libcaca-tutorial(3) - Linux man page

Name

libcaca-tutorial - A libcaca tutorial First, a very simple working program, to check for basic libcaca functionalities.

#include <caca.h>

int main(void)
{
    caca_canvas_t *cv; caca_display_t *dp; caca_event_t ev;

   dp = caca_create_display(NULL);
    if(!dp) return 1;
    cv = caca_get_canvas(dp);

   caca_set_display_title(dp, 'Hello!');
    caca_set_color_ansi(cv, CACA_BLACK, CACA_WHITE);
    caca_put_str(cv, 0, 0, 'This is a message');
    caca_refresh_display(dp);
    caca_get_event(dp, CACA_EVENT_KEY_PRESS, &ev, -1);
    caca_free_display(dp);

   return 0;
}
What does it do?
• Create a display. Physically, the display is either a window or a context in a terminal (ncurses, slang) or even the whole screen (VGA).

• Get the display's associated canvas. A canvas is the surface where everything happens: writing characters, sprites, strings, images... It is unavoidable. Here the size of the canvas is set by the display.

• Set the display's window name (only available in windowed displays, does nothing otherwise).

• Set the current canvas colours to black background and white foreground.

• Write the string 'This is a message' using the current colors onto the canvas.

• Refresh the display.

• Wait for an event of type 'CACA_EVENT_KEY_PRESS'.

• Free the display (release memory). Since it was created together with the display, the canvas will be automatically freed as well.

You can then compile this code on an UNIX-like system using the following comman (requiring pkg-config and gcc):
gcc 'pkg-config --libs --cflags caca' example.c -o example