NAME

Term::Clui.pm - Perl module offering a Command-Line User Interface

SYNOPSIS

use Term::Clui;
$chosen = choose("A Title", @a_list);  # single choice
@chosen = choose("A Title", @a_list);  # multiple choice
# multi-line question-texts are possible...
$x = choose("Which ?\n(Mouse, or Arrow-keys and Return)", @w);
$x = choose("Which ?\n".help_text(), @w);

if (confirm($text)) { do_something(); };

$answer = ask($question);
$answer = ask($question,$suggestion);
$password = ask_password("Enter password : ");

$newtext = edit($title, $oldtext);
edit($filename);

view($title, $text)  # if $title is not a filename
view($textfile)  # if $textfile _is_ a filename

edit(choose("Edit which file ?", grep(-T, readdir D)));

DESCRIPTION

Term::Clui offers a high-level user interface to give the user of command-line applications a consistent "look and feel". Its metaphor for the computer is as a human-like conversation-partner, and as each question/response is completed it is summarised onto one line, and remains on screen, so that the history of the session gradually accumulates on the screen and is available for review, or for cut/paste. This user interface can therefore be intermixed with standard applications which write to STDOUT or STDERR, such as make, pgp, rcs etc.

For the user, choose() uses either (since 1.50) the mouse; or arrow keys (or hjkl) and Return; also q to quit, and SpaceBar or Button3 to highlight multiple choices. confirm() expects y, Y, n or N. In general, ctrl-L redraws the (currently active bit of the) screen. edit() and view() use the default EDITOR and PAGER if possible.

It's fast, simple, and has few external dependencies. It doesn't use curses (which is a whole-of-screen interface); it uses a small subset of vt100 sequences (up down left right normal and reverse) which are very portable, and also (since 1.50) the SET_ANY_EVENT_MOUSE and kmous (terminfo) sequences, which are supported by all xterm, rxvt, konsole, screen, linux, gnome and putty terminals.

There is an associated file selector, Term::Clui::FileSelect

Since version 1.60, a speaking interface is provided for the visually-impaired user. It employs eflite, which is also used by emacspeak. Speech is turned on either if the EDITOR environment variable is set to emacspeak, or if the CLUI_SPEAK environment variable is set to any non-empty string. Because Term::Clui's metaphor for the computer is a human-like conversation-partner, this works very naturally. The application needs no modification.

There is an equivalent Python3 module, with (as far as possible) the same calling interface, at http://cpansearch.perl.org/src/PJB/Term-Clui-1.60/py/TermClui.py

This is Term::Clui.pm version 1.60

WINDOW-SIZE

Term::Clui attempts to handle the WINCH signal. If the window size is changed, then as soon as the user enters the next keystroke (such as ctrl-L) the current question/response will be redisplayed to fit the new size.

The first line of the question, the one which will remain on-screen, is not re-formatted, but is left to be dealt with by the width of the window. Subsequent lines are split into blank-separated words which are filled into the available width; lines beginning with white-space are treated as the beginning of a new indented paragraph, individual words which will not fit onto one line are truncated, and successive blank lines are collapsed into one. If the question will not fit within the available rows, it is truncated.

If the available choice items in a choose() overflow the screen, the user is asked to enter "clue" letters, and as soon as the items matching them will fit onto the screen they are displayed as a choice.

SUBROUTINES

ask( $question ); OR ask( $question, $default );

Asks the user the question and returns a string answer, with no newline character at the end. If the optional second argument is present, it is offered to the user as a default. For the user, left and right arrow keys move backward and forward through the string, delete and backspace erase the previous character, ctrl-A moves to the beginning, ctrl-E to the end, and ctrl-C, ctrl-D or ctrl-X clear the current string.

ask_password( $question );

Does the same with no echo, as used for password entry.

choose( $question, @list );

Displays the question, and formats the list items onto the lines beneath it.

If choose is called in a scalar context, the user can choose an item using arrow keys (or hjkl) and Return, or cancel the choice with a "q". choose then returns the chosen item, or undefined if the choice was cancelled.

If choose is called in an array context, the user can also mark an item with the SpaceBar. choose then returns the list of marked items, (including the item highlit when Return was pressed), or an empty array if the choice was cancelled.

A DBM database is maintained of the question and its chosen response. The next time the user is offered a choice with the same question, if that response is still in the list it is highlighted as the default; otherwise the first item is highlighted. Different parts of the code, or different applications using Term::Clui.pm can therefore exchange defaults simply by using the same question words, such as "Which printer ?". Multiple choices are not remembered, as the danger exists that the user might fail to notice some of the highlit items (for example, all the items might not fit onto one screen).

The database ~/.clui_dir/choices or $ENV{CLUI_DIR}/choices is available to be read or written if lower-level manipulation is needed, and the EXPORT_OK routines get_default($question) and set_default($question, $choice) should be used for this purpose, as they handle DBM's problem with concurrent accesses. The whole default database mechanism can be disabled by CLUI_DIR=OFF if you really want to :-(

If the items won't fit on the screen, the user is asked to enter a substring as a clue. As soon as the matching items will fit, they are displayed to be chosen as normal. If the user pressed "q" at this choice, they are asked if they wish to change their substring clue; if they reply "n" to this, choose quits and returns undefined.

If the $question is multi-line, The first line is put at the top as usual with the choices arranged beneath it; the subsequent lines are formatted within the screen width and displayed at the bottom. After the choice is made all but the first line is erased, and the first line remains on-screen with the choice appended after it. You should therefore try to arrange multi-line questions so that the first line is the question in short form, and subsequent lines are explanation and elaboration.

confirm( $question );

Asks the question, takes "y", "n", "Y" or "N" as a response. If the $question is multi-line, after the response, all but the first line is erased, and the first line remains on-screen with Yes or No appended after it; you should therefore try to arrange multi-line questions so that the first line is the question in short form, and subsequent lines are explanation and elaboration. Returns true or false.

edit( $title, $text ); OR edit( $filename );

Uses the environment variable EDITOR ( or vi :-) Uses RCS if directory RCS/ exists

sorry( $message );

Similar to warn "Sorry, $message\n";

inform( $message );

Similar to warn "$message\n"; except that it doesn't add the newline at the end if there already is one, and it uses /dev/tty rather than STDERR if it can.

view( $title, $text ); OR view( $filename );

If the $text is longer than a screenful, uses the environment variable PAGER ( or less ) to display it. If it is one or two lines it just omits the title and displays it. Otherwise it uses a simple built-in routine which expects either "q" or Return from the user; if the user presses Return the displayed text remains on the screen and the dialogue continues after it, if the user presses "q" the text is erased.

help_text( $mode );

This returns a short help message for the user. If mode is "ask" then the text describes the keys the user has available when responding to an &ask question; If mode is "multi" then then the text describes the keys and mouse actions the user has available when responding to a multiple-choice &choose question; Otherwise, the the text describes the keys and mouse actions the user has available when responding to a single-choice &choose.

EXPORT_OK SUBROUTINES

The following routines are not exported by default, but are exported under the ALL tag, so if you need them you should:

import Term::Clui qw(:ALL);
beep()

Beeps.

timestamp()

Returns a sortable timestamp string in "YYYYMMDD hhmmss" form.

get_default( $question )

Consults the database ~/.clui_dir/choices or $ENV{CLUI_DIR}/choices and returns the choice that the user made the last time this question was asked. Is is better than opening the database directly as it handles DBM's problem with concurrent accesses.

set_default( $question, $new_default )

Opens the database ~/.clui_dir/choices or $ENV{CLUI_DIR}/choices and sets the default response which will be offered to the user made the next time this question is asked. Is is better than opening the database directly as it handles DBM's problem with concurrent accesses.

DEPENDENCIES

It requires Exporter, which is core Perl. It uses Term::ReadKey if it's available; and uses Term::Size if it's available; if not, it tries tput before guessing 80x24.

ENVIRONMENT

The environment variable CLUI_DIR can be used (by programmer or user) to override ~/.clui_dir as the directory in which choose() keeps its database of previous choices. The whole default database mechanism can be disabled by CLUI_DIR = OFF if you really want to :-(

If either the LANG or the LC_TYPE environment variables contain the string utf8 or utf-8 (case insensitive), then choose() and inform() open /dev/tty with a utf8 encoding.

If the environment variable CLUI_SPEAK is set or if EDITOR is set to emacspeak, and if flite is installed, then Term::Clui will use flite to speak its questions and choices out loud.

Term::Clui also consults the environment variables HOME, LOGDIR, EDITOR and PAGER, if they are set.

EXAMPLES

These scripts using Term::Clui and Term::Clui::FileSelect are to be found in the examples subdirectory of the build directory.

linux_admin

I use this script a lot at work, for routine system administration of linux boxes, particularly Fedora and Debian. It includes crontab, chkconfig, update-rc.d, visudo, vipw, starting and stopping daemons, reconfiguring squid samba or apache, editing sysconfig or running any of the system-config-* utilities, and much else.

audio_stuff

This script offers an arrow-key-and-return interface integrating aplaymidi, cdrecord, cdda2wav, icedax, lame, mkisofs, muscript, normalize, normalize-audio, mpg123, sndfile-play, timidity, wodim and so on, allowing audio files to be ripped, burned, played, or converted between Muscript, MIDI, WAV and MP3 formats.

login_shell

This script offers the naive user arrow-key-and-return access to a text-based browser, a mail client, a news client, ssh and ftp and various other stuff.

test_script

This is the test script, as used during development.

choose

This is a script which wraps Term::Clui::choose for use at the shell-script level. It can either choose between command-line arguments, or, with the -f (filter) option, between lines of STDIN, like grep. A -m (multiple) option allows multiple-choice. This can be a very useful script, and you may want to copy it into /usr/local/bin/ or elsewhere in your PATH.

AUTHOR

Peter J Billam www.pjb.com.au/comp/contact.html

CREDITS

Based on some old perl 4 libraries, ask.pl, choose.pl, confirm.pl, edit.pl, sorry.pl, inform.pl and view.pl, which were in turn based on some even older curses-based programs in C.

SEE ALSO

Term::Clui::FileSelect
Term::ReadKey
Term::Size
http://www.pjb.com.au/
http://invisible-island.net/xterm/ctlseqs/ctlseqs.html
perl(1)
http://www.cpan.org/SITES.html
festival(1)
emacspeak(1)

There is an equivalent Python3 module, with (as far as possible) the same calling interface, at http://cpansearch.perl.org/src/PJB/Term-Clui-1.60/py/TermClui.py