Newt(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Newt(3)NAMENewt - Perl bindings for Red Hat newt library
SYNOPSIS
use Newt;
Newt::Init();
Newt::Cls();
#A lot of Newt operations...
Newt::Finished();
DESCRIPTION
The Newt module implements perl bindings for the Red Hat newt windowing
system, a terminal-based window and widget library for writing applica‐
tions with a simple, but user-friendly, interface.
Basic Newt functions
"Newt::Init()"
Starts Newt services. You must use this command first.
"Newt::Finished()"
Ends Newt services.
"Newt::Cls()"
Clears the background.
"Newt::Refresh()"
Foreces an inmediate update of the modified portions of the screen.
"Newt::Bell()"
Sends a beep to the terminal.
"Newt::GetScreenSize()"
Returns a tuple containing the screen dimensions.
Keyboard input
"Newt::WaitForKey()"
Stops program execution until a key is pressed.
"Newt::ClearKeyBuffer()"
Discards the contents of the terminal's input buffer without
waiting for additional input.
Drawing text on the root window
"Newt::DrawRootText($left, $top, $text)"
Displays the text in the indicated position.
"Newt::PushHelpLine($text)"
Saves the current help line on a stack and displays the new line.
If the text is null, Newt's default help line is displayed. If text
is a string of length 0, the help line is cleared.
"Newt::PopHelpLine()"
Replaces the current help line with the previous one. It is impor‐
tant not to pop more lines than the ones pushed.
Suspending Newt applications
By default, Newt programs cannot be suspended by the user. Instead,
programs can specify a callback function which gets invoked whe the
user presses the suspend key. To register such function, you can do
something like this:
sub my_cb {
...
}
Newt::SetSuspendCallback(\&my_cb);
If the application should suspend and continue like most user applica‐
tions, the suspend callback needs two other newt functions:
Newt::Suspend();
Newt::Resume();
The first one tells Newt to return the terminal to its initial state.
Once this is done, the application can suspend itself by sending
SIGSTP, fork a child program or whatever. When it wants to resume using
the Newt interface, is must call "Newt::Resume()" before doing so.
For more information on suspending newt applications, read the original
newt documentation.
Components
Components are the basic blocks for construction of Newt interfaces.
They all are created in a similar manner. You just have to call the
constructor to receive a blessed object of the specified class:
$object = Newt::Foo();
Once you have a component, you can add it to a panel to create a com‐
plex user input interface.
General component manipulation
You can attach a callback for a component like this:
sub comp_cb {
...
}
$component->AddCallback(\%comp_cb);
Exactly when (if ever) the callback is invoked depens on the type of
the component.
Yo can tell if a component takes or not focus when traversing a form
with the following function:
$component->TakesFocus($true_or_false);
It is handy to set some arbitrary information on a component for later
retrieval. You do this by setting its tag:
$button->Tag("OK");
If you call this function without an argument, it replies with the
actual tag for that component.
In general when the return value of any method of a component isn't
described the method returns the component itself to allow construc‐
tions like:
$panel
->Add(0,0, $componet1->Set( .... ) )
->Add(0,1, Newt::Label( .... ) )
->Add(0,2, Newt::Panel( .... )
->Add( .... )
->Add( .... ) )
->Add( .... );
Buttons
There are two kinds of buttons: full and compact:
$normal_button = Newt::Button($text);
$compact_button = Newt::CompactButton($text);
Labels
Labels are quite simple:
$label = Newt::Label($text);
You can set the text of an existing label like this:
$label->Set($text);
Entry boxes
Entry boxes are used to enter text:
$entry = Newt::Entry($width, $flags, $initial_text);
The initial text is optional. After an entry has been created, it's
contents can be set by using:
$entry->Set($text, $cursor_at_end);
The last parameter is optional, and signals if the cursor should be
moved to the end of the new value.
To get the current value of the entry box, you do this:
$entry->Get();
You can filter the characters that may be entered by using a callback
filter like this:
sub my_filter {
my ($proposed_char, $cursor_position) = @_;
...
return(0) if $char_shoud_be_ignored;
return($proposed_char) # Accept the char
}
$entry->SetFilter(\&my_filter);
As can be seen, filter callbacks receive a char and an integer which
indicates the position that the proposed char would take on the entry.
The filter function can return the very same char to indicate that it
was accepted, but it can also return another char, to actually substi‐
tute the original one. If the filter wants to simply reject the key‐
stroke, it only returns 0.
When an entry is created, some flags may be specified. The flags are
the following and may be "OR"ed:
"NEWT::NEWT_ENTRY_SCROLL"
If not specified, the user cannot enter text into the entry box
which is wider than the entry box itself. This flag removes this
limitation, and lets the user enter data of an arbitrary length.
"NEWT::NEWT_FLAG_HIDDEN"
If specified, the value of the entry is not displayed. Useful when
an applications needs a password.
"NEWT::NEWT_FLAG_RETURNEXIT"
When specified, the entry will cause the form to stop running if
the user pressed return inside the entry box. Nice shortcut for
users.
Checkboxes
Newt checkboxes are peculiar, since they may have more than two
states. To create a normal one (checked or unchecked), do this:
$check = Newt::Checkbox("Normal checkbox");
But you can create, for example, a checkbox that switches from not
checked to checked with an asterisk and then to checked with an
'M':
$check = Newt::Checkbox("Normal checkbox", " ", " *M");
As you can see, you can use the two optional parameters to tell the
default char first and then the possible chars.
To know if a checkbox is checked after the for is ran, you use the
following:
print "Is checked\n" if $check->Checked();
And you can always get the actual state like this:
$state = $check->Get();
Radio groups
You create two kinds of radio button groups, vertical and horizon‐
tal, by doing this:
$radio_group1 = Newt::VRadiogroup('Red', 'Green', 'Blue');
$radio_group2 = Newt::HRadiogroup('Red', 'Green', 'Blue');
You can put any number of options and the first one will always be
preselected. To know the index of the selected option after the
form has run, you do this:
$index = $radio_group->Get();
Listboxes
Listboxes are the most complicated components Newt provides. They
can allow single or multiple selection, and are easy to update.
They are created as follows:
$listbox = Newt::Listbox($height, $flags);
A listbox is created at a certain position and a given height. The
$height is used for two things. First of all, it is the minimum
height the listbox will use. If there are less items in the listbox
then the height, suggests the listbox will still take up that mini‐
mum amount of space. Secondly, if the listbox is set to be scrol‐
lable (by setting the "NEWT_FLAG_SCROLL" flag, $height is also the
maximum height of the listbox. If the listbox may not scroll, it
increases its height to display all of its items.
The following flags may be used when creating a listbox:
"NEWT_FLAG_SCROLL"
The listbox should scroll to display all of the items it con‐
tains.
"NEWT_FLAG_RETURNEXIT"
When the user presses return on an item in the list, the form
should return.
"NEWT_FLAG_BORDER"
A frame is drawn around the listbox, which can make it easier
to see which listbox has the focus when a form contains multi‐
ple listboxes.
"NEWT_FLAG_MULTIPLE"
By default, a listbox only lets the user select one item in the
list at a time. When this flag is specified, they may select
multiple items from the list.
Once a listbox has been created, items are appended to the bottom
like this:
$listbox->Append($item1, $item2, ...);
Appending is not the only way to add items to the list. You can
insert items in any position by telling the item that should be
before with the following command:
$listbox->Insert($before, $item1, $item2, ...);
And you can change any item just by telling:
$listbox->Set($original, $new);
Of course you can delete entries:
$listbox->Delete($item1, $item2, ...);
Or just clear out the listbox:
$listbox->Clear();
You can select and unselect items, with the following:
$listbox->Select($item1, $item2, ...);
$listbox->Unselect($item1, $item2, ...);
$listbox->ClearSelection();
but if you did not sepecify the flag "NEWT_FLAG_MULTIPLE" when con‐
structing your listbox, only the last item on the argument list of
"Unselect()" will remain selected.
To get a list of the selected items, just issue:
@selected_items = $listbox->Get();
Scales
Scales provide an easy way for telling the user the advance on some
lengthy operation. It is a horizontal bar graph which the applica‐
tion updates as the operation continues:
$scale = Newt::Scale($width, $fullvalue);
It is set as expected:
$scale->Set($amount);
Textboxes
A text box is used for displaying large amounts of text. They are
created as follows:
$textbox = Newt::Textbox($width, $height, $flags, $text, ...);
The $text parameter is optional, and if not supplied, the textbox
is created only, but it does not fill it with data. To do so, use:
$textbox->Set($text, ...);
All the arguments are simply concatenated using the double quote
operator.
The flags that can be passed to the constructor are the following:
"NEWT_FLAG_WRAP"
All text in the textbox should be wrapped to fit the width of
the textbox. If this flag is not specified, each newline-delim‐
ited line in the text is truncated if it is too long to fit.
When Newt wraps text, it tries not to break lines on spaces or
tabs. Literal newline characters are respected, and may be used
to force line breaks.
"NEWT_FLAG_SCROLL"
The text should be scrollable. When this option is used, the
scrollbar which is added increases the width of the area used
by the textbox by 2 characters.
Reflowing text
When applications need to display large amounts of text, it is com‐
mon not to know exactly where the linebreaks should go. While
textboxes are quite willing to scroll the text, the programmer
still must know what width the text will look ``best'' at (where
``best'' means most exactly rectangular; no lines much shorter or
much longer then the rest). This common is specially prevalent in
internationalized programs, which need to make a wide variety of
message string look good on a screen.
To help with this, Newt provides routines to reformat text to look
good. It tries different widths to figure out which one will look
``best'' to the user. As these commons are almost always used to
format text for textbox components, Newt makes it easy to construct
a textbox with reflowed text.
The following function reflows the provided text to a target width.
the actual width of the longest line in the returned text is
between "$width - $flexdown" and "$width + $flexup"; the actual
maximum line length is chosen to make displayed text look rectangu‐
lar. The function returns a tuple consisting of the reflowed text
and the actual width and height of it.
($r_text, $width, $height) = Newt::ReflowText($width,
$flexdown,
$flexup,
$text);
When the reflowed text is being placed in a textbox it may be eas‐
ier to use the following:
$textbox = Newt::TextboxReflowed($width, $flexdown,
$flexup, $flags,
$text, ...);
which creates a textbox, reflows the text, and places the reflowed
text in the listbox. Its parameters consist of the position of the
final textbox, the width and flex values for the text (which are
identical to the parameters passed to "Newt::Reflow()", and the
flags for the textbox (which are the same as the flags for
"Newt::Textbox()". This function does not let you limit the height
of the textbox, however, making limiting its use to constructing
textboxes which do not need to scroll.
To find out how tall the textbox created by "Newt::TextboxRe‐
flowed()" is, use "Newt::GetNumLines()", which returns the number
of lines in the textbox. For textboxes created by "Newt::TextboxRe‐
flowed()", this is always the same as the height of the textbox.
Please note that the order of the parameters of Newt::ReflowText
and Newt::TextboxReflowed differs from the C API to allow lists of
text but currently only TextboxReflowed allows this.
Scrollbars
Scrollbars may be attached to forms to let them contain more data
than they have space for. Currently, there can only be vertical
scrollbars:
$scroll = Newt::VScrollbar($height,
$normalColorset,
$thumbColorset);
When a scrollbar is created, it is given a position on the screen,
a height, and two colors. The first color is the color used for
drawing the scrollbar, and the second color is used for drawing the
thumb. This is the only place in newt where an application specifi‐
cally sets colors for a component. It s done here to let the colors
a scrollbar use match the colors of the component the scrollbar is
mated too. When a scrollbar is being used with a form, $normalCol‐
orset is often "NEWT_COLORSET_WINDOW" and $thumbColorset "NEWT_COL‐
ORSET_ACTCHECKBOX".
If you do not want to bother with colors, you can omit the last two
parameters and let Newt use the defaults.
As the scrollbar is normally updated by the component it is mated
with, there is no public interface for moving the thumb.
Panels
Panels are high level grid-like constructs that are used to group com‐
ponents. You create them by specifying the number of columns and rows
you want, as well as a caption to be used when the panel is displayed
as a toplevel:
$panel = Newt::Panel(2, 3, "Panel example");
When run, panels are centered by default, but you can specify a posi‐
tion relative to the topleft corner of the screen by appending two
optional integers:
$panel = Newt::Panel(2, 3, "Panel example", 5, 5);
Adding components to a panel is straightforward, you just have to indi‐
cate the position the component will take in the grid:
$panel1->Add(0, 0, $mycomponent);
Several optional parameters my however be used when adding components:
$panel1->Add($col,
$row,
$mycomponent,
$anchor,
$padleft,
$padtop,
$padright,
$padbottom,
$flag);
You can specify the side of the cell to which the component will be
aligned by specifying an anchor. The anchor values avalaible are
"NEWT_ANCHOR_LEFT", "NEWT_ANCHOR_RIGHT", "NEWT_ANCHOR_TOP",
"NEWT_ANCHOR_BOTTOM".
You can ask for more space on the sides of the component, perhaps to
get a cleaner, less cluttered presentation using the padding parame‐
ters, and specifiying an integer value.
Panels may be nested. For this to be done you only have to add a panel
to another as you would with any other component.
To run a panel as a toplevel and get user input, you may do the follow‐
ing:
($reason, $data) = $panel->Run();
if ($reason eq NEWT_EXIT_HOTKEY) {
if ($data eq NEWT_KEY_F12) {
print "F12 hotkey was pressed\n";
} else {
print "Some hotkey other than F12 was pressed\n";
}
} else {
print 'Form terminated by button ', $data->Tag(), "\n";
}
As can be seen on the example, when called in a list context "Run()"
returns two values, one is the reason why the form terminated and the
other is an associated data. In a scalar context only the data is
returned. Posible values for the reason are:
"NEWT_EXIT_HOTKEY"
The form exited because a hotkey was pressed. The associated data
contains the key pressed, that is, one of NEWT_KEY_* values. See
Hotkeys later for more information.
"NEWT_EXIT_COMPONENT"
The form exited because a component was activated, a button, for
instance a button. The associated data is a reference to the compo‐
nent involved.
Hotkeys
Normally, a panel terminates when the user presses a button, but
you can define some keys as "hotkeys" that will make the "Run()"
function return with "NEWT_EXIT_HOTKEY". Yo do this by issuing the
folowing:
$panel->AddHotKey(NEWT_KEY_F11);
F12 is always defined to be a hotkey.
Drawing panels instead uf running them
When you run a panel the terminal is blocked until the user presses
a component or a key that causes the panel to exit. Sometimes is
useful to present the interface to the user without blocking the
execution of code. This can be done by only drawing the panel, not
running it. It is easy to show an advance status for a lengthy
operation like this:
$i = 1;
foreach (@items) {
$label->Set("Processing item $i");
$panel->Draw();
$scale->Set($i);
process_item($_);
$i++
}
Hiding panels
Panels can be hidden in case you want by using the following:
$panel->Hide()Constants
You can import all the constants exported by this package as needed or
using several predefined tags, with the following syntax:
use Newt qw(:exits :keys);
exits NEWT_EXIT_* constants
keys NEWT_KEY_* constants
anchors NEWT_ANCHOR_* constants
colorsets NEWT_COLORSET_* constanst
flags NEWT_FLAG_* constants
entry NEWT_ENTRY_* constants
fd NEWT_FD_* constants
grid NEWT_GRID_* constants
textbox NEWT_TEXTBOX_* constants
macros
macros to make useful buttons and panels: OK_BUTTON, CANCEL_BUTTON,
QUIT_BUTTON, BACK_BUTTON, OK_CANCEL_PANEL, OK_BACK_PANEL. This
macros only create components which are properly tagged.
TO DO
Scrollable panels.
Some forms stuff, like watching file descriptors.
SEE ALSO
Writing programs using Newt, by Erik Troan.
THANKS TO
Erik Troan, for writing this useful library. Thanks for his tutorial,
too, from where I stole complete paragraphs for this documentation, I'm
afraid.
AUTHOR
The original author of the Red Hat newt library is Erik Troan,
<ewt@redhat.com> The author of this Perl bindings is Alejandro
Escalante Medina, <amedina@msg.com.mx>
DATE
Version 0.1, 5th Nov 1998
perl v5.8.8 2007-11-10 Newt(3)