/** \file output.h Generic output functions */ /** Constants for various character classifications. Each character of a command string can be classified as one of the following types. */ #ifndef FISH_OUTPUT_H #define FISH_OUTPUT_H #include enum { HIGHLIGHT_NORMAL, HIGHLIGHT_COMMAND, HIGHLIGHT_SUBSHELL, HIGHLIGHT_REDIRECTION, HIGHLIGHT_END, HIGHLIGHT_ERROR, HIGHLIGHT_PARAM, HIGHLIGHT_COMMENT, HIGHLIGHT_MATCH, HIGHLIGHT_SEARCH_MATCH, } ; /** Constants for various colors as used by the set_color function. */ enum { FISH_COLOR_BLACK, FISH_COLOR_RED, FISH_COLOR_GREEN, FISH_COLOR_YELLOW, FISH_COLOR_BLUE, FISH_COLOR_MAGENTA, FISH_COLOR_CYAN, FISH_COLOR_WHITE, /** The default fg color of the terminal */ FISH_COLOR_NORMAL } ; /** Sets the fg and bg color. May be called as often as you like, since if the new color is the same as the previous, nothing will be written. Negative values for set_color will also be ignored. Since the terminfo string this function emits can potentially cause the screen to flicker, the function takes care to write as little as possible. Possible values for color are any form the FISH_COLOR_* enum, FISH_COLOR_IGNORE and FISH_COLOR_RESET. FISH_COLOR_IGNORE will leave the color unchanged, and FISH_COLOR_RESET will perform an exit_attribute_mode, even if set_color thinks it is already in FISH_COLOR_NORMAL mode. In order to set the color to normal, three terminfo strings may have to be written. - First a string to set the color, such as set_a_foreground. This is needed because otherwise the previous strings colors might be removed as well. - After that we write the exit_attribute_mode string to reset all color attributes. - Lastly we may need to write set_a_background or set_a_foreground to set the other half of the color pair to what it should be. \param c Foreground color. \param c2 Background color. */ void set_color( int c, int c2 ); /** Write a char * narrow string to FD 1, needed for the terminfo strings. This is usually just a wrapper aound tputs, using writeb as the sending function. But a weird bug on PPC Linux means that on this platform, write is instead used directly. */ int writembs( char *str ); /** Write a wide character to fd 1. */ int writech( wint_t ch ); /** Write a wide character string to FD 1. */ void writestr( const wchar_t *str ); /** Write a wide character string to FD 1. If the string is wider than the specified maximum, truncate and ellipsize it. */ void writestr_ellipsis( const wchar_t *str, int max_width ); /** Escape and write a string to fd 1 */ int write_escaped_str( const wchar_t *str, int max_len ); /** parm_ich seems to often be undefined, so we use this workalike. Writes the specified number of spaces. */ int writespace( int c ); /** Return the internal color code representing the specified color */ int output_color_code( const wchar_t *val ); /** perm_left_cursor and parm_right_cursor don't seem to be defined very often so we use cursor_left and cursor_right as a fallback. */ void move_cursor( int steps ); /** This is for writing process notification messages. Has to write to stdout, so clr_eol and such functions will work correctly. Not an issue since this function is only used in interactive mode anyway. */ int writeb( tputs_arg_t b ); /** Set the function used for writing in move_cursor, writespace and set_color and all other output functions in this library. By default, the write call is used to give completely unbuffered output to stdout. */ void output_set_writer( int (*writer)(char) ); #endif