NAME¶
getyx, 
getparyx, 
getbegyx, 
getmaxyx - get
  
curses cursor and window coordinates
SYNOPSIS¶
#include <curses.h>
 
void getyx(WINDOW *win, int y, int x);
 
void getparyx(WINDOW *win, int y, int x);
 
void getbegyx(WINDOW *win, int y, int x);
 
void getmaxyx(WINDOW *win, int y, int x);
 
DESCRIPTION¶
The 
getyx macro places the current cursor position of the given window in
  the two integer variables 
y and 
x.
If 
win is a subwindow, the 
getparyx macro places the beginning
  coordinates of the subwindow relative to the parent window into two integer
  variables 
y and 
x. Otherwise, 
-1 is placed into 
y
  and 
x.
Like 
getyx, the 
getbegyx and 
getmaxyx macros store the
  current beginning coordinates and size of the specified window.
RETURN VALUE¶
The return values of these macros are undefined (i.e., they should not be used
  as the right-hand side of assignment statements).
NOTES¶
All of these interfaces are macros. A " 
&" is not necessary
  before the variables 
y and 
x.
PORTABILITY¶
The 
getyx, 
getparyx, 
getbegyx and 
getmaxyx macros
  are described in the XSI Curses standard, Issue 4.
This implementation also provides functions 
getbegx, 
getbegy,
  
getcurx, 
getcury, 
getmaxx, 
getmaxy, 
getparx
  and 
getpary for compatibility with older versions of curses.
Although X/Open Curses does not address this, many implementations provide
  members of the WINDOW structure containing values corresponding to these
  macros. For best portability, do not rely on using the data in WINDOW, since
  some implementations make WINDOW opaque (do not allow direct use of its
  members).
Besides the problem of opaque structures, the data stored in like-named members
  may not have like-values in different implementations. For example, the
  WINDOW._maxx and WINDOW._maxy values in ncurses have (at least since release
  1.8.1) differed by one from some other implementations. The difference is
  hidden by means of the macro 
getmaxyx.
SEE ALSO¶
ncurses(3NCURSES), 
legacy(3NCURSES), 
opaque(3NCURSES)