NAME¶
instr, 
innstr, 
winstr, 
winnstr, 
mvinstr,
  
mvinnstr, 
mvwinstr, 
mvwinnstr - get a string of
  characters from a 
curses window
SYNOPSIS¶
#include <curses.h>
 
int instr(char *str);
 
int innstr(char *str, int n);
 
int winstr(WINDOW *win, char *str);
 
int winnstr(WINDOW *win, char *str, int n);
 
int mvinstr(int y, int x, char *str);
 
int mvinnstr(int y, int x, char *str, int n);
 
int mvwinstr(WINDOW *win, int y, int x, char *str);
 
int mvwinnstr(WINDOW *win, int y, int x, char *str, int n);
 
DESCRIPTION¶
These routines return a string of characters in 
str, extracted starting
  at the current cursor position in the named window. Attributes are stripped
  from the characters. The four functions with 
n as the last argument
  return a leading substring at most 
n characters long (exclusive of the
  trailing NUL).
RETURN VALUE¶
All of the functions return 
ERR upon failure, or the number of characters
  actually read into the string.
X/Open defines no error conditions. In this implementation, if the window
  parameter is null or the str parameter is null, a zero is returned.
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.
NOTES¶
Note that all routines except 
winnstr may be macros.
PORTABILITY¶
SVr4 does not document whether a length limit includes or excludes the trailing
  NUL.
The ncurses library extends the XSI description by allowing a negative value for
  
n. In this case, the functions return the string ending at the right
  margin.
SEE ALSO¶
ncurses(3NCURSES).