Term::ReadLine(3perl) | Perl Programmers Reference Guide | Term::ReadLine(3perl) |
Term::ReadLine - Perl interface to various "readline" packages. If no real package is found, substitutes stubs instead of basic functions.
use Term::ReadLine; my $term = Term::ReadLine->new('Simple Perl calc'); my $prompt = "Enter your arithmetic expression: "; my $OUT = $term->OUT || \*STDOUT; while ( defined ($_ = $term->readline($prompt)) ) { my $res = eval($_); warn $@ if $@; print $OUT $res, "\n" unless $@; $term->addhistory($_) if /\S/; }
This package is just a front end to some other packages. It's a stub to set up a common interface to the various ReadLine implementations found on CPAN (under the "Term::ReadLine::*" namespace).
All the supported functions should be called as methods, i.e., either as
$term = Term::ReadLine->new('name');
or as
$term->addhistory('row');
where $term is a return value of Term::ReadLine->new().
The strings returned may not be useful for 3-argument open().
If "Features" method reports a feature "attribs" as present, the method "Attribs" is not dummy.
Actually "Term::ReadLine" can use some other package, that will support a richer set of commands.
All these commands are callable via method interface and have names which conform to standard conventions with the leading "rl_" stripped.
The stub package included with the perl distribution allows some additional methods:
The first call-back registered is the call back for waiting. It is expected that the callback will call the current event loop until there is something waiting to get on the input filehandle. The parameter passed in is the return value of the second call back.
The second call-back registered is the call back for registration. The input filehandle (often STDIN, but not necessarily) will be passed in.
For example, with AnyEvent:
$term->event_loop(sub { my $data = shift; $data->[1] = AE::cv(); $data->[1]->recv(); }, sub { my $fh = shift; my $data = []; $data->[0] = AE::io($fh, 0, sub { $data->[1]->send() }); $data; });
The second call-back is optional if the call back is registered prior to the call to $term->readline.
Deregistration is done in this case by calling event_loop with "undef" as its parameter:
$term->event_loop(undef);
This will cause the data array ref to be removed, allowing normal garbage collection to clean it up. With AnyEvent, that will cause $data->[0] to be cleaned up, and AnyEvent will automatically cancel the watcher at that time. If another loop requires more than that to clean up a file watcher, that will be up to the caller to handle.
One can check whether the currently loaded ReadLine package supports these methods by checking for corresponding "Features".
None
The environment variable "PERL_RL" governs which ReadLine clone is loaded. If the value is false, a dummy interface is used. If the value is true, it should be tail of the name of the package to use, such as "Perl" or "Gnu".
As a special case, if the value of this variable is space-separated, the tail might be used to disable the ornaments by setting the tail to be "o=0" or "ornaments=0". The head should be as described above, say
If the variable is not set, or if the head of space-separated list is empty, the best available package is loaded.
export "PERL_RL=Perl o=0" # Use Perl ReadLine sans ornaments export "PERL_RL= o=0" # Use best available ReadLine sans ornaments
(Note that processing of "PERL_RL" for ornaments is in the discretion of the particular used "Term::ReadLine::*" package).
2020-07-21 | perl v5.28.1 |