Termion is not supported on Windows, so we need to avoid building it.
Adds a conditional dependency to the Cargo.toml file to only include
termion when the target is not Windows. This allows contributors to
build using the `--all-features` flag on Windows rather than needing
to specify the features individually.
The new methods return/accept `Into<Position>` which can be either a Position or a (u16, u16) tuple.
```rust
backend.set_cursor_position(Position { x: 0, y: 20 })?;
let position = backend.get_cursor_position()?;
terminal.set_cursor_position((0, 20))?;
let position = terminal.set_cursor_position()?;
```
The `barchart` example has been split into two examples: `barchart` and
`barchart-grouped`. The `barchart` example now shows a simple barchart
with random data, while the `barchart-grouped` example shows a grouped
barchart with fake revenue data.
This simplifies the examples a bit so they don't cover too much at once.
- Simplify the rendering functions
- Fix several clippy lints that were marked as allowed
---------
Co-authored-by: EdJoPaTo <rfc-conform-git-commit-email@funny-long-domain-label-everyone-hates-as-it-is-too-long.edjopato.de>
Code which previously called `buf.get(x, y)` or `buf.get_mut(x, y)`
should now use index operators, or be transitioned to `buff.cell()` or
`buf.cell_mut()` for safe access that avoids panics by returning
`Option<&Cell>` and `Option<&mut Cell>`.
The new methods accept `Into<Position>` instead of `x` and `y`
coordinates, which makes them more ergonomic to use.
```rust
let mut buffer = Buffer::empty(Rect::new(0, 0, 10, 10));
let cell = buf[(0, 0)];
let cell = buf[Position::new(0, 0)];
let symbol = buf.cell((0, 0)).map(|cell| cell.symbol());
let symbol = buf.cell(Position::new(0, 0)).map(|cell| cell.symbol());
buf[(0, 0)].set_symbol("🐀");
buf[Position::new(0, 0)].set_symbol("🐀");
buf.cell_mut((0, 0)).map(|cell| cell.set_symbol("🐀"));
buf.cell_mut(Position::new(0, 0)).map(|cell| cell.set_symbol("🐀"));
```
The existing `get()` and `get_mut()` methods are marked as deprecated.
These are fairly widely used and we will leave these methods around on
the buffer for a longer time than our normal deprecation approach (2
major release)
Addresses part of: https://github.com/ratatui-org/ratatui/issues/1011
---------
Co-authored-by: EdJoPaTo <rfc-conform-git-commit-email@funny-long-domain-label-everyone-hates-as-it-is-too-long.edjopato.de>
This example demonstrates how to use Ratatui with widgets that fetch
data asynchronously. It uses the `octocrab` crate to fetch a list of
pull requests from the GitHub API. You will need an environment
variable named `GITHUB_TOKEN` with a valid GitHub personal access
token. The token does not need any special permissions.
Co-authored-by: Dheepak Krishnamurthy <me@kdheepak.com>
big_text.rs was a copy of the code from tui-big-text and was getting
gradually out of sync with the original crate. It was also rendering
something a bit different than the Ratatui logo. This commit replaces
the big_text.rs file with a much smaller string representation of the
Ratatui logo.

This is a simplification of the public API that is helpful for new users
that are not familiar with how rust re-exports work, and helps avoid
clashes with other modules in the backends that are named terminal.
BREAKING CHANGE: The `terminal` module is now private and can not be
used directly. The types under this module are exported from the root of
the crate.
```diff
- use ratatui::terminal::{CompletedFrame, Frame, Terminal, TerminalOptions, ViewPort};
+ use ratatui::{CompletedFrame, Frame, Terminal, TerminalOptions, ViewPort};
```
Fixes: https://github.com/ratatui-org/ratatui/issues/1210
Layout::init_cache no longer returns bool and takes a NonZeroUsize instead of usize
The cache is a thread-local, so doesn't make much sense to require
synchronized initialization.
Consensus is that explicit imports make it easier to understand the
example code. This commit removes the prelude import from all examples
and replaces it with the necessary imports, and expands other glob
imports (widget::*, Constraint::*, KeyCode::*, etc.) everywhere else.
Prelude glob imports not in examples are not covered by this PR.
See https://github.com/ratatui-org/ratatui/issues/1150 for more details.
`crossterm`, `termion`, and `termwiz` can now be accessed as
`ratatui::{crossterm, termion, termwiz}` respectively. This makes it
possible to just add the Ratatui crate as a dependency and use the
backend of choice without having to add the backend crates as
dependencies.
To update existing code, replace all instances of `crossterm::` with
`ratatui::crossterm::`, `termion::` with `ratatui::termion::`, and
`termwiz::` with `ratatui::termwiz::`.
Simplify the List example by removing lifetimes not strictly necessary
to demonstrate how Ratatui lists work. Instead, the sample strings are
copied into each `TodoItem`. To further simplify, I changed the code to
use a new TodoItem::new function, rather than an implementation of the
`From` trait.
Using reset is clearer to me what actually happens. On the other case a
struct is created to override the old one completely which basically
does the same in a less clear way.
- Simplify `assert_buffer_eq!` logic.
- Deprecate `assert_buffer_eq!`.
- Introduce `TestBackend::assert_buffer_lines`.
Also simplify many tests involving buffer comparisons.
For the deprecation, just use `assert_eq` instead of `assert_buffer_eq`:
```diff
-assert_buffer_eq!(actual, expected);
+assert_eq!(actual, expected);
```
---
I noticed `assert_buffer_eq!` creating no test coverage reports and
looked into this macro. First I simplified it. Then I noticed a bunch of
`assert_eq!(buffer, …)` and other indirect usages of this macro (like
`TestBackend::assert_buffer`).
The good thing here is that it's mainly used in tests so not many
changes to the library code.
`Block::bordered()` is shorter than
`Block::new().borders(Borders::ALL)`, requires one less import
(`Borders`) and in case `Block::default()` was used before can even be
`const`.
This is the proposed solution for issue #1068. It solves the bug in the
user_input example with multi-byte UTF-8 characters as input.
Fixes: #1068
---------
Co-authored-by: Josh McKinney <joshka@users.noreply.github.com>
With the Rust method naming conventions these methods are into methods
consuming the Span. Therefore, it's more consistent to use `into_`
instead of `to_`.
```rust
Span::to_centered_line
Span::to_left_aligned_line
Span::to_right_aligned_line
```
Are marked deprecated and replaced with the following
```rust
Span::into_centered_line
Span::into_left_aligned_line
Span::into_right_aligned_line
```
Fixes many not yet enabled lints (mostly pedantic) on everything that is
not the lib (examples, benchs, tests). Therefore, this is not containing
anything that can be a breaking change.
Lints are not enabled as that should be the job of #974. I created this
as a separate PR as its mostly independent and would only clutter up the
diff of #974 even more.
Also see
https://github.com/ratatui-org/ratatui/pull/974#discussion_r1506458743
---------
Co-authored-by: Josh McKinney <joshka@users.noreply.github.com>
In a recent commit we added Rec::split, but this feels more ergonomic as
Layout::areas. This also adds Layout::spacers to get the spacers between
the areas.