cpython/Lib/curses/__init__.py
Andrew M. Kuchling 37f0263811 Bug #412086, reported by Peter Wilson: The _curses module doesn't
define COLORS or COLOR_PAIRS until after start_color() is called,
    but they were never added to the curses module.  Fixed by adding
    a wrapper around start_color(), similar to the wrapper around initscr().
2001-04-05 16:08:41 +00:00

55 lines
1.5 KiB
Python

"""curses
The main package for curses support for Python. Normally used by importing
the package, and perhaps a particular module inside it.
import curses
from curses import textpad
curses.initwin()
...
"""
__revision__ = "$Id$"
from _curses import *
from curses.wrapper import wrapper
# Some constants, most notably the ACS_* ones, are only added to the C
# _curses module's dictionary after initscr() is called. (Some
# versions of SGI's curses don't define values for those constants
# until initscr() has been called.) This wrapper function calls the
# underlying C initscr(), and then copies the constants from the
# _curses module to the curses package's dictionary. Don't do 'from
# curses import *' if you'll be needing the ACS_* constants.
def initscr():
import _curses, curses
stdscr = _curses.initscr()
for key, value in _curses.__dict__.items():
if key[0:4] == 'ACS_' or key in ('LINES', 'COLS'):
setattr(curses, key, value)
return stdscr
# This is a similar wrapper for start_color(), which adds the COLORS and
# COLOR_PAIRS variables which are only available after start_color() is
# called.
def start_color():
import _curses, curses
retval = _curses.start_color()
if hasattr(_curses, 'COLORS'):
curses.COLORS = _curses.COLORS
if hasattr(_curses, 'COLOR_PAIRS'):
curses.COLOR_PAIRS = _curses.COLOR_PAIRS
return retval
# Import Python has_key() implementation if _curses doesn't contain has_key()
try:
has_key
except NameError:
from has_key import has_key