My application has a command line interface, and I\'m thinking about using the GNU Readline library to provide history, an editable command line, etc.
The hitch is that
You sure can.
You can define options for the '\r' and '\n' values with
rl_bind_key('\r', return_func);
Your return_func can now decide what to do with those keys.
int return_func(int cnt, int key) { ... }
If you're doing this inside a UNIX terminal, you will need to learn about ANSI terminal codes if you want to move your cursor around. There's a starting reference on wikipedia.
Here's some sample code that uses readline to read multi-line and will stop editing when you enter in a semi-colon (I've set that as the EOQ or end-or-query). Readline is extremely powerful, there's plenty of stuff to learn.
#include
#include
#include
#include
int my_startup(void);
int my_bind_cr(int, int);
int my_bind_eoq(int, int);
char *my_readline(void);
int my_eoq;
int
main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
if (isatty(STDIN_FILENO)) {
rl_readline_name = "my";
rl_startup_hook = my_startup;
my_readline();
}
}
int
my_startup(void)
{
my_eoq = 0;
rl_bind_key('\n', my_bind_cr);
rl_bind_key('\r', my_bind_cr);
rl_bind_key(';', my_bind_eoq);
}
int
my_bind_cr(int count, int key) {
if (my_eoq == 1) {
rl_done = 1;
}
printf("\n");
}
int
my_bind_eoq(int count, int key) {
my_eoq = 1;
printf(";");
}
char *
my_readline(void)
{
char *line;
if ((line = readline("")) == NULL) {
return NULL;
}
printf("LINE : %s\n", line);
}