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15.11. Editing Input

15.11.1. Problem

You want a user to be able to edit a line before sending it to you for reading.

15.11.2. Solution

Use the standard Term::ReadLine library along with the Term::ReadLine::Gnu module from CPAN:

use Term::ReadLine;

$term = Term::ReadLine->new("APP DESCRIPTION");
$OUT = $term->OUT || *STDOUT;

$term->addhistory($fake_line);
$line = $term->readline($prompt);

print $OUT "Any program output\n";

15.11.3. Discussion

The program in Example 15-4 acts as a crude shell. It reads a line and passes it to the shell to execute. The readline method reads a line from the terminal, with editing and history recall. It automatically adds the user's line to the history.

Example 15-4. vbsh

  #!/usr/bin/perl -w
  # vbsh -  very bad shell
  use strict;
  
  use Term::ReadLine;
  use POSIX qw(:sys_wait_h);
  
  my $term = Term::ReadLine->new("Simple Shell");
  my $OUT = $term->OUT( ) || *STDOUT;
  my $cmd;
  
  while (defined ($cmd = $term->readline('$ ') )) {
      my @output = `$cmd`;
      my $exit_value  = $? >> 8;
      my $signal_num  = $? & 127;
      my $dumped_core = $? & 128;
      printf $OUT "Program terminated with status %d from signal %d%s\n",
             $exit_value, $signal_num, 
             $dumped_core ? " (core dumped)" : "";
      print @output;
      $term->addhistory($cmd);
  }

If you want to seed the history with your own functions, use the addhistory method:

$term->addhistory($seed_line);

You can't seed with more than one line at a time. To remove a line from the history, use the remove_history method, which takes an index into the history list. 0 is the first (least recent) entry, 1 the second, and so on up to the most recent history lines.

$term->remove_history($line_number);

To get a list of history lines, use the GetHistory method, which returns a list of the lines:

@history = $term->GetHistory;

15.11.4. See Also

The documentation for the standard Term::ReadLine module and the Term::ReadLine::Gnu from CPAN



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