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What will give me something like ruby readline with a default value?

If I want to have a prompt on the terminal with a default value already typed in, how can I do that?

Ruby's standard Readline.readline() lets me set the history but not fill in a default value (as far as I can tell, at least)

I would like something like this:

code:

input = Readline.readline_with_default('>', 'default_text')

console:

> default_text|
like image 988
jes5199 Avatar asked Feb 22 '10 20:02

jes5199


4 Answers

What you are asking is possible with Readline. There's a callback where you can get control after the prompt is displayed and insert some text into the read buffer.

This worked for me:

Readline.pre_input_hook = -> do
  Readline.insert_text "hello.txt"
  Readline.redisplay

  # Remove the hook right away.
  Readline.pre_input_hook = nil
end

input = Readline.readline("Filename: ", false)
puts "-- input:#{input.inspect}"

BTW, I fairly tried to use HighLine, but it appeared to be a no-alternative to me. One of the disappointing reasons was the fact that HighLine#ask reads cursor movement keys as regular input. I stopped looking in that direction after that sort of discovery.

like image 81
Alex Fortuna Avatar answered Oct 23 '22 22:10

Alex Fortuna


+1 to highline

try with something like:

require 'highline/import'
input = ask('> ') {|q| q.default = 'default_text'} # > |default_text|
like image 35
Pablo Castellazzi Avatar answered Oct 23 '22 20:10

Pablo Castellazzi


Sounds like a job for ncurses. Seems like rbcurse (http://rbcurse.rubyforge.org/) is the best maintained API at the moment.

like image 43
Farrel Avatar answered Oct 23 '22 21:10

Farrel


I'm struggling with the same thing.

The way I'm doing it right now is:

options = ["the_text_you_want"]
question = "use TAB or up arrow to show the text > "

Readline.completion_append_character = " "
Readline::HISTORY.push options.first
Readline.completion_proc = proc { |s| options.grep( /^#{Regexp.escape(s)}/ ) }

while value = Readline.readline(question, true)
  exit if value == 'q'
  puts value.chomp.strip #do something with the value here
end

yes, it's silly, but it has been the only way I've found to do it.

did anybody find any solution to this?

like image 2
raf Avatar answered Oct 23 '22 21:10

raf