commit | 4b93e249cca4f13b0bdd49ebff268480acf28ebe | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Andrew Walbran <[email protected]> | Thu Oct 19 19:58:44 2023 +0000 |
committer | Automerger Merge Worker <[email protected]> | Thu Oct 19 19:58:44 2023 +0000 |
tree | 327ae0a399bfd7fd1d79e65c2cc13913f41bde9a | |
parent | c5b23273f7c0da337f12932326f2f648a7997bb2 [diff] | |
parent | e8e9d3f257acc12833228fd04b134f260daa72fc [diff] |
Migrate to cargo_embargo. am: 35acf1dc8f am: 6af9cc8924 am: e8e9d3f257 Original change: https://android-review.googlesource.com/c/platform/external/rust/crates/anes/+/2796412 Change-Id: I152cc3204a25568c5546e305fdada38968bbd960 Signed-off-by: Automerger Merge Worker <[email protected]>
A Rust library which provides an ANSI escape sequences (or codes, whatever you like more) and a parser allowing you to parse data from the STDIN (or /dev/tty
) in the raw mode.
Not all ANSI escape sequences are supported by all terminals. You can use the interactive-test to test them. Checkout the repository and then:
$ cd anes-rs $ cargo run --bin interactive-test
[dependencies] anes = "0.1"
An example how to retrieve the ANSI escape sequence as a String
:
use anes::SaveCursorPosition; fn main() { let string = format!("{}", SaveCursorPosition); assert_eq!(&string, "\x1B7"); }
An example how to use the ANSI escape sequence:
use std::io::{Result, Write}; use anes::execute; fn main() -> Result<()> { let mut stdout = std::io::stdout(); execute!( &mut stdout, anes::SaveCursorPosition, anes::MoveCursorTo(10, 10), anes::RestoreCursorPosition )?; Ok(()) }
You have to enable parser
feature in order to use the parser. It's disabled by default.
[dependencies] anes = { version = "0.1", features = ["parser"] }
An example how to parse cursor position:
use anes::parser::{Parser, Sequence}; let mut parser = Parser::default(); parser.advance(b"\x1B[20;10R", false); assert_eq!(Some(Sequence::CursorPosition(10, 20)), parser.next()); assert!(parser.next().is_none());
The ANES crate is dual-licensed under Apache 2.0 and MIT terms.
Copyrights in the ANES project are retained by their contributors. No copyright assignment is required to contribute to the ANES project.