I'm working on python curses and I have an initial window with initscr(). Then I create several new windows to overlap it, I want to know if I can delete these windows and restore the standard screen without having to refill it. Is there a way? Could someone tell me the difference between a window, subwindow, pad and sub pad.
I have this code:
stdscr = curses.initscr()
####Then I fill it with random letters
stdscr.refresh()
newwin=curses.newwin(10,20,5,5)
newwin.touchwin()
newwin.refresh()
####I want to delete newwin here so that if I 开发者_JS百科write stdscr.refresh() newwin won't appear
stdscr.touchwin()
stdscr.refresh()
####And here it should appear as if no window was created.
This, e.g, should work:
import curses
def fillwin(w, c):
y, x = w.getmaxyx()
s = c * (x - 1)
for l in range(y):
w.addstr(l, 0, s)
def main(stdscr):
fillwin(stdscr, 'S')
stdscr.refresh()
stdscr.getch()
newwin=curses.newwin(10,20,5,5)
fillwin(newwin, 'w')
newwin.touchwin()
newwin.refresh()
newwin.getch()
del newwin
stdscr.touchwin()
stdscr.refresh()
stdscr.getch()
curses.wrapper(main)
This fills the terminal with 'S'; at any keystoke, it fills the window with 'w'; at the next keystroke, it removes the window and show the stdscr again, so it's again all-'S'; at the next keystroke, the script ends and the terminal goes back to normal. Isn't this working for you? Or do you actually want something different...?
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