| WIMENU(1) | General Commands Manual | WIMENU(1) |
wimenu - The wmii menu program
wimenu [-i] [-h <history file>] [-n <history count>] [-p <prompt>]
wimenu -v
wimenu is wmii's standard menu program. It's used extensively by wmii and related programs to prompt the user for input. The standard configuration uses it to launch programs, select views, and perform standard actions. It supports basic item completion and history searching.
Normal use of wimenu shouldn't require any arguments other than the following. More advanced options are documented below.
<key> [action] [args]
where <key> is a key name, similar to the format used by wmii. For action and args, please refer to the default bindings, provided in the source distribution under cmd/menu/keys.txt, or use strings(1) on the wimenu executable (this level of customization is reserved for the determined).
wimenu's default key bindings are based largely on the movement keys of vi and the standard UNIX shell input bindings.
Custom, multipart completion data may be proveded by an external application. When the standard input is not a TTY, processing of a set of completions stops at every blank line. After the first new line or EOF, wimenu displays the first set of menu items, and waits for further input. The completion items may be replaced by writing out a new set, again followed by a new line. Every set following the first must begin with a line containing a single decimal number specifying where the new completion results are to be spliced into the input. When an item is selected, text from this position to the position of the caret is replaced.
<text before caret>\n<text after caret>\n
Let's assume that a script would like to provide a menu with completions first for a command name, then for arguments to that command. Given three commands and argument sets,
the following script provides the appropriate completions:
#!/bin/sh \-f
rm fifo
mkfifo fifo
# Open wimenu with a fifo as its stdin
wimenu \-c <fifo | awk '
BEGIN {
# Define the completion results
cmds = "foo\nbar\nbaz\n"
cmd["foo"] = "1\n2\n3\n"
cmd["bar"] = "4\n5\n6\n"
cmd["baz"] = "7\n8\n9\n"
# Print the first set of completions to wimenu’s fifo
fifo = "fifo"
print cmds >fifo; fflush(fifo)
}
{ print; fflush() }
# Push out a new set of completions
function update(str, opts) {
print length(str) >fifo # Print the length of the preceding string
print opts >fifo # and the options themself
fflush(fifo)
}
# Ensure correct argument count with trailing spaces
/ $/ { $0 = $0 "#"; }
{ # Process the input and provide the completions
if (NF == 1)
update("", cmds) # The first arg, command choices
else
update($1 " ", cmd[$1]) # The second arg, command arguments
# Skip the trailing part of the command
getline rest
}
' | tail \-1
In theory, this facility can be used for myriad purposes, including hijacking the programmable completion facilities of most shells. See also the provided examples[1].
wmii(1), wmiir(1), wistrug(1), wmii9menu(1), dmenu(1)
[1] http://www.suckless.org/wiki/wmii/tips/9p_tips
[2] /usr/share/doc/wmii/examples
| Oct, 2009 | wmii-hg2813 |