5.1 KiB
% notcurses_input(3) % nick black nickblack@linux.com % v1.1.8
NAME
notcurses_input - input via notcurses
SYNOPSIS
#include <notcurses.h>
typedef struct ncinput {
char32_t id; // Unicode codepoint
int y; // Y cell coordinate of event, -1 for undefined
int x; // X cell coordinate of event, -1 for undefined
bool alt; // Was Alt held during the event?
bool shift; // Was Shift held during the event?
bool ctrl; // Was Ctrl held during the event?
} ncinput;
bool nckey_mouse_p(char32_t r);
char32_t notcurses_getc(struct notcurses n, const struct timespec ts, sigset_t* sigmask, ncinput* ni);**
char32_t notcurses_getc_nblock(struct notcurses n, ncinput ni);**
char32_t notcurses_getc_blocking(struct notcurses n, ncinput ni);**
int notcurses_mouse_enable(struct notcurses n);*
int notcurses_mouse_disable(struct notcurses n);*
DESCRIPTION
notcurses supports input from keyboards and mice, and any device that looks like them. Mouse support requires a broker such as GPM, Wayland, or Xorg, and must be explicitly enabled via notcurses_mouse_enable(3). The full 32-bit range of Unicode is supported (see unicode(7)), with synthesized events mapped into the Supplementary Private Use Area-B. Unicode characters are returned directly as UCS-32, one codepoint at a time.
notcurses takes its keyboard input from stdin, which will be placed into non-blocking mode for the duration of operation. The terminal is put into raw mode (see cfmakeraw(3)), and thus keys are received without line-buffering. notcurses maintains its own buffer of input characters, which it will attempt to fill whenever it reads.
notcurses_getc(3) allows a struct timespec to be specified as a timeout. If ts is NULL, notcurses_getc(3) will block until it reads input, or is interrupted by a signal. If its values are zeroes, there will be no blocking. Otherwise, ts specifies a minimum time to wait for input before giving up. On timeout, 0 is returned. Signals in sigmask will be masked and blocked in the same manner as a call to ppoll(2). sigmask may be NULL. Event details will be reported in ni, unless ni is NULL.
Mice
For mouse events, the additional fields y and x are set. These fields are not meaningful for keypress events. Mouse events can be distinguished using the nckey_mouse_p(3) predicate. Once enabled, mouse button presses are detected, as are mouse motions made while a button is held down. If no button is depressed, mouse movement does not result in events. This is known as "button-event tracking" mode in the nomenclature of Xterm Control Sequences.
Synthesized keypresses
Many keys do not have a Unicode representation, let alone ASCII. Examples include the modifier keys (Alt, Meta, etc.), the "function" keys, and the arrow keys on the numeric keypad. The special keys available to the terminal are defined in the terminfo(5) entry, which notcurses loads on startup. Upon receiving an escape code matching a terminfo input capability, notcurses synthesizes a special value. An escape sequence must arrive in its entirety to notcurses; running out of input in the middle of an escape sequence will see it rejected. Likewise, any error while handling an escape sequence will see the lex aborted, and the sequence thus far played back as independent literal keystrokes.
The full list of synthesized keys (there are well over one hundred) can be found in <notcurses.h>. For more details, consult terminfo(5).
NCKEY_RESIZE
Unless the SIGWINCH handler has been inhibited (see notcurses_init(3)), notcurses will automatically catch screen resizes, and synthesize an NCKEY_RESIZE event. Upon receiving this event, the user may call notcurses_resize(3) to force an immediate reflow, or just wait until the next call to notcurses_render(3), when notcurses will pick up the resize itself. If the SIGWINCH handler is inhibited, NCKEY_RESIZE is never generated.
RETURN VALUES
On error, the _getc family of functions returns (char32_t)-1. The cause of the error may be determined using errno(3). Unless the error was a temporary one (especially e.g. EINTR), notcurses_getc(3) probably cannot be usefully called forthwith. On a timeout, 0 is returned. Otherwise, the UCS-32 value of a Unicode codepoint, or a synthesized event, is returned.
notcurses_mouse_enable(3) returns 0 on success, and non-zero on failure, as does notcurses_mouse_disable(3).
NOTES
Like any other notcurses function, it is an error to call notcurses_getc(3) during or after a call to notcurses_stop(3). If a thread is always sitting on blocking input, it can be tricky to guarantee that this doesn't happen.
BUGS
Failed escape sequences are not yet played back in their entirety; only an ESC (ASCII 0x1b) will be seen by the application.
SEE ALSO
poll(2), cfmakeraw(3), notcurses(3), notcurses_resize(3), termios(3), terminfo(5), ascii(7), signal(7), unicode(7)