NAME¶
COLORS, 
COLOR_PAIRS, 
COLS, 
ESCDELAY, 
LINES,
  
TABSIZE, 
curscr, 
newscr, 
stdscr - 
curses
  global variables
SYNOPSIS¶
#include <curses.h>
int COLOR_PAIRS;
 
int COLORS;
 
int COLS;
 
int ESCDELAY;
 
int LINES;
 
int TABSIZE;
 
WINDOW * curscr;
 
WINDOW * newscr;
 
WINDOW * stdscr;
DESCRIPTION¶
This page summarizes variables provided by the 
curses library. A more
  complete description is given in the 
curses(3X) manual page.
Depending on the configuration, these may be actual variables, or macros (see
  
threads(3NCURSES) and 
opaque(3NCURSES)) which provide read-only
  access to 
curses's state. In either case, applications should treat
  them as read-only to avoid confusing the library.
COLOR_PAIRS¶
After initializing curses, this variable contains the number of color pairs
  which the terminal can support. Usually the number of color pairs will be the
  product 
COLORS*
COLORS, however this is not always true:
  - •
 
  - a few terminals use HLS colors, which do not follow this rule
 
  - •
 
  - terminals supporting a large number of colors are limited by the number of
      color pairs that can be represented in a signed short value.
 
COLORS¶
After initializing curses, this variable contains the number of colors which the
  terminal can support.
COLS¶
After initializing curses, this variable contains the width of the screen, i.e.,
  the number of columns.
ESCDELAY¶
This variable holds the number of milliseconds to wait after reading an escape
  character, to distinguish between an individual escape character entered on
  the keyboard from escape sequences sent by cursor- and function-keys (see
  curses(3X).
LINES¶
After initializing curses, this variable contains the height of the screen,
  i.e., the number of lines.
TABSIZE¶
This variable holds the number of columns used by the 
curses library when
  converting a tab character to spaces as it adds the tab to a window (see
  curs_addch(3X).
The Current Screen¶
This implementation of curses uses a special window 
curscr to record its
  updates to the terminal screen.
The New Screen¶
This implementation of curses uses a special window 
newscr to hold
  updates to the terminal screen before applying them to 
curscr.
The Standard Screen¶
Upon initializing curses, a default window called 
stdscr, which is the
  size of the terminal screen, is created. Many curses functions use this
  window.
NOTES¶
The curses library is initialized using either 
initscr(3X), or
  
newterm(3X).
If 
curses is configured to use separate curses/terminfo libraries, most
  of these variables reside in the curses library.
PORTABILITY¶
ESCDELAY and TABSIZE are extensions, not provided in most other implementations
  of curses.
SEE ALSO¶
ncurses(3NCURSES), 
opaque(3NCURSES), 
terminfo(3NCURSES),
  
threads(3NCURSES), 
terminfo_variables(3NCURSES),
  
terminfo(5).