Jexer - Java Text User Interface library
========================================
-WARNING: THIS IS ALPHA CODE! PLEASE CONSIDER FILING BUGS AS YOU
-ENCOUNTER THEM.
+This library implements a text-based windowing system loosely
+reminiscent of Borland's [Turbo
+Vision](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turbo_Vision) system. It looks
+like this:
-This library is intended to implement a text-based windowing system
-loosely reminiscient of Borland's [Turbo
-Vision](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turbo_Vision) library. For those
-wishing to use the actual C++ Turbo Vision library, see [Sergio
-Sigala's updated version](http://tvision.sourceforge.net/) that runs
-on many more platforms.
-
-Three backends are available:
-
-* System.in/out to a command-line ECMA-48 / ANSI X3.64 type terminal
- (tested on Linux + xterm). I/O is handled through terminal escape
- sequences generated by the library itself: ncurses is not required
- or linked to. xterm mouse tracking using UTF8 and SGR coordinates
- are supported. For the demo application, this is the default
- backend on non-Windows platforms.
-
-* The same command-line ECMA-48 / ANSI X3.64 type terminal as above,
- but to any general InputStream/OutputStream. See the file
- jexer.demos.Demo2 for an example of running the demo over a TCP
- socket.
-
-* Java Swing UI. This backend can be selected by setting
- jexer.Swing=true. The default window size for Swing is 132x40,
- which is set in jexer.session.SwingSession. For the demo
- application, this is the default backend on Windows platforms.
-
-The demo application showing the existing UI controls can be seen in
-three ways:
+![Several Windows Open Including A Terminal](/screenshots/screenshot1.png?raw=true "Several Windows Open Including A Terminal")
- * 'java -jar jexer.jar' . This will use System.in/out on
- non-Windows, or Swing on Windows.
+Jexer works on both Xterm-like terminals and Swing, and supports
+images in both Xterm and Swing. On Swing, images are true color:
- * 'java -Djexer.Swing=true -jar jexer.jar' . This will always use
- Swing.
+![Swing Snake Image](/screenshots/snake_swing.png?raw=true "Swing Snake Image")
- * 'java -cp jexer.jar jexer.demos.Demo2 PORT' (where PORT is a
- number to run the TCP daemon on). This will use the telnet
- protocol to establish an 8-bit clean channel and be aware of
- screen size changes.
+On Xterm, images are dithered to a common palette:
-Additional backends can be created by subclassing
-jexer.backend.Backend and passing it into the TApplication
-constructor.
+![Xterm Snake Image](/screenshots/snake_xterm.png?raw=true "Xterm Snake Image")
License
-------
-This project is licensed LGPL ("GNU Lesser General Public License",
-sometimes called the "Library GPL") version 3 or greater. You may
-freely use Jexer in both closed source (proprietary) and open source
-applications, however any changes you make to the Jexer code must be
-made available to your users.
+Jexer is available to all under the MIT License. See the file LICENSE
+for the full license text.
-See the file LICENSE for the full license text, which includes both
-the GPL v3 and the LGPL supplemental terms.
+Obtaining Jexer
+---------------
-Acknowledgements
-----------------
+Jexer is available on Maven Central:
-Jexer makes use of the Terminus TrueType font [made available
-here](http://files.ax86.net/terminus-ttf/) .
+```xml
+<dependency>
+ <groupId>com.gitlab.klamonte</groupId>
+ <artifactId>jexer</artifactId>
+ <version>0.3.1</version>
+</dependency>
+```
+Binary releases are available on SourceForge:
+https://sourceforge.net/projects/jexer/files/jexer/
+The Jexer source code is hosted at: https://gitlab.com/klamonte/jexer
-Usage
------
-Usage patterns are still being worked on, but in general the goal will
-be to build applications as follows:
-```Java
-import jexer.*;
+Documentation
+-------------
-public class MyApplication extends TApplication {
+* [Java API Docs](https://jexer.sourceforge.io/apidocs/api/index.html)
- public MyApplication() {
- super(BackendType.SWING); // Could also use BackendType.XTERM
+* [Wiki](https://gitlab.com/klamonte/jexer/wikis/home)
- // Create standard menus for File and Window
- addFileMenu();
- addWindowMenu();
- }
- public static void main(String [] args) {
- MyApplication app = new MyApplication();
- (new Thread(app)).start();
- }
-}
-```
-See the files in jexer.demos for more detailed examples.
+Programming Examples
+--------------------
+The examples/ folder currently contains:
+ * A [prototype tiling window
+ manager](/examples/JexerTilingWindowManager.java) in less than 250
+ lines of code.
-Known Issues / Arbitrary Decisions
-----------------------------------
+ * A [prototype image thumbnail
+ viewer](/examples/JexerImageViewer.java) in less than 350 lines of
+ code.
-Some arbitrary design decisions had to be made when either the
-obviously expected behavior did not happen or when a specification was
-ambiguous. This section describes such issues.
+jexer.demos contains official demos showing all of the existing UI
+controls. The demos can be run as follows:
- - TTerminalWindow will hang on input from the remote if the
- TApplication is exited before the TTerminalWindow's process has
- closed on its own. This is due to a Java limitation/interaction
- between blocking reads (which is necessary to get UTF8 translation
- correct) and file streams.
+ * 'java -jar jexer.jar' . This will use System.in/out with
+ Xterm-like sequences on non-Windows non-Mac platforms. On Windows
+ and Mac it will use a Swing JFrame.
- - See jexer.tterminal.ECMA48 for more specifics of terminal
- emulation limitations.
+ * 'java -Djexer.Swing=true -jar jexer.jar' . This will always use
+ Swing on any platform.
- - TTerminalWindow uses cmd.exe on Windows. Output will not be seen
- until enter is pressed, due to cmd.exe's use of line-oriented
- input (see the ENABLE_LINE_INPUT flag for GetConsoleMode() and
- SetConsoleMode()).
+ * 'java -cp jexer.jar jexer.demos.Demo2 PORT' (where PORT is a
+ number to run the TCP daemon on). This will use the Xterm backend
+ on a telnet server that will update with screen size changes.
- - TTerminalWindow launches 'script -fqe /dev/null' on non-Windows
- platforms. This is a workaround for the C library behavior of
- checking for a tty: script launches $SHELL in a pseudo-tty. This
- works on Linux but might not on other Posix-y platforms.
+ * 'java -cp jexer.jar jexer.demos.Demo3' . This will use
+ System.in/out with Xterm-like sequences. One can see in the code
+ how to pass a different InputReader and OutputReader to
+ TApplication, permitting a different encoding than UTF-8.
- - Java's InputStreamReader as used by the ECMA48 backend requires a
- valid UTF-8 stream. The default X10 encoding for mouse
- coordinates outside (160,94) can corrupt that stream, at best
- putting garbage keyboard events in the input queue but at worst
- causing the backend reader thread to throw an Exception and exit
- and make the entire UI unusable. Mouse support therefore requires
- a terminal that can deliver either UTF-8 coordinates (1005 mode)
- or SGR coordinates (1006 mode). Most modern terminals can do
- this.
+ * 'java -cp jexer.jar jexer.demos.Demo4' . This demonstrates hidden
+ windows and a custom TDesktop.
- - jexer.session.TTYSession calls 'stty size' once every second to
- check the current window size, performing the same function as
- ioctl(TIOCGWINSZ) but without requiring a native library.
+ * 'java -cp jexer.jar jexer.demos.Demo5' . This demonstrates two
+ demo applications using different fonts in the same Swing frame.
- - jexer.io.ECMA48Terminal calls 'stty' to perform the equivalent of
- cfmakeraw() when using System.in/out. System.out is also
- (blindly!) put in 'stty sane cooked' mode when exiting.
+ * 'java -cp jexer.jar jexer.demos.Demo6' . This demonstrates two
+ applications performing I/O across three screens: an Xterm screen
+ and Swing screen, monitored from a third Swing screen.
-System Properties
------------------
+More Screenshots
+----------------
-The following properties control features of Jexer:
+![Yo Dawg...](/screenshots/yodawg.png?raw=true "Yo Dawg, I heard you like text windowing systems, so I ran a text windowing system inside your text windowing system so you can have a terminal in your terminal.")
- jexer.Swing
- -----------
+![Sixel Pictures Of Cliffs Of Moher And Buoy](/screenshots/sixel_images.png?raw=true "Sixel Pictures Of Cliffs Of Moher And Buoy")
- Used only by jexer.demos.Demo1. If true, use the Swing interface
- for the demo application. Default: true on Windows platforms
- (os.name starts with "Windows"), false on non-Windows platforms.
+![Sixel Color Wheel](/screenshots/sixel_color_wheel.png?raw=true "Sixel Color Wheel")
- jexer.Swing.cursorStyle
- -----------------------
- Used by jexer.io.SwingScreen. Selects the cursor style to draw.
- Valid values are: underline, block, outline. Default: underline.
+Terminal Support
+----------------
+The table below lists terminals tested against Jexer's Xterm backend:
-Roadmap
--------
+| Terminal | Environment | Mouse Click | Mouse Cursor | Images |
+| -------------- | ------------------ | ----------- | ------------ | ------ |
+| xterm | X11 | yes | yes | yes |
+| lcxterm(3) | CLI, Linux console | yes | yes | no |
+| rxvt-unicode | X11 | yes | yes | no(2) |
+| alacritty(3) | X11 | yes | yes | no |
+| gnome-terminal | X11 | yes | yes | no |
+| xfce4-terminal | X11 | yes | yes | no |
+| mlterm | X11 | yes | yes | no(5) |
+| aminal(3) | X11 | yes | no | no |
+| konsole | X11 | yes | no | no |
+| yakuake | X11 | yes | no | no |
+| screen | CLI | yes(1) | yes(1) | no(2) |
+| tmux | CLI | yes(1) | yes(1) | no |
+| putty | X11, Windows | yes | no | no(2) |
+| Linux | Linux console | no | no | no(2) |
+| qodem(3) | CLI, Linux console | yes | yes(4) | no |
+| qodem-x11(3) | X11 | yes | no | no |
-Many tasks remain before calling this version 1.0:
+1 - Requires mouse support from host terminal.
-0.0.3: FINISH PORTING
+2 - Also fails to filter out sixel data, leaving garbage on screen.
-0.0.4: NEW STUFF
+3 - Latest in repository.
-- Making TMenu keyboard accelerators active/inactive
-- TStatusBar
-- TEditor
-- TWindow
- - "Smart placement" for new windows
+4 - Requires TERM=xterm-1003 before starting.
-0.0.5: BUG HUNT
+5 - Opening image crashes terminal.
-- TSubMenu keyboard mnemonic not working
-- Swing performance. Even with double buffering it isn't great.
-0.1.0: BETA RELEASE
-- TSpinner
-- TComboBox
-- TListBox
-- TCalendar
-- TColorPicker
+See Also
+--------
-Wishlist features (2.0):
+* [Tranquil Java IDE](https://tjide.sourceforge.io) is a TUI-based
+ integrated development environment for the Java language that was
+ built using a very lightly modified GPL version of Jexer. TJ
+ provided a real-world use case to shake out numerous bugs and
+ limitations of Jexer.
-- TTerminal
- - Handle resize events (pass to child process)
-- Screen
- - Allow complex characters in putCharXY() and detect them in putStrXY().
-- Drag and drop
- - TEditor
- - TField
- - TText
- - TTerminal
- - TComboBox
+* [LCXterm](https://lcxterm.sourceforge.io) is a curses-based terminal
+ emulator that allows one to use Jexer with full support on the raw
+ Linux console.
+* [ptypipe](https://gitlab.com/klamonte/ptypipe) is a small C utility
+ that permits a Jexer TTerminalWindow to resize the running shell
+ when its window is resized.
-Screenshots
------------
-![Several Windows Open Including A Terminal](/screenshots/screenshot1.png?raw=true "Several Windows Open Including A Terminal")
-![Yo Dawg...](/screenshots/yodawg.png?raw=true "Yo Dawg, I heard you like text windowing systems, so I ran a text windowing system inside your text windowing system so you can have a terminal in your terminal.")
+Acknowledgements
+----------------
+
+Jexer makes use of the Terminus TrueType font [made available
+here](http://files.ax86.net/terminus-ttf/) .