NAME
Tickit::Widget::Entry
- a widget for entering text
SYNOPSIS
use Tickit;
use Tickit::Widget::Entry;
my $tickit = Tickit->new;
my $entry = Tickit::Widget::Entry->new(
on_enter => sub {
my ( $self, $line ) = @_;
# process $line somehow
$self->set_text( "" );
},
);
$tickit->set_root_widget( $entry );
$tickit->run;
DESCRIPTION
This class provides a widget which allows the user to enter a line of text.
KEYBINDINGS
The following keys are bound by default
Ctrl-K
Delete the entire line
Ctrl-U
Delete to the start of the line
Ctrl-W
Delete one word backwards
Backspace
Delete one character backwards
Delete
Delete one character forwards
Ctrl-Delete
Delete one word forwards
End or Ctrl-E
Move the cursor to the end of the input line
Enter
Accept a line of input by running the
on_enter
actionHome or Ctrl-A
Move the cursor to the beginning of the input line
Insert
Toggle between overwrite and insert mode
Left
Move the cursor one character left
Ctrl-Left or Alt-B
Move the cursor one word left
Right
Move the cursor one character right
Ctrl-Right or Alt-F
Move the cursor one word right
CONSTRUCTOR
$entry = Tickit::Widget::Entry->new( %args )
Constructs a new Tickit::Widget::Entry
object.
Takes the following named arguments:
- text => STR
-
Optional. Initial text to display in the box
- position => INT
-
Optional. Initial position of the cursor within the text.
- on_enter => CODE
-
Optional. Callback function to invoke when the
<Enter>
key is pressed.
ACCESSORS
$on_enter = $entry->on_enter
$entry->set_on_enter( $on_enter )
Return or set the CODE reference to be called when the key_enter_line
action is invoked; usually bound to the Enter
key.
$on_enter->( $entry, $line )
$offset = $entry->position
Returns the current entry position, in terms of characters within the text.
$entry->set_position( $position )
Set the text entry position, moving the cursor
METHODS
$entry->bind_keys( $keystr => $value, ... )
Associate methods or CODE references with keypresses. On receipt of a the key the method or CODE reference will be invoked, being passed the stringified key representation and the underlying Term::TermKey::Key
structure.
$ret = $entry->method( $keystr, $key )
$ret = $coderef->( $entry, $keystr, $key )
This method takes a hash of keystring/value pairs. Binding a value of undef
will remove it.
TEXT MODEL METHODS
These methods operate on the text input buffer directly, updating the stored text and changing the rendered display to reflect the changes. They can be used by a program to directly manipulate the text.
$text = $entry->text
Returns the currently entered text.
$entry->set_text( $text )
Replace the text in the entry box. This completely redraws the widget's window. It is largely provided for initialisation; for normal edits (such as from keybindings), it is preferrable to use text_insert
, text_delete
or text_splice
.
$entry->text_insert( $text, $pos_ch )
Insert the given text at the given character position.
$deleted = $entry->text_delete( $pos_ch, $len_ch )
Delete the given section of text. Returns the deleted text.
$deleted = $entry->text_splice( $pos_ch, $len_ch, $text )
Replace the given section of text with the given replacement. Returns the text deleted from the section.
$pos = $entry->find_bow_forward( $initial, $else )
Search forward in the string, returning the character position of the next beginning of word from the initial position. If none is found, returns $else
.
$pos = $entry->find_eow_forward( $initial )
Search forward in the string, returning the character position of the next end of word from the initial position. If none is found, returns the length of the string.
$pos = $entry->find_bow_backward( $initial )
Search backward in the string, returning the character position of the previous beginning of word from the initial position. If none is found, returns 0.
$pos = $entry->find_eow_backward( $initial )
Search backward in the string, returning the character position of the previous end of word from the initial position. If none is found, returns undef
.
TODO
Plugin ability
Try to find a nice way to allow loaded plugins, possibly per-instance if not just globally or per-class. See how many of these TODO items can be done using plugins.
More readline behaviours
History. Isearch. History replay. Transpose. Transcase. Yank ring. Numeric prefixes.
Visual selection behaviour
Shift-movement, or vim-style. Mouse.
AUTHOR
Paul Evans <leonerd@leonerd.org.uk>