Provided by: ncurses-doc_6.5-2_all bug

NAME

       printw, wprintw, mvprintw, mvwprintw, vwprintw, vw_printw - write formatted output to a curses window

SYNOPSIS

       #include <curses.h>

       int printw(const char *fmt, ...);
       int wprintw(WINDOW *win, const char *fmt, ...);
       int mvprintw(int y, int x, const char *fmt, ...);
       int mvwprintw(WINDOW *win, int y, int x, const char *fmt, ...);

       int vw_printw(WINDOW *win, const char *fmt, va_list varglist);

       /* obsolete */
       int vwprintw(WINDOW *win, const char *fmt, va_list varglist);

DESCRIPTION

       printw, wprintw, mvprintw, and mvwprintw are analogous to printf(3).  In effect, the string that would be
       output  by  printf(3) is instead output as though waddstr(3NCURSES) were used with win (or stdscr) as its
       first argument.

       vwprintw and vw_printw are analogous to vprintf(3), and perform a wprintw using a variable argument list.
       The third argument is a va_list, a pointer to a list of arguments, as defined in stdarg.h.

RETURN VALUE

       These functions return ERR upon failure and OK upon success.

       In ncurses, failure occurs if the library cannot allocate enough memory for the  buffer  into  which  the
       output is formatted, or if the window pointer win is null.

       Functions prefixed with “mv” first perform cursor movement and fail if the position (y, x) is outside the
       window boundaries.

NOTES

       No  wide  character  counterpart  functions  are  defined  by the “wide” ncurses configuration nor by any
       standard.  To format and write a wide-character string to a curses window, consider using swprintf(3) and
       waddwstr(3NCURSES) or similar.

PORTABILITY

       X/Open Curses, Issue 4 describes these functions.  It specifies no error conditions for them.

       ncurses defines vw_printw and vwprintw identically to support legacy applications.  However,  the  latter
       is obsolete.

       •   X/Open  Curses,  Issue  4  Version  2  (1996),  marked  vwprintw  as  requiring  varargs.h and “TO BE
           WITHDRAWN”, and specified vw_printw using the stdarg.h interface.

       •   X/Open Curses, Issue 5, Draft 2 (December 2007) marked vwprintw (along with vwscanw and  the  termcap
           interface)  as  withdrawn.   After  incorporating review comments, this became X/Open Curses, Issue 7
           (2009).

       •   ncurses provides vwprintw, but marks it as deprecated.

HISTORY

       While printw was implemented in 4BSD (November 1980), it was unused until  4.2BSD  (August  1983),  which
       employed  it  for  games.  That early version of curses preceded the ANSI C standard of 1989.  It did not
       use varargs.h, though that had been available since Seventh Edition Unix (1979).  In 1991  (a  couple  of
       years  after  SVr4  was  generally  available,  and after the C standard was published), other developers
       updated the library, using stdarg.h internally in 4.4BSD curses.  Even with this improvement, BSD  curses
       did not use function prototypes (nor even declare functions) in curses.h until 1992.

       SVr2  (1984)  documented  printw  and  wprintw  tersely  as  “printf  on  stdscr”  and  “printf  on win”,
       respectively.

       SVr3 (1987) added mvprintw and mvwprintw, with a three-line summary asserting that they were analogous to
       printf(3), explaining that the string that printf(3) would write to  the  standard  output  stream  would
       instead  be  output  using  waddstr  to the given window.  SVr3 also implemented vwprintw, describing its
       third parameter as a va_list, defined in varargs.h, and referred the  reader  to  the  manual  pages  for
       varargs and vprintf for detailed descriptions.

       SVr4  (1989)  introduced no new variations of printw, but provided for using either varargs.h or stdarg.h
       to define the va_list type.

       X/Open Curses, Issue 4 (1995), defined vw_printw to replace vwprintw, stating that its  va_list  type  is
       defined in stdarg.h.

SEE ALSO

       ncurses(3NCURSES), addstr(3NCURSES), scanw(3NCURSES), printf(3), vprintf(3)

ncurses 6.5                                        2024-04-20                                   printw(3NCURSES)