TTY::Editor
Open a file or text in a preferred terminal text editor.
TTY::Editor provides independent component for TTY toolkit.
Installation
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem "tty-editor"
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install tty-editor
Contents
- 1. Usage
- 2. API
- 2.1 new
- 2.1.1 :command
- 2.1.2 :env
- 2.1.3 :raise_on_failure
- 2.1.4 :prompt
- 2.1.5 :hide_menu
- 2.1.6 :enable_color
- 2.1.7 :menu_interrupt
- 2.2 open
- 2.1 new
- 3. Default Editors
1. Usage
To edit a file in a default text editor do:
TTY::Editor.open("/path/to/file")
To edit text in a default editor:
TTY::Editor.open(text: "Some text")
You can also open multiple existing and/or new files:
TTY::Editor.open("file_1", "file_2", "new_file_3")
Note that the VISUAL
or EDITOR
shell environment variables take precedence when auto detecting available editors.
You can also set your preferred editor command(s) and ignore VISUAL
and EDITOR
as well as other user preferences:
TTY::Editor.open("/path/to/file", command: "vim -f")
When VISUAL
or EDITOR
are not specified, a selection menu will be presented to the user.
For example, if an user has code
, emacs
and vim
editors available on their system, they will see the following menu:
Select an editor?
1) code
2) emacs
3) vim
Choose 1-3 [1]:
You can further customise this behaviour with :prompt, :hide_menu, :enable_color and :menu_interrupt.
2. API
2.1 new
Instantiation of an editor will trigger automatic search for available command-line editors:
editor = TTY::Editor.new
You can change default search with the :command
keyword argument.
2.1.1 :command
You can force to always use a specific editor by passing :command
option:
editor = TTY::Editor.new(command: "vim")
Or you can specify multiple commands and give a user a choice:
editor = TTY::Editor.new(command: ["vim", "emacs"])
The class-level open
method accepts the same parameters:
TTY::Editor.open("/path/to/file", command: "vim")
2.1.2 :env
Use :env
key to forward environment variables to the text editor launch command:
TTY::Editor.new(env: {"FOO" => "bar"})
The class-level open
method accepts the same parameters:
TTY::Editor.open("/path/to/file", env: {"FOO" => "bar"})
2.1.3 :raise_on_failure
By default when editor fails to open a false
status is returned:
TTY::Editor.open("/path/to/unknown/file") # => false
Alternatively, you can use :raise_on_failure
to raise an error on failure to open a file.
The TTY::Editor::CommandInvocationError
will be raised anytime an editor fails to open a file:
editor = TTY::Editor.new(raise_on_failure: true)
editor.open("/path/to/unknown/file")
# => raises TTY::Editor::ComandInvocationError
2.1.4 :prompt
When more than one editor is available and user hasn't specified their preferred choice via VISUAL
or EDITOR
variables, a selection menu is presented.
For example, when code
, emacs
and vim
executable exists on the system, the following menu will be displayed:
Select an editor?
1) code
2) emacs
3) vim
Choose 1-3 [1]:
If you would like to change the menu prompt use :prompt
keyword:
editor = TTY::Editor.new(prompt: "Which one do you fancy?")
editor.open("/path/to/file")
This may produce the following in the terminal:
Which one do you fancy?
1) code
2) emacs
3) vim
Choose 1-3 [1]:
2.1.5 :hide_menu
When more than one editor is available from the default list, a selection menu will be displayed in the console:
Select an editor?
1) code
2) emacs
3) vim
Choose 1-3 [1]:
To hide the menu and automatically choose the first available editor use the :hide_menu
keyword option:
editor = TTY::Editor.new(hide_menu: true)
2.1.6 :enable_color
An editor selection menu will display the first choice in colour on terminals that support colours. However, you can turn off colouring with the :enable_color
keyword option:
editor = TTY::Editor.new(enable_color: false)
Equally, you can enforce the current menu choice to be always coloured:
editor = TTY::Editor.new(enable_color: true)
2.1.7 :menu_interrupt
When an editor selection menu gets interrupted by the Ctrl+C
key, an InputInterrupt
error is raised. To change this, provide the :menu_interrupt
option with one of the following:
-
:error
- raisesInputInterrupt
error -
:exit
- exits with130
status code -
:noop
- skips handler -
:signal
- sends interrupt signal -
proc
- custom proc handler
For example, to immediately exit the menu and program do:
editor = TTY::Editor.new(menu_interrupt: :exit)
2.2 open
There is a class-level and instance-level open
method. These are equivalent:
editor = TTY::Editor.new
editor.open(...)
# or
TTY::Editor.open(...)
Creating TTY::Editor
instance means that the search for a command editor will be performed only once. Then the editor command will be shared between invocations of open
call.
Conversely, the class-level open
method will search for an editor each time it is invoked.
The following examples of using the open
method apply to both the instance and class level invocations.
If you wish to open an editor without giving a file or content do:
TTY::Editor.open
To open a file, pass a path as an argument to open
:
TTY::Editor.open("../README.md")
# => true
When editor successfully opens a file or content then true
is returned, false
otherwise.
You can change this with :raise_on_failure
keyword to raise a TTY::Editor::CommandInvocation
error when an editor cannot be opened.
In order to open text content inside an editor use :text
keyword like so:
TTY::Editor.open(text: "Some text")
You can also provide filename that will be created with specified content before editor is opened:
TTY::Editor.open("/path/to/new-file", text: "Some text")
If you open a filename with already existing content then the new content will be appended at the end of the file.
You can also open multiple existing and non-existing files providing them as consecutive arguments:
TTY::Editor.open("file_1", "file_2", "new_file_3")
3. Default Editors
When an editor in EDITOR
and VISUAL
environment variables can't be found or isn't specified, a choice menu is displayed. The menu includes available editors from the default list of text editors:
Atom
Emacs
gedit
JED
Kate
Mg
Nano
Notepad
Pico
Sublime Text
TextMate
Vi
Vim
Visual Studio Code
Development
After checking out the repo, run bin/setup
to install dependencies. Then, run rake spec
to run the tests. You can also run bin/console
for an interactive prompt that will allow you to experiment.
To install this gem onto your local machine, run bundle exec rake install
. To release a new version, update the version number in version.rb
, and then run bundle exec rake release
, which will create a git tag for the version, push git commits and tags, and push the .gem
file to rubygems.org.
Contributing
Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/piotrmurach/tty-editor. This project is intended to be a safe, welcoming space for collaboration, and contributors are expected to adhere to the code of conduct.
License
The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.
Code of Conduct
Everyone interacting in the TTY::Editor project's codebases, issue trackers, chat rooms and mailing lists is expected to follow the code of conduct.
Copyright
Copyright (c) 2017 Piotr Murach. See LICENSE for further details.