointing left         ACS_LARROW     <         ,        0x2c
1917         arrow pointing up           ACS_UARROW     ^         -        0x2d
1918         arrow pointing down         ACS_DARROW     v         .        0x2e
1919         solid square block          ACS_BLOCK      #         0        0x30
1920         diamond                     ACS_DIAMOND    +         `        0x60
1921         checker board (stipple)     ACS_CKBOARD    :         a        0x61
1922         degree symbol               ACS_DEGREE     \         f        0x66
1923         plus/minus                  ACS_PLMINUS    #         g        0x67
1924         board of squares            ACS_BOARD      #         h        0x68
1925         lantern symbol              ACS_LANTERN    #         i        0x69
1926
1927         lower right corner          ACS_LRCORNER   +         j        0x6a
1928         upper right corner          ACS_URCORNER   +         k        0x6b
1929         upper left corner           ACS_ULCORNER   +         l        0x6c
1930         lower left corner           ACS_LLCORNER   +         m        0x6d
1931         large plus or crossover     ACS_PLUS       +         n        0x6e
1932         scan line 1                 ACS_S1         ~         o        0x6f
1933         scan line 3                 ACS_S3         -         p        0x70
1934         horizontal line             ACS_HLINE      -         q        0x71
1935         scan line 7                 ACS_S7         -         r        0x72
1936         scan line 9                 ACS_S9         _         s        0x73
1937         tee pointing right          ACS_LTEE       +         t        0x74
1938         tee pointing left           ACS_RTEE       +         u        0x75
1939         tee pointing up             ACS_BTEE       +         v        0x76
1940         tee pointing down           ACS_TTEE       +         w        0x77
1941         vertical line               ACS_VLINE      |         x        0x78
1942         less-than-or-equal-to       ACS_LEQUAL     <         y        0x79
1943         greater-than-or-equal-to    ACS_GEQUAL     >         z        0x7a
1944         greek pi                    ACS_PI         *         {        0x7b
1945         not-equal                   ACS_NEQUAL     !         |        0x7c
1946         UK pound sign               ACS_STERLING   f         }        0x7d
1947         bullet                      ACS_BULLET     o         ~        0x7e
1948
1949       A few notes apply to the table itself:
1950
1951       ·   X/Open Curses incorrectly states that the mapping  for  lantern  is
1952           uppercase  “I”  although Unix implementations use the lowercase “i”
1953           mapping.
1954
1955       ·   The DEC VT100 implemented graphics using  the  alternate  character
1956           set  feature, temporarily switching modes and sending characters in
1957           the range 0x60 (96) to 0x7e (126) (the acsc Value column in the ta‐
1958           ble).
1959
1960       ·   The AT&T terminal added graphics characters outside that range.
1961
1962           Some  of  the  characters  within the range do not match the VT100;
1963           presumably they were used in the AT&T terminal:  board  of  squares
1964           replaces  the  VT100  newline symbol, while lantern symbol replaces
1965           the VT100 vertical tab symbol.  The other VT100 symbols for control
1966           characters  (horizontal tab, carriage return and line-feed) are not
1967           (re)used in curses.
1968
1969       The best way to define a new device's graphics set is to add  a  column
1970       to  a  copy of this table for your terminal, giving the character which
1971       (when emitted between smacs/rmacs switches) will  be  rendered  as  the
1972       corresponding graphic.  Then read off the VT100/your terminal character
1973       pairs right to left in sequence; these become the ACSC string.
1974
1975   Color Handling
1976       The curses library functions init_pair and  init_color  manipulate  the
1977       color   pairs   and   color  values  discussed  in  this  section  (see
1978       curs_color(3X) for details on these and related functions).
1979
1980       Most color terminals are either “Tektronix-like” or “HP-like”:
1981
1982       ·   Tektronix-like terminals have a predefined set of N colors (where N
1983           is usually 8), and can set character-cell foreground and background
1984           characters independently, mixing them into N * N color-pairs.
1985
1986       ·   On HP-like terminals, the user must set each color  pair  up  sepa‐
1987           rately  (foreground and background are not independently settable).
1988           Up to M color-pairs may be set up from 2*M different colors.  ANSI-
1989           compatible terminals are Tektronix-like.
1990
1991       Some basic color capabilities are independent of the color method.  The
1992       numeric capabilities colors and pairs specify the  maximum  numbers  of
1993       colors  and  color-pairs  that can be displayed simultaneously.  The op
1994       (original pair) string resets foreground and background colors to their
1995       default  values  for  the terminal.  The oc string resets all colors or
1996       color-pairs to their default values for the terminal.   Some  terminals
1997       (including many PC terminal emulators) erase screen areas with the cur‐
1998       rent background color rather  than  the  power-up  default  background;
1999       these should have the boolean capability bce.
2000
2001       While the curses library works with color pairs (reflecting the inabil‐
2002       ity of some devices to set foreground and  background  colors  indepen‐
2003       dently), there are separate capabilities for setting these features:
2004
2005       ·   To  change  the  current  foreground  or background color on a Tek‐
2006           tronix-type terminal, use setaf (set  ANSI  foreground)  and  setab
2007           (set  ANSI background) or setf (set foreground) and setb (set back‐
2008           ground).  These take one parameter, the  color  number.   The  SVr4
2009           documentation  describes only setaf/setab; the XPG4 draft says that
2010           "If the terminal supports ANSI escape sequences to  set  background
2011           and  foreground,  they  should be coded as setaf and setab, respec‐
2012           tively.
2013
2014       ·   If the terminal supports other escape sequences to  set  background
2015           and  foreground,  they  should  be  coded as setf and setb, respec‐
2016           tively.  The vidputs and the refresh(3X) functions  use  the  setaf
2017           and setab capabilities if they are defined.
2018
2019       The  setaf/setab and setf/setb capabilities take a single numeric argu‐
2020       ment each.  Argument values 0-7 of setaf/setab are portably defined  as
2021       follows  (the  middle  column  is the symbolic #define available in the
2022       header for the curses or ncurses libraries).  The terminal hardware  is
2023       free to map these as it likes, but the RGB values indicate normal loca‐
2024       tions in color space.
2025
2026                    Color       #define       Value       RGB
2027                    black     COLOR_BLACK       0     0, 0, 0
2028                    red       COLOR_RED         1     max,0,0
2029                    green     COLOR_GREEN       2     0,max,0
2030                    yellow    COLOR_YELLOW      3     max,max,0
2031                    blue      COLOR_BLUE        4     0,0,max
2032                    magenta   COLOR_MAGENTA     5     max,0,max
2033                    cyan      COLOR_CYAN        6     0,max,max
2034                    white     COLOR_WHITE       7     max,max,max
2035
2036       The argument values of setf/setb historically correspond to a different
2037       mapping, i.e.,
2038
2039                    Color       #define       Value       RGB
2040                    black     COLOR_BLACK       0     0, 0, 0
2041                    blue      COLOR_BLUE        1     0,0,max
2042                    green     COLOR_GREEN       2     0,max,0
2043                    cyan      COLOR_CYAN        3     0,max,max
2044                    red       COLOR_RED         4     max,0,0
2045                    magenta   COLOR_MAGENTA     5     max,0,max
2046                    yellow    COLOR_YELLOW      6     max,max,0
2047                    white     COLOR_WHITE       7     max,max,max
2048
2049       It is important to not confuse the two sets of color capabilities; oth‐
2050       erwise red/blue will be interchanged on the display.
2051
2052       On an HP-like terminal, use scp with a color-pair number  parameter  to
2053       set which color pair is current.
2054
2055       Some terminals allow the color values to be modified:
2056
2057       ·   On  a Tektronix-like terminal, the capability ccc may be present to
2058           indicate that colors can be modified.  If so, the initc  capability
2059           will take a color number (0 to colors - 1)and three more parameters
2060           which describe the color.  These three parameters default to  being
2061           interpreted as RGB (Red, Green, Blue) values.  If the boolean capa‐
2062           bility hls is present, they are instead  as  HLS  (Hue,  Lightness,
2063           Saturation) indices.  The ranges are terminal-dependent.
2064
2065       ·   On  an HP-like terminal, initp may give a capability for changing a
2066           color-pair value.  It will take seven parameters; a color-pair num‐
2067           ber  (0  to  max_pairs - 1), and two triples describing first back‐
2068           ground and then foreground colors.  These parameters must be  (Red,
2069           Green, Blue) or (Hue, Lightness, Saturation) depending on hls.
2070
2071       On  some color terminals, colors collide with highlights.  You can reg‐
2072       ister these collisions with the ncv capability.  This is a bit-mask  of
2073       attributes  not to be used when colors are enabled.  The correspondence
2074       with the attributes understood by curses is as follows:
2075
2076                  Attribute              Bit   Decimal      Set by
2077                  A_STANDOUT             0     1            sgr
2078                  A_UNDERLINE            1     2            sgr
2079                  A_REVERSE              2     4            sgr
2080                  A_BLINK                3     8            sgr
2081                  A_DIM                  4     16           sgr
2082                  A_BOLD                 5     32           sgr
2083                  A_INVIS                6     64           sgr
2084                  A_PROTECT              7     128          sgr
2085                  A_ALTCHARSET           8     256          sgr
2086                  A_HORIZONTAL           9     512          sgr1
2087                  A_LEFT                 10    1024         sgr1
2088                  A_LOW                  11    2048         sgr1
2089                  A_RIGHT                12    4096         sgr1
2090                  A_TOP                  13    8192         sgr1
2091                  A_VERTICAL             14    16384        sgr1
2092                  A_ITALIC               15    32768        sitm
2093
2094       For example, on many IBM PC consoles, the underline attribute  collides
2095       with  the  foreground  color  blue  and is not available in color mode.
2096       These should have an ncv capability of 2.
2097
2098       SVr4 curses does nothing with ncv, ncurses recognizes it and  optimizes
2099       the output in favor of colors.
2100
2101   Miscellaneous
2102       If  the  terminal requires other than a null (zero) character as a pad,
2103       then this can be given as pad.  Only the first  character  of  the  pad
2104       string is used.  If the terminal does not have a pad character, specify
2105       npc.  Note that ncurses implements the termcap-compatible PC  variable;
2106       though  the  application  may  set this value to something other than a
2107       null, ncurses will test npc first and use napms if the terminal has  no
2108       pad character.
2109
2110       If  the terminal can move up or down half a line, this can be indicated
2111       with hu (half-line up) and hd (half-line down).  This is primarily use‐
2112       ful for superscripts and subscripts on hard-copy terminals.  If a hard-
2113       copy terminal can eject to the next page (form feed), give this  as  ff
2114       (usually control L).
2115
2116       If  there  is  a  command to repeat a given character a given number of
2117       times (to save time transmitting a large number  of  identical  charac‐
2118       ters)  this  can  be  indicated with the parameterized string rep.  The
2119       first parameter is the character to be repeated and the second  is  the
2120       number of times to repeat it.  Thus, tparm(repeat_char, 'x', 10) is the
2121       same as “xxxxxxxxxx”.
2122
2123       If the terminal has a settable command character, such as the TEKTRONIX
2124       4025,  this can be indicated with cmdch.  A prototype command character
2125       is chosen which is used in all capabilities.  This character  is  given
2126       in  the  cmdch  capability to identify it.  The following convention is
2127       supported on some UNIX systems: The environment is to be searched for a
2128       CC  variable,  and if found, all occurrences of the prototype character
2129       are replaced with the character in the environment variable.
2130
2131       Terminal descriptions that do not represent a specific  kind  of  known
2132       terminal,  such  as  switch, dialup, patch, and network, should include
2133       the gn (generic) capability so that programs can complain that they  do
2134       not  know how to talk to the terminal.  (This capability does not apply
2135       to virtual terminal descriptions for which  the  escape  sequences  are
2136       known.)
2137
2138       If the terminal has a “meta key” which acts as a shift key, setting the
2139       8th bit of any character transmitted, this fact can be  indicated  with
2140       km.   Otherwise, software will assume that the 8th bit is parity and it
2141       will usually be cleared.  If strings exist to turn this “meta mode”  on
2142       and off, they can be given as smm and rmm.
2143
2144       If the terminal has more lines of memory than will fit on the screen at
2145       once, the number of lines of memory can be indicated with lm.  A  value
2146       of lm#0 indicates that the number of lines is not fixed, but that there
2147       is still more memory than fits on the screen.
2148
2149       If the terminal is one of those supported by the UNIX virtual  terminal
2150       protocol, the terminal number can be given as vt.
2151
2152       Media  copy strings which control an auxiliary printer connected to the
2153       terminal can be given as mc0: print the contents of  the  screen,  mc4:
2154       turn  off  the printer, and mc5: turn on the printer.  When the printer
2155       is on, all text sent to the terminal will be sent to the  printer.   It
2156       is  undefined whether the text is also displayed on the terminal screen
2157       when the printer is on.  A variation  mc5p  takes  one  parameter,  and
2158       leaves the printer on for as many characters as the value of the param‐
2159       eter, then turns the printer off.  The parameter should not exceed 255.
2160       All  text,  including mc4, is transparently passed to the printer while
2161       an mc5p is in effect.
2162
2163   Glitches and Braindamage
2164       Hazeltine terminals, which do not allow “~” characters to be  displayed
2165       should indicate hz.
2166
2167       Terminals  which  ignore a line-feed immediately after an am wrap, such
2168       as the Concept and vt100, should indicate xenl.
2169
2170       If el is required to get rid of standout  (instead  of  merely  writing
2171       normal text on top of it), xhp should be given.
2172
2173       Teleray terminals, where tabs turn all characters moved over to blanks,
2174       should indicate xt (destructive tabs).  Note: the  variable  indicating
2175       this  is  now  “dest_tabs_magic_smso”;  in  older versions, it was tel‐
2176       eray_glitch.  This glitch is also taken to mean that it is not possible
2177       to position the cursor on top of a “magic cookie”, that to erase stand‐
2178       out mode it is instead necessary to use delete and  insert  line.   The
2179       ncurses implementation ignores this glitch.
2180
2181       The  Beehive Superbee, which is unable to correctly transmit the escape
2182       or control C characters, has xsb, indicating that the f1  key  is  used
2183       for  escape  and  f2  for control C.  (Only certain Superbees have this
2184       problem, depending on the ROM.)  Note that in older terminfo  versions,
2185       this capability was called “beehive_glitch”; it is now “no_esc_ctl_c”.
2186
2187       Other  specific terminal problems may be corrected by adding more capa‐
2188       bilities of the form xx.
2189
2190   Pitfalls of Long Entries
2191       Long terminfo entries are unlikely to be a problem; to date,  no  entry
2192       has  even approached terminfo's 4096-byte string-table maximum.  Unfor‐
2193       tunately, the termcap translations are much more strictly  limited  (to
2194       1023  bytes),  thus  termcap  translations of long terminfo entries can
2195       cause problems.
2196
2197       The man pages for 4.3BSD and older versions  of  tgetent  instruct  the
2198       user  to  allocate a 1024-byte buffer for the termcap entry.  The entry
2199       gets null-terminated by the termcap library, so that makes the  maximum
2200       safe  length  for a termcap entry 1k-1 (1023) bytes.  Depending on what
2201       the application and the termcap library being used does, and  where  in
2202       the  termcap  file  the terminal type that tgetent is searching for is,
2203       several bad things can happen.
2204
2205       Some termcap libraries print a warning message or exit if they find  an
2206       entry that's longer than 1023 bytes; others do not; others truncate the
2207       entries to 1023 bytes.  Some application programs  allocate  more  than
2208       the recommended 1K for the termcap entry; others do not.
2209
2210       Each  termcap  entry has two important sizes associated with it: before
2211       "tc" expansion, and after "tc" expansion.  "tc" is the capability  that
2212       tacks on another termcap entry to the end of the current one, to add on
2213       its capabilities.  If a termcap entry does not use the "tc" capability,
2214       then of course the two lengths are the same.
2215
2216       The  "before tc expansion" length is the most important one, because it
2217       affects more than just users of that particular terminal.  This is  the
2218       length  of the entry as it exists in /etc/termcap, minus the backslash-
2219       newline pairs, which tgetent strips out while reading it.  Some termcap
2220       libraries strip off the final newline, too (GNU termcap does not).  Now
2221       suppose:
2222
2223       ·   a termcap entry before expansion is more than 1023 bytes long,
2224
2225       ·   and the application has only allocated a 1k buffer,
2226
2227       ·   and the termcap library (like the one in BSD/OS 1.1 and GNU)  reads
2228           the  whole entry into the buffer, no matter what its length, to see
2229           if it is the entry it wants,
2230
2231       ·   and tgetent is searching for a terminal type  that  either  is  the
2232           long  entry,  appears  in the termcap file after the long entry, or
2233           does not appear in the file at all (so that tgetent has  to  search
2234           the whole termcap file).
2235
2236       Then  tgetent  will  overwrite  memory, perhaps its stack, and probably
2237       core dump the program.  Programs like telnet are particularly  vulnera‐
2238       ble;  modern telnets pass along values like the terminal type automati‐
2239       cally.  The results are almost as undesirable with a  termcap  library,
2240       like  SunOS  4.1.3 and Ultrix 4.4, that prints warning messages when it
2241       reads an overly long termcap entry.  If  a  termcap  library  truncates
2242       long  entries,  like  OSF/1  3.0,  it  is immune to dying here but will
2243       return incorrect data for the terminal.
2244
2245       The "after tc expansion" length will  have  a  similar  effect  to  the
2246       above, but only for people who actually set TERM to that terminal type,
2247       since tgetent only does "tc" expansion once it is  found  the  terminal
2248       type it was looking for, not while searching.
2249
2250       In  summary,  a termcap entry that is longer than 1023 bytes can cause,
2251       on various combinations of termcap libraries and applications,  a  core
2252       dump,  warnings, or incorrect operation.  If it is too long even before
2253       "tc" expansion, it will have this effect even for users of  some  other
2254       terminal  types  and  users whose TERM variable does not have a termcap
2255       entry.
2256
2257       When in -C (translate to termcap) mode, the ncurses  implementation  of
2258       tic(1M)  issues  warning  messages  when the pre-tc length of a termcap
2259       translation is too long.  The -c (check) option  also  checks  resolved
2260       (after tc expansion) lengths.
2261
2262   Binary Compatibility
2263       It  is  not  wise  to  count  on portability of binary terminfo entries
2264       between commercial UNIX versions.  The problem is  that  there  are  at
2265       least  two  versions  of  terminfo (under HP-UX and AIX) which diverged
2266       from System V terminfo after SVr1, and have added  extension  capabili‐
2267       ties  to the string table that (in the binary format) collide with Sys‐
2268       tem V and XSI Curses extensions.
2269

EXTENSIONS

2271       Searching  for  terminal  descriptions  in  $HOME/.terminfo  and   TER‐
2272       MINFO_DIRS is not supported by older implementations.
2273
2274       Some  SVr4  curses  implementations,  and  all previous to SVr4, do not
2275       interpret the %A and %O operators in parameter strings.
2276
2277       SVr4/XPG4 do not specify whether msgr licenses  movement  while  in  an
2278       alternate-character-set  mode  (such modes may, among other things, map
2279       CR and NL to characters  that  do  not  trigger  local  motions).   The
2280       ncurses  implementation  ignores  msgr in ALTCHARSET mode.  This raises
2281       the possibility that an XPG4 implementation making the opposite  inter‐
2282       pretation  may  need  terminfo  entries  made  for ncurses to have msgr
2283       turned off.
2284
2285       The ncurses library handles insert-character and insert-character modes
2286       in  a  slightly  non-standard way to get better update efficiency.  See
2287       the Insert/Delete Character subsection above.
2288
2289       The parameter substitutions for set_clock  and  display_clock  are  not
2290       documented  in  SVr4 or the XSI Curses standard.  They are deduced from
2291       the documentation for the AT&T 505 terminal.
2292
2293       Be careful assigning the kmous capability.  The ncurses  library  wants
2294       to  interpret  it as KEY_MOUSE, for use by terminals and emulators like
2295       xterm that can return mouse-tracking information in the  keyboard-input
2296       stream.
2297
2298       X/Open  Curses  does  not  mention italics.  Portable applications must
2299       assume that  numeric  capabilities  are  signed  16-bit  values.   This
2300       includes  the  no_color_video  (ncv)  capability.  The 32768 mask value
2301       used for italics with ncv can be confused with an absent  or  cancelled
2302       ncv.   If  italics  should work with colors, then the ncv value must be
2303       specified, even if it is zero.
2304
2305       Different commercial ports of terminfo  and  curses  support  different
2306       subsets of the XSI Curses standard and (in some cases) different exten‐
2307       sion sets.  Here is a summary, accurate as of October 1995:
2308
2309       ·   SVR4, Solaris, ncurses -- These support all SVr4 capabilities.
2310
2311       ·   SGI -- Supports the SVr4 set, adds one undocumented extended string
2312           capability (set_pglen).
2313
2314       ·   SVr1, Ultrix -- These support a restricted subset of terminfo capa‐
2315           bilities.  The  booleans  end  with  xon_xoff;  the  numerics  with
2316           width_status_line; and the strings with prtr_non.
2317
2318       ·   HP/UX  --  Supports  the  SVr1  subset,  plus the SVr[234] numerics
2319           num_labels,  label_height,  label_width,  plus  function  keys   11
2320           through  63,  plus  plab_norm,  label_on,  and label_off, plus some
2321           incompatible extensions in the string table.
2322
2323       ·   AIX -- Supports the SVr1 subset, plus function keys 11 through  63,
2324           plus a number of incompatible string table extensions.
2325
2326       ·   OSF -- Supports both the SVr4 set and the AIX extensions.
2327

FILES

2329       /usr/share/terminfo/?/*  files containing terminal descriptions
2330

SEE ALSO

2332       tic(1M),  infocmp(1M),  curses(3X), curs_color(3X), printf(3), term(5).
2333       term_variables(3X).  user_caps(5).
2334

AUTHORS

2336       Zeyd M. Ben-Halim, Eric S. Raymond, Thomas E. Dickey.  Based on pcurses
2337       by Pavel Curtis.
2338
2339
2340
2341                                                                   terminfo(5)
Impressum