$Id: README,v 1.16 2009-05-03 14:13:27 t-peters Exp $y
This directory contains a ruby module for accessing the FSF's ncurses library.
- (C) 2002, 2003, 2004 Tobias Peters [email protected]
- (C) 2004 Simon Kaczor [email protected]
- (C) 2005 2006 Tobias Herzke [email protected]
- (C) 2013 2014 Gaute Hope [email protected]
- (C) 2013 2014 Sup developers
This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
This module is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU Lesser General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public License along with this module; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA
This README file explains how to use the ncurses
ruby interface. It is
assumed that the reader has a rough understanding of what the ncurses
library is and how to use it from the C language. It then goes into
detail, explaining what is covered by the ruby interface, and the
rules that were followed in translating the C interface into a ruby
interface.
This ncurses
interface provides access to the functions, macros,
global variables and constants of the ncurses
library. These are
mapped to a Ruby Module named ncurses
: Functions and external
variables are implemented as singleton functions of the Module
Ncurses
.
This README is organized into the following parts:
- Overview
- Installation and Usage
- External Variables
- Constants
- Functions (and their Interfaces)
- Module / Class Hierarchy
- The Window class
- The Panel Library
- The Form Library
- The Menu Library
- Locale handling
- Ncurses and Ruby Threads
- Example programs
If you don't know how to use ncurses
from C, then please read an
introduction to ncurses
before continuing with this README. Eric
Raymond has written an introduction that should be part of the ncurses
development package installed on your computer.
If you'd like a gentler introduction, then you have two options:
-
there is a part of a chapter in "The Linux Programmer's Guide" dealing with
ncurses
, available from www.tldp.org. It is quite old by now, but thencurses
interface has not changed since then, regarding the scope of covered functions, so it is still a very good read. -
There is also an up-to-date "NCURSES-Programming-HOWTO" in the HOWTO collection of the Linux Documentation Project, also available at www.tldp.org, which is worth a read.
You will also appreciate the extensive man-pages of ncurses
, a useful
reference while coding.
gem install ncursesw
Or add to your Gemfile
gem 'ncursesw'
If your programs use the scanw
functions (most unlikely) you will have to
install the scanf
library for ruby (http://www.rubyhacker.com/code/scanf).
Most ncurses
functions are only available after either Ncurses.initscr
or
Ncurses.newterm
has returned successfully.
External variables are accessed read-only, by module functions taking no
arguments. They are spelled exactly like their C counterparts. Sometimes, this
leads to module functions beginning with an uppercase letter (e.g.
Ncurses.LINES
).
One of these external variables, ESCDELAY
, can also be set with a ruby method
(Ncurses.ESCDELAY=
).
Another external variable, Ncurses.RESIZEDELAY
is introduced by this wrapper.
It contains the maximum milliseconds delay with which terminal resizings are
recognized.
(static C Preprocessor macros)
Constants are implemented as module constants in the Ncurses
module, if
possible. Ruby constants can not start with an underscore, so these constants
have been renamed (they lost the leading underscore). There are, however,
module functions with the same name as these constants, that also return
the constant's value, when invoked (e.g. Ncurses._ENDLINE
returns the value
of the constant Ncurses::ENDLINE
, which has the same value as the C constant
_ENDLINE
).
Note: The ncurses
macros starting with ACS_
are not constants, their value
depends on the terminal in use. Nevertheless, they are implemented as
constants of the Ncurses
module, but since they depend on the terminal, they
are not initialized before initscr()
has been called. If you need more than
one terminal in a single program, you can access the ACS_
values through member
functions of class SCREEN
.
Functions (also those only implemented by macros in C) can be accessed as module functions of the Module Ncurses. They take exactly the same arguments as their C counterparts. Some of the C functions return additional arguments through pointer arguments. These are implemented as follows:
When the C-function expects a pointer to int
, short
, chtype
, or attr_type
,
You should use a variable containing an empty array as the argument to the ruby
function. This is because ruby passes these types (int
) "by value" instead of
"by reference"; but arrays are passed by reference, so that you can see the
changes to them.
Attention: some macro-only functions like getsyx
accept variables of type int
,
but, being macros, they write values to their arguments. Thus, they also need
empty array arguments when called from ruby.
Example:
color_pair_number = 4
foreground_color = []
background_color = []
if (Ncurses.pair_content(color_pair_number, foreground_color,
background_color) != Ncurses::ERR)
"color pair number #{color_pair_number} contains color number " +
"#{foreground_color[0]} as the foreground color, and color " +
"number #{background_color[0]} as the background color")
end
There are 2 functions that read a value from the location pointed to by a
pointer to int, and store another value at those locations. These functions are
mouse_trafo
and wmouse_trafo
. When calling these functions, you have to provide
2 arrays, each filled with exacly one Integer. The values contained in these
arrays will then be changed by the ruby module function.
When the C-function expects a pointer to char, you should use a variable containing an empty string as the argument to the ruby function.
Example:
line2 = ""
if (Ncurses.mvwinnstr(Ncurses.stdscr, y=2, x=0, line2,
Ncurses.getmaxx(Ncurses.stdscr)) == Ncurses::ERR)
raise "could not scan 3rd line"
else
Ncurses.beep if line2.index("|")
end
The string that the C function would store at the pointer-to-char location will be appended to the given string.
Functions expecting const pointers to char do not modify the string they receive, you can pass any string to them.
When the C-function expects a pointer to WINDOW
, SCREEN
, MEVENT
,
PANEL
, FORM
, FIELD
or FIELDTYPE
then simply pass it the corresponding,
already existing ruby object.
namely scanw
, mvscanw
, wscanw
, mvwscanw
. Use an array after the format string.
The scanned values will be placed there. Remember, you need scanf
for ruby
installed for these functions to work.
module Ncurses
class WINDOW; end
class SCREEN; end
class MEVENT; end
module Panel
class PANEL; end
end
module Form
class FORM; end
class FIELD; end
class FIELDTYPE; end
end
module Menu
class MENU; end
class ITEM; end
end
end
The class WINDOW
implements method_missing
and tries to map invoked
methods to ncurses
module functions using a simple heuristic:
If the method name starts with mv
, it looks for a ncurses
module
function that starts with mvw
, and if it exists, adds itself to the
argument list and calls this function.
If no such module function exists, or the name of the invoked method
does not start with mv
, it looks if there is a module function with
the name w
+ methodname
, and if it exists, adds itself again to the
argument list and calls this function.
If this module function did not exist either, then, as a last step, it invokes a module function with the same name as the method, adding itself to the argument list.
Example: If you invoke win.mvaddch(y,x,ch)
on an Ncurses::WINDOW
object, it will delegate the method call to
Ncurses.mvwaddch(win,y,x,ch)
.
Other Examples:
win.printw("hello") => Ncurses.wprintw(win, "hello")
win.getmaxyx(y=[],
x=[]) => Ncurses.getmaxyx(win,y,x)
win.delwin() => Ncurses.delwin(win) # win cannot be used
# after this call
The panel library has also been wrapped. All panel functions are
implemented as module functions of the module Ncurses::Panel
.
Most of these functions are also implemented as methods of class
Ncurses::Panel::PANEL
, once with their original name and once with the
subword panel
and an adjacent underscore removed.
The form library was wrapped inside the Ncurses:Form
module. All
form functions are implemented as module functions on the module
Ncurses::Form
. In addition, all function for which the first
parameter is one of the objects are also implemented as an instance
method of the respective class. For example, instead of calling
post_form(form)
, you can use form.post_form()
.
Three objects are defined in the Ncurses:Form
module:
FORM
FIELD
FIELDTYPE
They are wrapping actual ncurses pointers and should be use whenever a pointer to one of these types is expected in function calls.
All form constants are defined in the module as Ruby constants with
the same name as the curses
constants.
Constructors for FORM
, FIELD
and FIELDTYPE
objects are also provided,
and they expect the same parameters as new_form
, new_field
and
new_fieldtype
curses
functions.
Field validation is implemented using Ruby Proc
objects. You must
provide a Ruby block whenever a function pointer is expected in curses
function arguments. See the example form2.rb
for more details.
The functions form_userptr
and field_userptr
are not supported. Use
form.user_object
and field.user_object
to store Ruby objects instead.
The menu library was wrapped inside the Ncurses:Menu
module. All
menu functions are implemented as module functions in the module
Ncurses::Menu
. In addition, all functions for which the first
parameter is one of the objects, are also implemented as an instance
method of the respective class.
For example, instead of calling post_menu(menu)
, you can use
menu.post_menu()
.
Two objects are defined in the Ncurses:Menu
module:
MENU
ITEM
They are wrapping actual ncurses
pointers and should be use whenever a
pointer to one of these types is expected in function calls.
All menu constants are defined in the module as Ruby constants with
the same name as the curses
constants.
Constructors for MENU
and ITEM
objects are also provided, and they
expect the same parameters as new_menu
and new_item
curses functions.
You must provide a Ruby block whenever a function pointer is expected
in curses
function arguments.
The functions menu_userptr
and item_userptr
are not supported. Use
menu.user_object
and item.user_object
to store Ruby objects instead.
The C library function setlocale
is not technically an ncurses
function.
However, it is used by many ncurses
programs, and for this purpose,
a wrapper for this function is also included in ncurses-ruby
.
The function is implemented as a module function Ncurses.ruby
, and
expects two arguments, an Integer
and a String
. It returns a string.
The constants that can be used as the Integer argument are also wrapped
as constants in the ncurses
module. See the manual page for setlocale
for documentation of this function.
The ncurses
library is not thread-safe. Your application must properly
serialize calls into ncurses
.
Prior to release 0.9.2, the getch
and wgetch
calls used to block the
complete ruby interpreter, all threads. This is no longer so. Other
threads should now continue to run during blocking calls to getch
and
wgetch
.
Directory examples
contains a few example programs demonstrating how
to use the ncurses library with ruby. Be sure to read the file
examples/LICENSES_for_examples
.