Term::Completion(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Term::Completion(3)NAMETerm::Completion - read one line of user input, with convenience
functions
USAGE
use Term::Completion;
my $tc = Term::Completion->new(
prompt => "Enter your first name: ",
choices => [ qw(Alice Bob Chris Dave Ellen) ]
);
my $name = $tc->complete();
print "You entered: $name\n";
DESCRIPTIONTerm::Completion is an extensible, highly configurable replacement for
the venerable Term::Complete package. It is object-oriented and thus
allows subclassing. Two derived classes are Term::Completion::Multi and
Term::Completion::Path.
A prompt is printed and the user may enter one line of input,
submitting the answer by pressing the ENTER key. This basic scenario
can be implemented like this:
my $answer = <STDIN>;
chomp $answer;
But often you don't want the user to type in the full word (from a list
of choices), but allow completion, i.e. expansion of the word as far as
possible by pressing as few keys as necessary.
Some users like to cycle through the choices, preferably with the
up/down arrow keys.
And finally, you may not want the user to enter any random characters,
but validate what was enter and come back if the entry did not pass the
validation.
If you are missing full line editing (left/right, delete to the left
and right, jump to the beginning and the end etc.), you are probably
wrong here, and want to consider Term::ReadLine and friends.
Global Setup
The technical challenge for this package is to read single keystrokes
from the input handle - usually STDIN, the user's terminal. There are
various ways how to accomplish that, and Term::Completion supports them
all:
use Term::Completion qw(:stty);
Use the external "stty" command to configure the terminal. This is
what Term::Complete does, and works fine on systems that have a
working "stty". However, using an external command seems like an
ugly overhead. See also Term::Completion::_stty.
use Term::Completion qw(:readkey);
This is the default for all systems, as we assume you have
Term::ReadKey installed. This seems to be the right approach to
also support various platforms. See also
Term::Completion::_readkey.
use Term::Completion qw(:POSIX);
This uses the POSIX interface ("POSIX::Termios") to set the
terminal in the right mode. It should be well portable on UNIX
systems. See also Term::Completion::_POSIX.
Exports
Term::Completion does not export anything by default, in order not to
pollute your namespace. Here are the exportable methods:
Complete(...)
For compatibility with Term::Complete, you can import the
"Complete" function:
use Term::Completionqw(Complete);
my $result = Complete($prompt, @choices);
Methods
Term::Completion objects are simple hashes. All fields are fully
accessible and can be tweaked directly, without accessor methods.
Term::Completion offers the following methods:
new(...)
The constructor for Term::Completion objects. Arguments are
key/value pairs. See "Configuration" for a description of all
options. Note that "columns" and "rows" overrides the real terminal
size from Term::Size.
Usually you'd supply the list of choices and the prompt string:
my $tc = Term::Completion->new(
prompt => "Pick a color: ",
choices => [ qw(red green blue) ]
);
The object can be reused several times for the same purpose.
Term::Completion objects are simple hashes. All fields are fully
accessible and can be tweaked directly, without accessor methods.
In the example above, you can manipulate the choice list:
push(@{$tc->{choices}}, qw(cyan magenta yellow));
Note that the constructor won't actually execute the query - that
is done by the "complete()" method.
complete()
This method executes the query and returns the result string. It
is guaranteed that the result is a defined value, it may however be
empty or 0.
post_process($answer)
This method is called on the answer string entered by the user
after the ENTER key was pressed. The implementation in the base
class is just stripping any leading and trailing whitespace. The
method returnes the postprocessed answer string.
validate($answer)
This method is called on the postprocessed answer and returns:
1. in case of success
The correct answer string. Please note that the validate method may
alter the answer, e.g. to adapt it to certain conventions
(lowercase only).
2. in case of failure
The undef value. This indicates a failure of the validation. In
that situation an error message should be printed to tell the user
why the validation failed. This should be done using the following
idiom for maximum portability:
$this->{out}->print("ERROR: no such choice available",
$this->{eol});
Validation is turned on by the "validation" parameter. See
"Predefined Validations" for a list of available validation
options.
You can override this method in derived classes to implement your
own validation strategy - but in some situations this could be too
much overhead. So the base class understands this callback:
my $tc = Term::Completion->new(
prompt => 'Enter voltage: ',
choices => [ qw(1.2 1.5 1.8 2.0 2.5 3.3) ],
validate => [
'Voltage must be a positive, non-zero value' =>
sub { $_[0] > 0.0 }
]
);
get_choices($answer)
This method returns the items from the choice list which match the
current answer string. This method is used by the completion
algorithm and the list of choices. This can be overridden to
implement a completely different way to get the choices (other than
a static list) - e.g. by querying a database.
show_choices($answer)
This method is called when the user types CTRL-D (or TAB-TAB) to
show the list of choices, available with the current answer string.
Basically "get_choices($answer)" is called and then the list is
pretty-printed using "_show_choices(...)".
_show_choices(...)
Pretty-print the list of items given as arguments. The list is
formatted into columns, like in UNIX' "ls" command, according to
the current terminal width (if Term::Size is available). If the
list is long, then poor man's paging is enabled, comparable to the
UNIX "more" command. The user can use ENTER to proceed by one line,
SPACE to proceed to the next page and Q or CTRL-C to quit paging.
After listing the choices and return from this method, the prompt
and the current answer are redisplayed.
Override this method if you have a better pretty-printer/pager. :-)
Configuration
There is a global hash %Term::Completion::DEFAULTS that contains the
default values for all configurable options. Upon object construction
(see "new(...)" any of these defaults can be overridden by placing the
corresponding key/value pair in the arguments. Find below the list of
configurable options, their default value and their purpose.
The key definitions are regular expressions ("qr/.../") - this allows
to match multiple keys for the same action, as well as diable the
action completely by specifying an expression that will never match a
single character, e.g. "qr/-disable-/".
"in"
The input file handle, default is "\*STDIN". Can be any filehandle-
like object, has to understand the "getc()" method.
"out"
The output file handle, default is "\*STDOUT". Can be basically any
filehandle-like object, has to understand the "print()" method.
"tab"
Regular expression matching those keys that should work as the TAB
key, i.e. complete the current answer string as far as possible,
and when pressed twice, show the list of matching choices. Default
is the tab key, i.e. "qr/\t/".
"list"
Regular expression matching those keys that should trigger the
listing of choices. Default is - like in Term::Complete - CTRL-D,
i.e. "qr/\cd/".
"kill"
Regular expression matching those keys that should delete all
input. Default is CTRL-U, i.e. "qr/\cu/".
"erase"
Regular expression matching those keys that should delete one
character (backspace). Default is the BACKSPACE and the DELETE
keys, i.e. "qr/[\177\010]/".
"wipe"
This is a special control: if either "sep" or "delim" are defined
(see below), then this key "wipes" all characters (from the right)
until (and including) the last separator or delimiter. Default is
CTRL-W, i.e. "qr/\cw/".
"enter"
Regular expression matching those keys that finish the entry
process. Default is the ENTER key, and for paranoia reasons we use
"qr/[\r\n]/".
"up"
Regular expression matching those keys that select the previous
item from the choice list. Default is CTRL-P, left and up arrow
keys, i.e. "qr/\cp|\x1b\[[AD]/".
"down"
Regular expression matching those keys that select the next item
from the choice list. Default is CTRL-N, right and down arrow keys,
i.e. "qr/\cn|\x1b\[[BC]/".
"quit"
Regular expression matching those keys that exit from paging when
the list of choices is displayed. Default is 'q' and CTRL-C, i.e.
"qr/[\ccq]/".
"prompt"
A default prompt string to apply for all Term::Completion objects.
Default is the empty string.
"columns"
Default number of terminal columns for the list of choices. This
default is only applicable if Term::Size is unavailable to get the
real number of columns. The default is 80.
"rows"
Default number of terminal rows for the list of choices. This
default is only applicable if Term::Size is unavailable to get the
real number of rows. The default is 24. If set to 0 (zero) there
won't be any paging when the list of choices is displayed.
"bell"
The character which rings the terminal bell, default is "\a". Used
when completing with the TAB key and there are multiple choices
available, and when paging is restarted because the terminal size
was changed.
"page_str"
The string to display when max number of lines on the terminal has
been reached when displaying the choices. Default is '--more--'.
"eol"
The characters to print for a new line in raw terminal mode.
Default is "\r\n".
"del_one"
The characters to print for deleting one character (to the left).
Default is "\b \b".
"helptext"
This is an optional text which is printed by the "complete()"
method before the actual completion process starts. It may be a
multi-line string and should end with a newline character. Default
is undef. The text could for example look like this:
helptext => <<'EOT',
You may use the following control keys here:
TAB complete the word
CTRL-D show list of matching choices (same as TAB-TAB)
CTRL-U delete the input
CTRL-H delete a character (backspace)
CTRL-P cycle through choices (backward) (also up arrow)
CTRL-N cycle through choices (forward) (also down arrow)
EOT
"choices"
The default list of choices for all Term::Completion objects
(unless overridden by the "new(...)" constructor. Has to be an
array reference. Default is the empty array reference "[]".
Undefined items are filtered out.
Predefined Validations
Whenever you need validation of the user's input, you can always
specify your own code, see "validate($answer)" above. To support
everybody's laziness, there are a couple of predefined validation
methods available. You can specify them as a blank or comma separated
string in the "new(...)" constructor:
my $tc = Term::Completion->new(
prompt => 'Fruit: ',
choices => [ qw(apple banana cherry) ],
validation => 'nonblank fromchoices'
);
In the example above, you are guaranteed the user will choose one of
the given choices. Here's a list of all pre-implemented validations:
"uppercase"
Map all the answer string to upper case before proceeding with any
further validation.
"lowercase"
Map all the answer string to lower case before proceeding with any
further validation.
"match_one"
This option has some magic: it tries to match the answer string
first at the beginning of all choices; if that yields a unique
match, the match is returned. If not, the answer string is matched
at any position in the choices, and if that yields a unique match,
the match is returned. Otherwise an error will be raised that the
answer does not match a unique item.
"nonempty"
Raises an error if the answer has a length of zero characters.
"nonblank"
Raises an error if the answer does not contain any non-whitespace
character.
"fromchoices"
Only allow literal entries from the choice list, or the empty
string. If you don't like the latter, combine this with "nonempty".
"numeric"
Only allow numeric values, e.g. -1.234 or 987.
"integer"
Only allow integer numbers, e.g. -1 or 234.
"nonzero"
Prohibit the numeric value 0 (zero). To avoid warnings about non-
numeric values, this should be used together with one of "numeric"
or "integer".
"positive"
Only allow numeric values greater than zero. To avoid warnings
about non-numeric values, this should be used together with one of
"numeric" or "integer".
This list obviously can be arbitrarily extended. Suggestions (submitted
as patches) are welcome.
CAVEATS
Terminal handling
This package temporarily has to set the terminal into 'raw' mode, which
means that all keys lose their special meaning (like CTRL-C, which
normally interrupts the script). This is a highly platform-specific
operation, and therefore this package depends on the portability of
Term::ReadKey and POSIX. Reports about failing platforms are welcome,
but there is probably little that can be fixed here.
Terminal size changes
This package does the best it can to handle changes of the terminal
size during the completion process. It redisplays the prompt and the
current entry during completion, and restarts paging when showing the
list of choices. The latter however only after you press a key - the
bell sounds to indicate that something happened. This is because it
does not seem possible to jump out of a getc().
Arrow key handling
On UNIX variants, the arrow keys generate a sequence of bytes, starting
with the escape character, followed by a square brackets and others.
Term::Completion accumulates these characters until they either match
this sequence, or not. In the latter case, it will drop the previous
characters and proceed with the last one typed. That however means that
you won't be able to assign the bare escape key to an action. I found
this to be the lesser of the evils. Suggestions on how to solve this in
a clean way are welcome. Yes, I read "How can I tell whether there's a
character waiting on a filehandle?" in perlfaq5 but that's probably
little portable.
SEE ALSO
Term::Complete, Term::ReadKey, Term::Size, POSIX, Term::ReadLine
AUTHOR
Marek Rouchal, <rouchal@muc.infineon.com>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright (C) 2009 by Marek Rouchal
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
under the same terms as Perl itself, either Perl version 5.8.8 or, at
your option, any later version of Perl 5 you may have available.
POD ERRORS
Hey! The above document had some coding errors, which are explained
below:
Around line 623:
You forgot a '=back' before '=head2'
perl v5.14.1 2009-02-27 Term::Completion(3)