NAME
Term::Tmux::Layout - Create tmux layout strings programmatically
VERSION
version 1.192430
SYNOPSIS
my $layout = Term::Tmux::Layout->new();
my $checksum = $layout->set_layout('abc|def');
DESCRIPTION
Set tmux pane layouts using via a simpler interface. See also tmuxlayout which wraps this module in a command-line script.
ATTRIBUTES
hsize
Defines the width of the terminal window (the entire canvas), with a default of 80.
vsize
Defines the height of the terminal window tmux canvas (does not include the status line and command line at the bottom, so this should be one line smaller than the actual terminal emulator window size). This defaults to 24.
METHODS
set_layout( $definition )
This option sets the layout to the string definition provided. The string provided must follow the requirements of layout()
described elsewhere in this document.
This command will determine the current tmux window size (using get_window_size()
) and then calls layout()
to get the layout string in proper tmux format. Finally, it executes tmux to select that layout as the active layout.
You can only run this method from a tmux window. tmuxlayout
is a thin wrapper around this function.
layout ( $layout )
This method takes a "layout" in a text format, and outputs the proper output.
The layout format consists of a text field of numbers or other characters, separated by new lines. Each character reflects a single pane on the screen, defining its' size in rows and columns.
Some sample layouts:
11123
11124
This would create a layout with 4 panes. The panes would be arranged such that pane 1 takes up the entire vertical canvas, but only 3/5ths of the horizontal canvas. Pane 2 also takes up the entire vertical canvas, but only 1/5 of the horizontal canvas. Pane 3 and 4 are stacked, taking 1/5 of the horizontal canvas, evenly splitting the vertical canvas.
Note that some layouts cannot be displayed by tmux. For example, the following would be invalid:
1122
1134
5556
Tmux divides the entire screen up either horizontally or vertically. However, there is no single horizontal or vertical split that would allow this screen to be divided.
This layout can be passed a single scalar, where the rows are seperated by pipe characters |
or new lines.
If this function is passed an array in the place of the definition, each element starts its own row. Each element can also contain pipe or newlines, and these are also interpreted as row deliminators.
Thus, the following are all valid calls to layout:
$obj->layout('abc|def|ghi');
$obj->layout("abc\ndef\nghi");
$obj->layout('abc', 'def', 'ghi');
$obj->layout('abc|def', 'ghi');
checksum( $str )
This method performs the tmux checksum, as described in the tmux source code in layout_checksum()
. The input value is the string without the checksum on the front. The output is the checksum value as a string (four hex characters).
get_window_size( )
This method fetches the window size for the currently active tmux window. If tmux is not running, it instead returns undef
.
new
my $layout = Term::Tmux::Layout( hsize => 80, vsize => 23 );
Create a new layout class. Optionally takes named parameters for the hsize
and vsize
.
TODO
Break out command execution
There probably should be a Term::Tmux::Command module to execute tmux commands, rather than having the window size commands executed directly by this module.
REPOSITORY
https://github.com/jmaslak/Term-Tmux-Layout
SEE ALSO
See tmuxlayout for a command line utility that wraps this module.
BUGS
Check the issue tracker at: https://github.com/jmaslak/Term-Tmux-Layout/issues
AUTHOR
Joelle Maslak <jmaslak@antelope.net>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is copyright (c) 2015-2018 by Joelle Maslak.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.