tput(1)                     General Commands Manual                    tput(1)

NAME
       tput, reset - initialize a terminal or query terminfo database

SYNOPSIS
       tput [-Ttype] capname [parms ... ]
       tput [-Ttype] init
       tput [-Ttype] reset
       tput [-Ttype] longname
       tput -S  <<
       tput -V

DESCRIPTION
       The tput utility uses the terminfo database to make the values of
       terminal-dependent capabilities and information available to the shell
       (see sh(1)), to initialize or reset the terminal, or return the long
       name of the requested terminal type.  The result depends upon the
       capability's type:

              string
                   tput writes the string to the standard output.  No trailing
                   newline is supplied.

              integer
                   tput writes the decimal value to the standard output, with
                   a trailing newline.

              boolean
                   tput simply sets the exit code (0 for TRUE if the terminal
                   has the capability, 1 for FALSE if it does not), and writes
                   nothing to the standard output.

       Before using a value returned on the standard output, the application
       should test the exit code (e.g., $?, see sh(1)) to be sure it is 0.
       (See the EXIT CODES and DIAGNOSTICS sections.)  For a complete list of
       capabilities and the capname associated with each, see terminfo(5).

       -Ttype indicates the type of terminal.  Normally this option is
              unnecessary, because the default is taken from the environment
              variable TERM.  If -T is specified, then the shell variables
              LINES and COLUMNS will also be ignored.

       capname
              indicates the capability from the terminfo database.  When
              termcap support is compiled in, the termcap name for the
              capability is also accepted.

       parms  If the capability is a string that takes parameters, the
              arguments parms will be instantiated into the string.

              Most parameters are numbers.  Only a few terminfo capabilities
              require string parameters; tput uses a table to decide which to
              pass as strings.  Normally tput uses tparm (3X) to perform the
              substitution.  If no parameters are given for the capability,
              tput writes the string without performing the substitution.

       -S     allows more than one capability per invocation of tput.  The
              capabilities must be passed to tput from the standard input
              instead of from the command line (see example).  Only one
              capname is allowed per line.  The -S option changes the meaning
              of the 0 and 1 boolean and string exit codes (see the EXIT CODES
              section).

              Again, tput uses a table and the presence of parameters in its
              input to decide whether to use tparm (3X), and how to interpret
              the parameters.

       -V     reports the version of ncurses which was used in this program,
              and exits.

       init   If the terminfo database is present and an entry for the user's
              terminal exists (see -Ttype, above), the following will occur:

              (1)    if present, the terminal's initialization strings will be
                     output as detailed in the terminfo(5) section on Tabs and
                     Initialization,

              (2)    any delays (e.g., newline) specified in the entry will be
                     set in the tty driver,

              (3)    tabs expansion will be turned on or off according to the
                     specification in the entry, and

              (4)    if tabs are not expanded, standard tabs will be set
                     (every 8 spaces).

              If an entry does not contain the information needed for any of
              the four above activities, that activity will silently be
              skipped.

       reset  Instead of putting out initialization strings, the terminal's
              reset strings will be output if present (rs1, rs2, rs3, rf).  If
              the reset strings are not present, but initialization strings
              are, the initialization strings will be output.  Otherwise,
              reset acts identically to init.

       longname
              If the terminfo database is present and an entry for the user's
              terminal exists (see -Ttype above), then the long name of the
              terminal will be put out.  The long name is the last name in the
              first line of the terminal's description in the terminfo
              database [see term(5)].

       If tput is invoked by a link named reset, this has the same effect as
       tput reset.  See @TSET@ for comparison, which has similar behavior.

EXAMPLES
       tput init
            Initialize the terminal according to the type of terminal in the
            environmental variable TERM.  This command should be included in
            everyone's .profile after the environmental variable TERM has been
            exported, as illustrated on the profile(5) manual page.

       tput -T5620 reset
            Reset an AT&T 5620 terminal, overriding the type of terminal in
            the environmental variable TERM.

       tput cup 0 0
            Send the sequence to move the cursor to row 0, column 0 (the upper
            left corner of the screen, usually known as the "home" cursor
            position).

       tput clear
            Echo the clear-screen sequence for the current terminal.

       tput cols
            Print the number of columns for the current terminal.

       tput -T450 cols
            Print the number of columns for the 450 terminal.

       bold=`tput smso` offbold=`@TPUT@ rmso`
            Set the shell variables bold, to begin stand-out mode sequence,
            and offbold, to end standout mode sequence, for the current
            terminal.  This might be followed by a prompt: echo "${bold}Please
            type in your name: ${offbold}\c"

       tput hc
            Set exit code to indicate if the current terminal is a hard copy
            terminal.

       tput cup 23 4
            Send the sequence to move the cursor to row 23, column 4.

       tput cup
            Send the terminfo string for cursor-movement, with no parameters
            substituted.

       tput longname
            Print the long name from the terminfo database for the type of
            terminal specified in the environmental variable TERM.

            tput -S <<!
            > clear
            > cup 10 10
            > bold
            > !

            This example shows tput processing several capabilities in one
            invocation.  It clears the screen, moves the cursor to position
            10, 10 and turns on bold (extra bright) mode.  The list is
            terminated by an exclamation mark (!) on a line by itself.

FILES
       /usr/share/terminfo
              compiled terminal description database

       /usr/share/tabset/*
              tab settings for some terminals, in a format appropriate to be
              output to the terminal (escape sequences that set margins and
              tabs); for more information, see the "Tabs and Initialization"
              section of terminfo(5)

EXIT CODES
       If the -S option is used, tput checks for errors from each line, and if
       any errors are found, will set the exit code to 4 plus the number of
       lines with errors.  If no errors are found, the exit code is 0.  No
       indication of which line failed can be given so exit code 1 will never
       appear.  Exit codes 2, 3, and 4 retain their usual interpretation.  If
       the -S option is not used, the exit code depends on the type of
       capname:

            boolean
                   a value of 0 is set for TRUE and 1 for FALSE.

            string a value of 0 is set if the capname is defined for this
                   terminal type (the value of capname is returned on standard
                   output); a value of 1 is set if capname is not defined for
                   this terminal type (nothing is written to standard output).

            integer
                   a value of 0 is always set, whether or not capname is
                   defined for this terminal type.  To determine if capname is
                   defined for this terminal type, the user must test the
                   value written to standard output.  A value of -1 means that
                   capname is not defined for this terminal type.

            other  reset or init may fail to find their respective files.  In
                   that case, the exit code is set to 4 + errno.

       Any other exit code indicates an error; see the DIAGNOSTICS section.

DIAGNOSTICS
       tput prints the following error messages and sets the corresponding
       exit codes.

       exit code   error message
       ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
       0           (capname is a numeric variable that is not specified in
                   the terminfo(5) database for this terminal type, e.g.
                   tput -T450 lines and @TPUT@ -T2621 xmc)
       1           no error message is printed, see the EXIT CODES section.
       2           usage error
       3           unknown terminal type or no terminfo database
       4           unknown terminfo capability capname
       >4          error occurred in -S
       ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━

PORTABILITY
       The longname and -S options, and the parameter-substitution features
       used in the cup example, are not supported in BSD curses or in AT&T/USL
       curses before SVr4.

       X/Open documents only the operands for clear, init and reset.  In this
       implementation, clear is part of the capname support.  Other
       implementations of tput on SVr4-based systems such as Solaris, IRIX64
       and HPUX as well as others such as AIX and Tru64 provide support for
       capname operands.

       A few platforms such as FreeBSD and NetBSD recognize termcap names
       rather than terminfo capability names in their respective tput
       commands.

       Most implementations which provide support for capname operands use the
       tparm function to expand parameters in it.  That function expects a
       mixture of numeric and string parameters, requiring tput to know which
       type to use.  This implementation uses a table to determine that for
       the standard capname operands, and an internal library function to
       analyze nonstandard capname operands.  Other implementations may simply
       guess that an operand containing only digits is intended to be a
       number.

SEE ALSO
       clear(1), stty(1), tabs(1), terminfo(5), curs_termcap(3X).

       This describes ncurses version 5.7 (patch 20081102).

                                                                       tput(1)