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scanw

NAME

scanw, wscanw, mvscanw, mvwscanw, vwscanw, vw_scanw - convert formatted input from a curses window

SYNOPSIS

#include <curses.h>

int scanw(const char *fmt, ...);
int wscanw(WINDOW *
win, const char *fmt, ...);
int mvscanw(int
y, int x, const char *fmt, ...);
int mvwscanw(WINDOW *
win, int y, int x, const char *fmt, ...);

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

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

DESCRIPTION

The scanw, wscanw and mvscanw routines are analogous to scanf [see scanf(3)]. The effect of these routines is as though wgetstr were called on the window, and the resulting line used as input for sscanf(3). Fields which do not map to a variable in the fmt field are lost.

The vwscanw and vw_scanw routines are analogous to vscanf(3). They perform a wscanw 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

vwscanw returns ERR on failure and an integer equal to the number of fields scanned on success.

Applications may use the return value from the scanw, wscanw, mvscanw and mvwscanw routines to determine the number of fields which were mapped in the call.

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.

HISTORY

While scanw was implemented in 4BSD, none of the BSD releases used it until 4.4BSD (in a game). That early version of curses was before the ANSI C standard. It did not use <varargs.h>, though that was available. 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 (or even declare functions) in the <curses.h> header until 1992.

SVr2 documented scanw, wscanw tersely as “scanf through stdscr” and tersely as “scanf through win”, respectively.

SVr3 added mvscanw, and mvwscanw, with a three-line summary saying that they were analogous to scanf(3), explaining that the string which would be output from scanf(3) would instead be output using waddstr on the given window. SVr3 also added vwscanw, saying that the third parameter is a va_list, defined in <varargs.h>, and referring the reader to the manual pages for varargs and vprintf for detailed descriptions. (Because the SVr3 documentation does not mention vscanf, that reference to vprintf may not be an error).

SVr4 added no new variations of scanw, but provided for using <varargs.h> or <stdarg.h> to define the va_list type.

X/Open Curses added vw_scanw to replace vwscanw, stating that its va_list definition requires <stdarg.h>.

PORTABILITY

In this implementation, vw_scanw and vwscanw are equivalent, to support legacy applications. However, the latter (vwscanw) is obsolete:

The XSI Curses standard, Issue 4 described these functions, noting that the function vwscanw is marked TO BE WITHDRAWN, and is to be replaced by a function vw_scanw using the <stdarg.h> interface.

The Single Unix Specification, Version 2 states that vw_scanw is preferred to vwscanw since the latter requires including <varargs.h>, which cannot be used in the same file as <stdarg.h>. This implementation uses <stdarg.h> for both, because that header is included in <curses.h>.

X/Open Curses, Issue 5 (December 2007) marked vwscanw (along with vwprintw and the termcap interface) as withdrawn.

Both XSI and The Single Unix Specification, Version 2 state that these functions return ERR or OK.

Since the underlying scanf(3) can return the number of items scanned, and the SVr4 code was documented to use this feature, this is probably an editing error which was introduced in XSI, rather than being done intentionally.

This implementation returns the number of items scanned, for compatibility with SVr4 curses. As of 2018, NetBSD curses also returns the number of items scanned. Both ncurses and NetBSD curses call vsscanf to scan the string, which returns EOF on error.

Portable applications should only test if the return value is ERR, since the OK value (zero) is likely to be misleading.

One possible way to get useful results would be to use a "%n" conversion at the end of the format string to ensure that something was processed.

SEE ALSO

ncurses(3NCURSES), getstr(3NCURSES), printw(3NCURSES), termcap(3NCURSES), scanf(3).

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