XStoreBytes(3X11) SysV XStoreBytes(3X11)
NAME
XStoreBytes, XStoreBuffer, XFetchBytes, XFetchBuffer, XRotateBuffers -
manipulate cut and paste buffers
SYNTAX
XStoreBytes(display, bytes, nbytes)
Display *display;
char *bytes;
int nbytes;
XStoreBuffer(display, bytes, nbytes, buffer)
Display *display;
char *bytes;
int nbytes;
int buffer;
char *XFetchBytes(display, nbytes_return)
Display *display;
int *nbytes_return;
char *XFetchBuffer(display, nbytes_return, buffer)
Display *display;
int *nbytes_return;
int buffer;
XRotateBuffers(display, rotate)
Display *display;
int rotate;
ARGUMENTS
buffer Specifies the buffer in which you want to store the bytes or
from which you want the stored data returned.
bytes Specifies the bytes, which are not necessarily ASCII or null-
terminated.
display Specifies the connection to the X server.
nbytes Specifies the number of bytes to be stored.
nbytes_return
Returns the number of bytes in the buffer.
rotate Specifies how much to rotate the cut buffers.
DESCRIPTION
Note that the cut buffer's contents need not be text, so zero bytes are
not special. The cut buffer's contents can be retrieved later by any
client calling XFetchBytes.
XStoreBytes can generate a BadAlloc error.
If the property for the buffer has never been created, a BadAtom error
results.
XStoreBuffer can generate BadAlloc and BadAtom errors.
The XFetchBytes function returns the number of bytes in the nbytes_return
argument, if the buffer contains data. Otherwise, the function returns
NULL and sets nbytes to 0. The appropriate amount of storage is
allocated and the pointer returned. The client must free this storage
when finished with it by calling XFree. Note that the cut buffer does
not necessarily contain text, so it may contain embedded zero bytes and
may not terminate with a null byte.
The XFetchBuffer function returns zero to the nbytes_return argument if
there is no data in the buffer.
XFetchBuffer can generate a BadValue error.
The XRotateBuffers function rotates the cut buffers, such that buffer 0
becomes buffer n, buffer 1 becomes n + 1 mod 8, and so on. This cut
buffer numbering is global to the display. Note that XRotateBuffers
generates BadMatch errors if any of the eight buffers have not been
created.
XRotateBuffers can generate a BadMatch error.
DIAGNOSTICS
BadAlloc The server failed to allocate the requested resource or server
memory.
BadAtom A value for an Atom argument does not name a defined Atom.
BadMatch Some argument or pair of arguments has the correct type and
range but fails to match in some other way required by the
request.
BadValue Some numeric value falls outside the range of values accepted
by the request. Unless a specific range is specified for an
argument, the full range defined by the argument's type is
accepted. Any argument defined as a set of alternatives can
generate this error.
SEE ALSO
Xlib - C Language X Interface