PDCurses for X11 ================ This is a port of PDCurses for X11, aka XCurses. It is designed to allow existing curses programs to be re-compiled with PDCurses, resulting in native X11 programs. Building -------- . Run "./configure" in the top-level directory. To build the wide-character version of the library, specify "--enable-widec" as a parameter. To use X Input Methods, add "--enable-xim". I recommend these options, but I haven't yet made them the defaults, for the sake of backwards compatibility and due to their new and relatively untested status. If your system is lacking in UTF-8 support, you can force the use of UTF-8 instead of the system locale via "--enable-force-utf8". This is generally more useful in Windows. If configure can't find your X include files or X libraries, you can specify the paths with the arguments "--x-includes=inc_path" and/or "--x-libraries=lib_path". By default, the library and demo programs are built with the optimizer switch -O2. You can turn this off, and turn on debugging (-g), by adding "--with-debug" to the configure command. . Run "make". This should build libXCurses and all the demo programs. . Optionally, run "make install". curses.h and panel.h will be renamed when installed (to xcurses.h and xpanel.h), to avoid conflicts with any existing curses installations. Unrenamed copies of curses.h and panel.h are installed in (by default) /usr/local/include/xcurses. libXpanel is just a symlink to libXCurses. Both curses and panel functions are in the main library. Distribution Status ------------------- As of April 13, 2006, the files in this directory are released to the Public Domain, except for ScrollBox*, which are under essentially the MIT X License. To be Done ---------- - have newterm() create a new X window - provide a command line parsing function to enable X command line arguments to be parsed and stripped from the arguments passed back to the calling procedure. Acknowledgements ---------------- X11 port was provided by Mark Hessling