NAME

Term::ReadLine::Zoid - another ReadLine package

SYNOPSIS

# In your app:
use Term::ReadLine;
my $term = Term::ReadLine->new("my app");

my $prompt = "eval: ";
my $OUT = $term->OUT || \*STDOUT;
while ( defined ($_ = $term->readline($prompt)) ) {
	# Think while (<STDIN>) {}
	my $res = eval($_);
	warn $@ if $@;
	print $OUT $res, "\n" unless $@;
}

# In some rc file
export PERL_RL=Zoid

DESCRIPTION

This package provides a set of modules that form an interactive input buffer written in plain perl with minimal dependencies. It features almost all key-bindings described in the posix spec for the sh(1) utility with some extensions like multiline editing; this includes a vi-command mode with a save-buffer (for copy-pasting) and an undo-stack.

Historically this code was part of the Zoidberg shell, but this implementation is complete independent from zoid and uses the Term::ReadLine interface, so it can be used with other perl programs.

ENVIRONMENT

The Term::ReadLine interface module uses the PERL_RL variable to decide which module to load; so if you want to use this module for all your perl applications, try something like:

export PERL_RL=Zoid

KEY MAPPING

The default key mapping is as follows:

escape
^[

Place the line editor in command mode, see Term::ReadLine::Zoid::ViCommand.

^C

End editing and return an empty string.

^D

End editing and return undef. Disabled when there are any chars on the edit line.

delete
backspace
^H
^?

Delete and backspace kill the current or previous character. The key '^?' is by default considered a backspace because most modern keyboards use this key for the "backspace" key and an escape sequence for the "delete" key. Of course '^H' is also considered a backspace.

tab
^I

Try to complete the bigword on left of the cursor.

There is no default completion included in this package, so unless you define a custom expansion it doesn't do anything. See the completion_function option.

return
^J

End editing and return the edit line to the application unless the newline is escaped.

If _all_ lines in the buffer end with a single '\', the newline is considered escaped and a new line will be inserted at the end. This behaviour can be a bit unexpected because this module has multiline support which historic applications have not, historically the escaping of a newline is done by the application not by the readline library. The surpress this behaviour, and let the application do it's thing, disable the "automultiline" option.

To enter the real multiline editing mode, press 'escape m', see Term::ReadLine::Zoid::MultiLine.

^K

Delete from cursor to the end of the line.

^L

Clear entire screen.

^R

Enter incremental search mode, see Term::ReadLine::Zoid::ISearch.

^U

This is also known as the "kill" char. It deletes all characters on the edit line and puts them in the save buffer. You can paste them back in later with 'escape-p'.

^V

Insert next key literally, ignoring any key-bindings.

WARNING: control or escape chars in the editline can cause unexpected results

^W

Delete the word before the cursor.

insert

Toggle replace bit.

^A
home

Move cursor to the begin of the edit line.

^E
end

Move cursor to the end of the edit line.

^B
left
^F

These keys can be used to move the cursor in the edit line.

^P
up
^N
down

These keys are used to rotate the history.

ATTRIBS

The hash with options can be accessed with the Attribs method. Also they can be altered interactively using the mini-buffer of the command mode.

autohistory

If enabled lines are added to the history automaticly, subject to MinLine. By default enabled.

autoenv

If enabled the environment variables COLUMNS and LINES are kept up to date. By default enabled.

autolist

If set completions are listed directly when a completion fails, if not set you need to press "tab" twice to see a list of possible completions. By default enabled.

automultiline

See return for a description. By default enabled.

bell

This option can contain a CODE reference. The default is print "\cG", which makes the terminal ring a bell.

completion

TODO private completion hook

completion_function

This option can contain either a code ref or the name of a function to perform completion. For compatibility with Term::ReadLine::Perl the global scalar $readline::rl_completion_function will be checked if this option isn't defined.

The function will get the following arguments: $word, $buffer, $start. Where $word is the word before the cursor, while $buffer is the complete text on the command line; $start is the offset of $word in $buffer.

The function should return a list of possible completions of $word. The completion list is checked for double entries.

There is no default.

ignore_comment

This option can be set to a string, if the edit line starts with this string the line is regarded to be a comment and is not returned to the application, but it will appear in the history if 'autohistory' is also set. Defaults to "#".

When there are multiple lines in the buffer they all need to start with the comment string for the buffer to be regarded as a comment.

maxcomplete

Maximum number of completions to be displayed. By default set to 150.

minline

This option controls which lines are included in the history, lines shorter then this number are ignored. When set to "0" all lines are included in the history, when set to undef all lines are ignored. Defaults to "0".

PS2

This option can contain the prompt to be used for extra buffer lines. It defaults to "> ".

Although the "PS1" prompt (as specified as an argument to the readline() method) can contain newlines, the PS2 prompt can't.

RPS1

This option can contain a string that will be shown on the right side of the screen. This is known as the "right prompt" and the idea is stolen from zsh(1).

title

Used to set the terminal title, defaults to the appname.

low_latency

Changes the escape sequences are read from input. If true delays evalution of the escape key till the next char is known. By default disabled.

FILES

This module reads a rc-file on intialisation, either $HOME/.perl_rl_zoid_rc, $HOME/.zoid/perl_rl_zoid_rc or /etc/perl_rl_zoid_rc. The rc-file is a perl script with access to the Term::ReadLine::Zoid object through the method current(). If you want to have different behaviour for different applications, try to check for $rl->{appname}.

# in for example ~/.perl_rl_zoid_rc
my $rl = Term::ReadLine::Zoid->current();

# set low latency
$rl->Attribs()->{low_latency} = 1;

# alias control-space to escape
$rl->bindchr( chr(0), 'escape' );

# create an ad hoc macro
$rl->bindkey('^P', sub { $rl->press('mplayer -vo sdl ') } );

METHODS

ReadLine api

Functions specified by the Term::ReadLine documentation.

new($appname, $IN, $OUT)

Simple constructor. Arguments are the application name (used for default prompt and title string) and optional filehandles for input and output.

ReadLine()

Returns the name of the current ReadLine module actually used.

readline($prompt, $preput)

Returns a string entered by the user. The final newline is stripped, though the string might contain newlines elsewhere.

The prompt only supports the escape "!" for the history number of the current line, use "!!" for a literal "!". All other escapes you need to parse yourself, before supplying the prompt. The prompt defaults to "$appname !> ".

If you want to do more with your prompt see Env::PS1.

$preput can be used to set some text on the edit line allready.

addhistory($line)
AddHistory($line)

Add a command to the history (subject to the minline option).

If autohistory is set this method will be called automaticly by readline.

IN()

Returns the filehandle used for input.

OUT()

Returns the filehandle used for output.

MinLine($value)

Sets minline option to $value and returns old value.

findConsole()

TODO - what uses does this have ?

Attribs()

Returns a reference to the options hash.

Features()

Returns a reference to a hash with names of implemented features.

Be aware that the naming scheme is quite arbitrary, this module uses the same names as Term::ReadLine::Gnu for common features.

Extended api

SetHistory(@hist)
GetHistory()

Simple acces to the history arry, the "set" function supports both a list and a reference, the "get" function uses "wantarray". Not sure which behaviour is compatible with T:RL::Gnu.

TermSize()

Returns number of columns and lines on the terminal.

continue()

This method can be called to continue the previous readline() call. Can be used to build a custom auto-mulitline feature.

current()

Returns the current T:RL::Zoid object, for use in rc files, see FILES.

bindkey($key, $sub, $map)

Bind a CODE reference to a key, the function gets called when the key is typed with the key name as an argument. The $map argument is optional and can be either "default", "command", "isearch" or "multiline".

If $sub is not a reference it is considered an alias; these aliases are not recursive.

For alphanumeric characters the name is the character itself, special characters have long speaking names and control characters are prefixed with a '^'.

Binding combination with the meta- or alt-key is not supported.

Private api

Methods for use in overload classes.

Avoid using these methods from the application.

switch_mode($mode)

Switch to input mode $mode; changes the key map and reblesses the object if the _on_switch key returns a class name.

reset()

Reset all temporary attributes.

save()

Returns a ref with a copy of some temporary attributes. Can be used to switch between multiple edit lines in combination with restore.

restore($save)

Restores saved attributes.

hist_up()

Scroll one position backwards in the history and display it in the buffer.

hist_down()

Scroll one position forwards in the history and display it in the buffer.

NOTES

With most modern keymappings the combination of the meta key (alt) with a letter is identical with an escape character followed by that letter.

Some functioality may in time be moved to the ::Base package.

BUGS

Line wrap doesn't always displays the last character on the line right, no functional bug though.

Please mail the author if you find any other bugs.

AUTHOR

Jaap Karssenberg || Pardus [Larus] <pardus@cpan.org>

Copyright (c) 2004 Jaap G Karssenberg. All rights reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.

SEE ALSO

Term::ReadLine::Zoid::ViCommand, Term::ReadLine::Zoid::MultiLine, Term::ReadLine::Zoid::ISearch, Term::ReadLine::Zoid::Base, Term::ReadLine, Env::PS1, Zoidberg