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## Readline | ||
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To use this module, do `require('readline')`. Readline allows reading of a | ||
stream (such as STDIN) on a line-by-line basis. | ||
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Note that once you've invoked this module, your node program will not | ||
terminate until you've closed the interface, and the STDIN stream. Here's how | ||
to allow your program to gracefully terminate: | ||
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var rl = require('readline'); | ||
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var i = rl.createInterface(process.sdtin, process.stdout, null); | ||
i.question("What do you think of node.js?", function(answer) { | ||
// TODO: Log the answer in a database | ||
console.log("Thank you for your valuable feedback."); | ||
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// These two lines together allow the program to terminate. Without | ||
// them, it would run forever. | ||
i.close(); | ||
process.stdin.destroy(); | ||
}); | ||
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### rl.createInterface(input, output, completer) | ||
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Takes two streams and creates a readline interface. The `completer` function | ||
is used for autocompletion. When given a substring, it returns `[[substr1, | ||
substr2, ...], originalsubstring]`. | ||
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`createInterface` is commonly used with `process.stdin` and | ||
`process.stdout` in order to accept user input: | ||
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var readline = require('readline'), | ||
rl = readline.createInterface(process.stdin, process.stdout); | ||
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### rl.setPrompt(prompt, length) | ||
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Sets the prompt, for example when you run `node` on the command line, you see | ||
`> `, which is node's prompt. | ||
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### rl.prompt() | ||
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Readies readline for input from the user, putting the current `setPrompt` | ||
options on a new line, giving the user a new spot to write. | ||
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<!-- ### rl.getColumns() Not available? --> | ||
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### rl.question(query, callback) | ||
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Prepends the prompt with `query` and invokes `callback` with the user's | ||
response. Displays the query to the user, and then invokes `callback` with the | ||
user's response after it has been typed. | ||
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Example usage: | ||
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interface.question('What is your favorite food?', function(answer) { | ||
console.log('Oh, so your favorite food is ' + answer); | ||
}); | ||
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### rl.close() | ||
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Closes tty. | ||
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### rl.pause() | ||
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Pauses tty. | ||
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### rl.resume() | ||
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Resumes tty. | ||
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### rl.write() | ||
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Writes to tty. | ||
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### Event: 'line' | ||
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`function (line) {}` | ||
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Emitted whenever the `in` stream receives a `\n`, usually received when the | ||
user hits enter, or return. This is a good hook to listen for user input. | ||
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Example of listening for `line`: | ||
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rl.on('line', function (cmd) { | ||
console.log('You just typed: '+cmd); | ||
}); | ||
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### Event: 'close' | ||
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`function () {}` | ||
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Emitted whenever the `in` stream receives a `^C` or `^D`, respectively known | ||
as `SIGINT` and `EOT`. This is a good way to know the user is finished using | ||
your program. | ||
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Example of listening for `close`, and exiting the program afterward: | ||
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rl.on('close', function() { | ||
console.log('goodbye!'); | ||
process.exit(0); | ||
}); | ||
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Here's an example of how to use all these together to craft a tiny command | ||
line interface: | ||
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var readline = require('readline'), | ||
rl = readline.createInterface(process.stdin, process.stdout), | ||
prefix = 'OHAI> '; | ||
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rl.on('line', function(line) { | ||
switch(line.trim()) { | ||
case 'hello': | ||
console.log('world!'); | ||
break; | ||
default: | ||
console.log('Say what? I might have heard `' + line.trim() + '`'); | ||
break; | ||
} | ||
rl.setPrompt(prefix, prefix.length); | ||
rl.prompt(); | ||
}).on('close', function() { | ||
console.log('Have a great day!'); | ||
process.exit(0); | ||
}); | ||
console.log(prefix + 'Good to see you. Try typing stuff.'); | ||
rl.setPrompt(prefix, prefix.length); | ||
rl.prompt(); | ||
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Take a look at this slightly more complicated | ||
[example](https://gist.github.com/901104), and | ||
[http-console](http://github.com/cloudhead/http-console) for a real-life use | ||
case. |