refresh,wrefresh
The refresh and wrefresh routines (or wnoutrefresh and doupdate) must be called to get actual output to
the terminal, as other routines merely manipulate data structures. The routine wrefresh copies the named
window to the physicalscreen, taking into account what is already there to do optimizations. The
refresh routine is the same, using stdscr as the default window. Unless leaveok(3NCURSES) has been
enabled, the physical cursor of the terminal is left at the location of the cursor for that window.
wnoutrefresh,doupdate
The wnoutrefresh and doupdate routines allow multiple updates with more efficiency than wrefresh alone.
In addition to all the window structures, curses keeps two data structures representing the terminal
screen:
• a physicalscreen, describing what is actually on the screen, and
• a virtualscreen, describing what the programmer wants to have on the screen.
The routine wrefresh works by
• first calling wnoutrefresh, which copies the named window to the virtualscreen, and
• then calling doupdate, which compares the virtualscreen to the physicalscreen and does the actual
update.
If the programmer wishes to output several windows at once, a series of calls to wrefresh results in
alternating calls to wnoutrefresh and doupdate, causing several bursts of output to the screen. By first
calling wnoutrefresh for each window, it is then possible to call doupdate once, resulting in only one
burst of output, with fewer total characters transmitted and less CPU time used.
If the win argument to wrefresh is the physicalscreen (i.e., the global variable curscr), the screen is
immediately cleared and repainted from scratch.
The phrase “copies the named window to the virtual screen” above is ambiguous. What actually happens is
that all touched (changed) lines in the window are copied to the virtual screen. This affects programs
that use overlapping windows; it means that if two windows overlap, you can refresh them in either order
and the overlap region will be modified only when it is explicitly changed. (But see the section on
PORTABILITY below for a warning about exploiting this behavior.)
wredrawln,redrawwin
The wredrawln routine indicates to curses that some screen lines are corrupted and should be thrown away
before anything is written over them. It touches the indicated lines (marking them changed). The
routine redrawwin touches the entire window.