/** \file screen.h High level library for handling the terminal screen The screen library allows the interactive reader to write its output to screen efficiently by keeping an internal representation of the current screen contents and trying to find a reasonably efficient way for transforming that to the desired screen content. The current implementation is less smart than ncurses allows and can not for example move blocks of text around to handle text insertion. */ #ifndef FISH_SCREEN_H #define FISH_SCREEN_H #include /** A class representing a single line of a screen. */ struct line_t { std::vector text; std::vector colors; bool is_soft_wrapped; line_t() : text(), colors(), is_soft_wrapped(false) { } void clear(void) { text.clear(); colors.clear(); } void append(wchar_t txt, int color) { text.push_back(txt); colors.push_back(color); } size_t size(void) const { return text.size(); } wchar_t char_at(size_t idx) const { return text.at(idx); } int color_at(size_t idx) const { return colors.at(idx); } }; /** A class representing screen contents. */ class screen_data_t { std::vector line_datas; public: struct cursor_t { int x; int y; cursor_t() : x(0), y(0) { } cursor_t(int a, int b) : x(a), y(b) { } } cursor; line_t &add_line(void) { line_datas.resize(line_datas.size() + 1); return line_datas.back(); } void resize(size_t size) { line_datas.resize(size); } line_t &create_line(size_t idx) { if (idx >= line_datas.size()) { line_datas.resize(idx + 1); } return line_datas.at(idx); } line_t &line(size_t idx) { return line_datas.at(idx); } size_t line_count(void) { return line_datas.size(); } }; /** The class representing the current and desired screen contents. */ class screen_t { public: /** Constructor */ screen_t(); /** The internal representation of the desired screen contents. */ screen_data_t desired; /** The internal representation of the actual screen contents. */ screen_data_t actual; /** A string containing the prompt which was last printed to the screen. */ wcstring actual_left_prompt; /** Last right prompt width */ size_t last_right_prompt_width; /** The actual width of the screen at the time of the last screen write. */ int actual_width; /** If we support soft wrapping, we can output to this location without any cursor motion. */ screen_data_t::cursor_t soft_wrap_location; /** Whether the last-drawn autosuggestion (if any) is truncated, or hidden entirely */ bool autosuggestion_is_truncated; /** This flag is set to true when there is reason to suspect that the parts of the screen lines where the actual content is not filled in may be non-empty. This means that a clr_eol command has to be sent to the terminal at the end of each line, including actual_lines_before_reset. */ bool need_clear_lines; /** Whether there may be yet more content after the lines, and we issue a clr_eos if possible. */ bool need_clear_screen; /** If we need to clear, this is how many lines the actual screen had, before we reset it. This is used when resizing the window larger: if the cursor jumps to the line above, we need to remember to clear the subsequent lines. */ size_t actual_lines_before_reset; /** These status buffers are used to check if any output has occurred other than from fish's main loop, in which case we need to redraw. */ struct stat prev_buff_1, prev_buff_2, post_buff_1, post_buff_2; }; /** This is the main function for the screen putput library. It is used to define the desired contents of the screen. The screen command will use it's knowlege of the current contents of the screen in order to render the desired output using as few terminal commands as possible. \param s the screen on which to write \param left_prompt the prompt to prepend to the command line \param right_prompt the right prompt, or NULL if none \param commandline the command line \param explicit_len the number of characters of the "explicit" (non-autosuggestion) portion of the command line \param colors the colors to use for the comand line \param indent the indent to use for the command line \param cursor_pos where the cursor is */ void s_write(screen_t *s, const wcstring &left_prompt, const wcstring &right_prompt, const wcstring &commandline, size_t explicit_len, const int *colors, const int *indent, size_t cursor_pos); /** This function resets the screen buffers internal knowledge about the contents of the screen. Use this function when some other function than s_write has written to the screen. \param s the screen to reset \param reset_cursor whether the line on which the cursor has changed should be assumed to have changed. If \c reset_cursor is false, the library will attempt to make sure that the screen area does not seem to move up or down on repaint. \param reset_prompt whether to reset the prompt as well. If reset_cursor is incorrectly set to false, this may result in screen contents being erased. If it is incorrectly set to true, it may result in one or more lines of garbage on screen on the next repaint. If this happens during a loop, such as an interactive resizing, there will be one line of garbage for every repaint, which will quickly fill the screen. */ void s_reset(screen_t *s, bool reset_cursor, bool reset_prompt = true); enum screen_reset_mode_t { /* Do not make a new line, do not repaint the prompt. */ screen_reset_current_line_contents, /* Do not make a new line, do repaint the prompt. */ screen_reset_current_line_and_prompt, /* Abandon the current line, go to the next one, repaint the prompt */ screen_reset_abandon_line, /* Abandon the current line, go to the next one, clear the rest of the screen */ screen_reset_abandon_line_and_clear_to_end_of_screen }; void s_reset(screen_t *s, screen_reset_mode_t mode); /* Returns the length of an escape code. Exposed for testing purposes only. */ size_t escape_code_length(const wchar_t *code); #endif