Daniel Supernault a42503817b Add basic ORM implementation | 6 年之前 | |
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.. | ||
Bin | 5 年之前 | |
Chrome | 5 年之前 | |
Dispatcher | 5 年之前 | |
Documentation | 5 年之前 | |
Readline | 5 年之前 | |
Terminfo | 5 年之前 | |
Test | 5 年之前 | |
.State | 5 年之前 | |
.gitignore | 5 年之前 | |
.travis.yml | 5 年之前 | |
CHANGELOG.md | 5 年之前 | |
Console.php | 5 年之前 | |
Cursor.php | 5 年之前 | |
Exception.php | 5 年之前 | |
GetOption.php | 5 年之前 | |
Input.php | 5 年之前 | |
Mouse.php | 5 年之前 | |
Output.php | 5 年之前 | |
Parser.php | 5 年之前 | |
Processus.php | 5 年之前 | |
README.md | 5 年之前 | |
Tput.php | 5 年之前 | |
Window.php | 5 年之前 | |
composer.json | 5 年之前 |
Hoa is a modular, extensible and
structured set of PHP libraries.
Moreover, Hoa aims at being a bridge between industrial and research worlds.
This library allows to interact easily with a terminal: getoption, cursor, window, processus, readline etc.
With Composer, to include this library into
your dependencies, you need to
require hoa/console
:
$ composer require hoa/console '~3.0'
For more installation procedures, please read the Source page.
Before running the test suites, the development dependencies must be installed:
$ composer install
Then, to run all the test suites:
$ vendor/bin/hoa test:run
For more information, please read the contributor guide.
We propose a quick overview of some features: cursor, window, readline, processus and finally getoption.
The Hoa\Console\Cursor
class allows to manipulate the cursor. Here is a list
of some operations:
move
,moveTo
,save
,restore
,clear
,hide
,show
,getPosition
,colorize
,The API is very straightforward. For example, we can use l
, left
or ←
to
move the cursor on the left column. Thus we move the cursor to the left 3 times
and then to the top 2 times:
Hoa\Console\Cursor::move('left left left up up');
… or with Unicode symbols:
Hoa\Console\Cursor::move('← ← ← ↑ ↑');
This method moves the cursor relatively from its current position, but we are able to move the cursor to absolute coordinates:
Hoa\Console\Cursor::moveTo(13, 42);
We are also able to save the current cursor position, to move, clear etc., and then to restore the saved position:
Hoa\Console\Cursor::save(); // save
Hoa\Console\Cursor::move('↓'); // move below
Hoa\Console\Cursor::clear('↔'); // clear the line
echo 'Something below…'; // write something
Hoa\Console\Cursor::restore(); // restore
Another example with colors:
Hoa\Console\Cursor::colorize(
'underlined foreground(yellow) background(#932e2e)'
);
Please, read the API documentation for more informations.
The Hoa\Console\Mouse
class allows to listen the mouse actions and provides
the following listeners: mouseup
, mousedown
, wheelup
and wheeldown
.
Example:
$mouse = Hoa\Console\Mouse::getInstance();
$mouse->on('mousedown', function ($bucket) {
print_r($bucket->getData());
});
$mouse::track();
And then, when we left-click, we will see:
Array
(
[x] => 69
[y] => 30
[button] => left
[shift] =>
[meta] =>
[ctrl] =>
)
When we left-click while hiting the shift key, we will see:
Array
(
[x] => 71
[y] => 32
[button] => left
[shift] => 1
[meta] =>
[ctrl] =>
)
This is an experimental API.
The Hoa\Console\Window
class allows to manipulate the window. Here is a list
of some operations:
setSize
,getSize
,moveTo
,getPosition
,scroll
,minimize
,restore
,raise
,setTitle
,getTitle
,copy
,Furthermore, we have the hoa://Event/Console/Window:resize
event channel to
listen when the window has been resized.
For example, we resize the window to 40 lines and 80 columns, and then we move the window to 400px horizontally and 100px vertically:
Hoa\Console\Window::setSize(40, 80);
Hoa\Console\Window::moveTo(400, 100);
If we do not like our user, we are able to minimize its window:
Hoa\Console\Window::minimize();
sleep(2);
Hoa\Console\Window::restore();
We are also able to set or get the title of the window:
Hoa\Console\Window::setTitle('My awesome application');
Finally, if we have a complex application layout, we can repaint it when the
window is resized by listening the hoa://Event/Console/Window:resize
event
channel:
Hoa\Event\Event::getEvent('hoa://Event/Console/Window:resize')
->attach(function (Hoa\Event\Bucket $bucket) {
$data = $bucket->getData();
$size = $data['size'];
echo
'New dimensions: ', $size['x'], ' lines x ',
$size['y'], ' columns.', "\n";
});
Please, read the API documentation for more informations
The Hoa\Console\Readline\Readline
class provides an advanced readline which
allows the following operations:
It supports UTF-8. It is based on bindings, and here are some:
arrow up
and arrow down
: move in the history,arrow left
and arrow right
: move the cursor left and right,Ctrl-A
: move to the beginning of the line,Ctrl-E
: move to the end of the line,Ctrl-B
: move backward of one word,Ctrl-F
: move forward of one word,Ctrl-W
: delete first backard word,Backspace
: delete first backward character,Enter
: submit the line,Tab
: autocomplete.Thus, to read one line:
$readline = new Hoa\Console\Readline\Readline();
$line = $readline->readLine('> '); // “> ” is the prefix of the line.
The Hoa\Console\Readline\Password
allows the same operations but without
printing on STDOUT.
$password = new Hoa\Console\Readline\Password();
$line = $password->readLine('password: ');
We are able to add a mapping with the help of the
Hoa\Console\Readline\Readline::addMapping
method. We use \e[…
for \033[
,
\C-…
for Ctrl-…
and a character for the rest. We can associate a character
or a callable:
$readline->addMapping('a', 'z'); // crazy, we replace “a” by “z”.
$readline->addMapping('\C-R', function ($readline) {
// do something when pressing Ctrl-R.
});
We are also able to manipulate the history, thanks to the addHistory
,
clearHistory
, getHistory
, previousHistory
and nextHistory
methods on the
Hoa\Console\Readline\Readline
class.
Finally, we have autocompleters that are enabled on Tab
. If one solution is
proposed, it will be inserted directly. If many solutions are proposed, we are
able to navigate in a menu to select the solution (with the help of keyboard
arrows, Enter, Esc etc.). Also, we are able to combine autocompleters. The
following example combine the Word
and Path
autocompleters:
$functions = get_defined_functions();
$readline->setAutocompleter(
new Hoa\Console\Readline\Autocompleter\Aggregate([
new Hoa\Console\Readline\Autocompleter\Path(),
new Hoa\Console\Readline\Autocompleter\Word($functions['internal'])
])
);
Here is an example of the result:
On Windows, a readline is equivalent to a simple fgets(STDIN)
.
The Hoa\Console\Processus
class allows to manipulate processus as a stream
which implements Hoa\Stream\IStream\In
, Hoa\Stream\IStream\Out
and
Hoa\Stream\IStream\Pathable
interfaces (please, see the
Hoa\Stream
library).
Basically, we can read STDOUT like this:
$processus = new Hoa\Console\Processus('ls');
$processus->open();
echo $processus->readAll();
And we can write on STDIN like this:
$processus->writeAll('foobar');
etc. This is very classical.
Hoa\Console\Processus
also proposes many events: start
, stop
, input
,
output
and timeout
. Thus:
$processus = new Hoa\Console\Processus('ls');
$processus->on('output', function (Hoa\Event\Bucket $bucket) {
$data = $bucket->getData();
echo '> ', $data['line'], "\n";
});
$processus->run();
We are also able to read and write on more pipes than 0 (STDOUT), 1 (STDIN) and 2 (STDERR). In the same way, we can set the current working directory of the processus and its environment.
We can quickly execute a processus without using a stream with the help of the
Hoa\Console\Processus::execute
method.
The Hoa\Console\Parser
and Hoa\Console\GetOption
classes allow to parse a
command-line and get options and inputs values easily.
First, we need to parse a command-line, such as:
$parser = new Hoa\Console\Parser();
$parser->parse('-s --long=value input');
Second, we need to define our options:
$options = new Hoa\Console\GetOption(
[
// long name type short name
// ↓ ↓ ↓
['short', Hoa\Console\GetOption::NO_ARGUMENT, 's'],
['long', Hoa\Console\GetOption::REQUIRED_ARGUMENT, 'l']
],
$parser
);
And finally, we iterate over options:
$short = false;
$long = null;
// short name value
// ↓ ↓
while (false !== $c = $options->getOption($v)) {
switch ($c) {
case 's':
$short = true;
break;
case 'l':
$long = $v;
break;
}
}
var_dump($short, $long); // bool(true) and string(5) "value".
Please, see API documentation of Hoa\Console\Parser
to see all supported forms
of options (flags or switches, long or short ones, inputs etc.).
It also support typos in options. In this case, we have to add:
case '__ambiguous':
$options->resolveOptionAmbiguity($v);
break;
If one solution is found, it will select this one automatically, else it will
raise an exception. This exception is caught by Hoa\Console\Dispatcher\Kit
when using the hoa
script and a prompt is proposed.
Thanks to the Hoa\Router
library and the
Hoa\Dispatcher
library (with its
dedicated kit Hoa\Console\Dispatcher\Kit
), we are able to build commands
easily. Please, see all Bin/
directories in different libraries (for example
Hoa\Cli\Bin\Resolve
)
and
Hoa/Cli/Bin/Hoa.php
to learn more.
The following awecodes show this library in action:
Hoa\Console\Readline
:
why and how to use Hoa\Console\Readline
? Simple examples will help us to
use default shortcuts and we will even see the auto-completion,Hoa\Websocket
:
why and how to use Hoa\Websocket\Server
and Hoa\Websocket\Client
? A
simple example will illustrate the WebSocket protocol.The
hack book of Hoa\Console
contains detailed information about how to use this library and how it works.
To generate the documentation locally, execute the following commands:
$ composer require --dev hoa/devtools
$ vendor/bin/hoa devtools:documentation --open
More documentation can be found on the project's website: hoa-project.net.
There are mainly two ways to get help:
#hoaproject
IRC channel,Do you want to contribute? Thanks! A detailed contributor guide explains everything you need to know.
Hoa is under the New BSD License (BSD-3-Clause). Please, see
LICENSE
for details.
The following projects are using this library: