NAME¶
ins_wstr, 
ins_nwstr, 
wins_wstr, 
wins_nwstr,
  
mvins_wstr, 
mvins_nwstr, 
mvwins_wstr, 
mvwins_nwstr
  - insert a wide-character string into a curses window
SYNOPSIS¶
#include <curses.h>
int ins_wstr(const wchar_t *wstr);
 
int ins_nwstr(const wchar_t *wstr, int n);
 
int wins_wstr(WINDOW *win, const wchar_t *wstr);
 
int wins_nwstr(WINDOW *win, const wchar_t *wstr, int n);
 
int mvins_wstr(int y, int x, const wchar_t *wstr);
 
int mvins_nwstr(int y, int x, const wchar_t *wstr, int n);
 
int mvwins_wstr(WINDOW *win, int y, int x, const wchar_t *wstr);
 
int mvwins_nwstr(WINDOW *win, int y, int x, const wchar_t *wstr, int n);
DESCRIPTION¶
These routines insert a 
wchar_t character string (as many characters as
  will fit on the line) before the character under the cursor. All characters to
  the right of the cursor are shifted right, with the possibility of the
  rightmost characters on the line being lost. No wrapping is performed. The
  cursor position does not change (after moving to 
y, 
x, if
  specified). The four routines with 
n as the last argument insert a
  leading substring of at most 
n wchar_t characters. If 
n
  is less than 1, the entire string is inserted.
If a character in 
wstr is a tab, newline, carriage return or backspace,
  the cursor is moved appropriately within the window. A newline also does a
  
clrtoeol before moving. Tabs are considered to be at every eighth
  column. If a character in 
wstr is another control character, it is
  drawn in the 
^X notation. Calling 
win_wch after adding a
  control character (and moving to it, if necessary) does not return the control
  character, but instead returns a character in the ^-representation of the
  control character.
NOTES¶
Note that all but wins_nwstr may be macros.
If the first character in the string is a nonspacing character, these functions
  will fail. XSI does not define what will happen if a nonspacing character
  follows a control character.
RETURN VALUE¶
Upon successful completion, these functions return OK. Otherwise, they return
  ERR.
Functions with a "mv" prefix first perform a cursor movement using
  
wmove, and return an error if the position is outside the window, or if
  the window pointer is null.
SEE ALSO¶
ncurses(3NCURSES), 
insstr(3NCURSES), 
in_wch(3NCURSES),
  
ins_wch(3NCURSES).