wingkeet / ask

Simple Node.js CLI library to display a list of scrollable choices and ask user for selection.

Geek Repo:Geek Repo

Github PK Tool:Github PK Tool

ask

Simple Node.js CLI library to display a list of scrollable choices and ask user for selection.

Introduction

Ask is a Node.js module that offers an easy-to-use API to display a list of scrollable choices. The end user navigates the choices with the up arrow and down arrow keys and presses the Enter key for selection. Configurable options are shown below:

  • 8-bit and 24-bit text terminal colors.
  • Number of visible rows in the scrollable window.
  • Selection pointer can be specified with a UTF-8 string.

Prerequisites

  • The file ask.js requires Node.js >= 14.0.0 due to usage of the optional chaining operator (?.) from ES2020.
  • The file ask.js has zero external dependencies.

Getting Started

Here is a complete working program to demonstrate how to use the ask module. Call the ask function with an array of strings followed by an options object. The ask function returns a Promise that resolves to an integer indicating the zero-based answer.

'use strict'
const ask = require('./ask')

async function main() {
    const choices = [
        'Abkhazia',
        'Afghanistan',
        'Aland Islands',
        'Albania',
        'Algeria',
        'American Samoa',
        'Andorra',
        'Angola',
        'Anguilla',
        'Antarctica',
        'Antigua and Barbuda',
        'Argentina',
        'Armenia',
        'Aruba',
        'Ascension',
        'Australia',
        'Austria',
        'Azerbaijan',
    ]

    console.log(`Where do you come from? (${choices.length})`)
    const answer = await ask(choices, { color: 'HotPink', maxWindow: 6, pointer: '😀' })
    console.log(choices[answer])
}

main()

Running the above program produces the output shown below. Note that we specified maxWindow: 6 but there are 18 choices, so scrolling is possible. Use the up arrow and down arrow keys to move the selection pointer. Press Enter to confirm selection, and CTRL-C to terminate the program immediately.

Screenshot

The ask function can also be called without passing in the options argument. Type npm start on the command line for a simple demo.

Text Terminal Color Support

Text terminal colors are displayed using ANSI escape codes that were introduced in the 1970s. However, the ask function hides all the details from the developer and hence colors may be specified using:

  • A Number type (8-bit indexed color; e.g. { color: 6 } for cyan), or
  • A String type (24-bit RGB color; see below for details)

For 8-bit color, refer to the 256-color lookup table on Wikipedia.

For 24-bit color, CSS named-colors, hex-colors, rgb-colors and hsl-colors are supported via the file css-colors.js. Examples are shown below:

  • { color: 'CornflowerBlue' }
  • { color: '#fe10ca' }, { color: '#d2b' }
  • { color: 'rgb(188,0,95)' }, { color: 'rgb(0%,50%,100%)' }
  • { color: 'hsl(0,100%,50%)' }

Below are a list of usage notes for 24-bit color string values:

  • All color values are case-insensitive.
  • Spaces should not be used within the color values.
  • Alpha values are not supported.
  • Invalid color values are silently ignored.
  • A list of CSS color names can be found on w3schools.com and MDN.

The file css-colors.js must be present if you want 24-bit color support. That file may be removed if you are fine with 8-bit color or whatever color your text terminal was already set up to display.

Authors

  • Steve Leong - Initial work

License

This project is licensed under the MIT License - see the LICENSE file for details.

About

Simple Node.js CLI library to display a list of scrollable choices and ask user for selection.

License:MIT License


Languages

Language:JavaScript 100.0%