Library for interactive pseudoteletypewriter command sessions using ANSI Standard X3.64 control sequences
This is a single-file no-dependencies C or C++ library that makes it as easy as possible to display a command prompt that asks the user for input. It supports Emacs editing shortcuts, history search, completion / hint callback, and utf-8 editing under a bsd-2 license.
Bestline is a fork of linenoise (a popular readline alternative) that fixes its bugs and adds the missing features while reducing binary footprint (surprisingly) by removing bloated dependencies, which means you can finally have a permissively-licensed command prompt w/ a 38kb footprint that's nearly as good as gnu readline.
$ CC="cc -s -static -Os -DNDEBUG" make
$ ls -hal bestline_example
-rwxr-xr-x 1 jart jart 38K Sep 19 21:41 bestline_example
This example will save history to ~/.foo_history
. It's 50kb when
statically linked with Cosmopolitan Libc.
#include <stdio.h>
#include "bestline.h"
main() {
char *line;
while ((line = bestlineWithHistory("IN> ", "foo"))) {
fputs("OUT> ", stdout);
fputs(line, stdout);
fputs("\n", stdout);
free(line);
}
}
CTRL-E END
CTRL-A START
CTRL-B BACK
CTRL-F FORWARD
CTRL-L CLEAR
CTRL-H BACKSPACE
CTRL-D DELETE
CTRL-Y YANK
CTRL-D EOF (IF EMPTY)
CTRL-N NEXT HISTORY
CTRL-P PREVIOUS HISTORY
CTRL-R SEARCH HISTORY
CTRL-G CANCEL SEARCH
ALT-< BEGINNING OF HISTORY
ALT-> END OF HISTORY
ALT-F FORWARD WORD
ALT-B BACKWARD WORD
CTRL-ALT-F FORWARD EXPR
CTRL-ALT-B BACKWARD EXPR
ALT-RIGHT FORWARD EXPR
ALT-LEFT BACKWARD EXPR
CTRL-K KILL LINE FORWARDS
CTRL-U KILL LINE BACKWARDS
ALT-H KILL WORD BACKWARDS
CTRL-W KILL WORD BACKWARDS
CTRL-ALT-H KILL WORD BACKWARDS
ALT-D KILL WORD FORWARDS
ALT-Y ROTATE KILL RING AND YANK AGAIN
ALT-\ SQUEEZE ADJACENT WHITESPACE
CTRL-T TRANSPOSE
ALT-T TRANSPOSE WORD
ALT-U UPPERCASE WORD
ALT-L LOWERCASE WORD
ALT-C CAPITALIZE WORD
CTRL-C INTERRUPT PROCESS
CTRL-Z SUSPEND PROCESS
CTRL-\ QUIT PROCESS
CTRL-S PAUSE OUTPUT
CTRL-Q UNPAUSE OUTPUT (IF PAUSED)
CTRL-Q ESCAPED INSERT
CTRL-SPACE SET MARK
CTRL-X CTRL-X GOTO MARK
CTRL-Z SUSPEND PROCESS
Remap CAPS LOCK to CTRL.
You have to use an ANSI UTF-8 terminal that supports VT100 codes.
Here's what we've changed compared to linenoise:
- Remove bell
- Add kill ring
- Fix flickering
- Add UTF-8 editing
- Add CTRL-R search
- React to terminal resizing
- Don't generate .data section
- Support terminal flow control
- Make history loading 10x faster
- Make multiline mode the only mode
- Support unlimited input line length
- Accommodate O_NONBLOCK file descriptors
- Restore raw mode on process foregrounding
- Make source code compatible with C++ compilers
- Fix corruption issues by using generalized parsing
- Implement nearly all GNU readline editing shortcuts
- Remove heavyweight dependencies like printf/sprintf
- Remove ISIG→^C→EAGAIN hack and catch signals properly
- Support running on Windows in MinTTY or CMD.EXE on Win10+
- Support diacritics, русский, Ελληνικά, 漢字, 仮名, 한글
This codebase aims to follow in Antirez's tradition of writing beautiful programs, that solve extremely difficult technical problems in the most elegant way possible. The original Linenoise source code is sort of like an old Delorean where it's simple and beautiful, but has a lot of things broken about it that need to be fixed, which gives you plenty of reasons to sit down and fix things to fully appreciate its beauty.
There are, however, some differences in style. Antirez generally optimizes for fewer lines of code even if it makes the binary footprint larger and with poor edge case handling and cultural biases presumably to preserve its accessibility and value as an educational tool. For example, one of the biggest issues with Linenoise, was that pressing the wrong key on the keyboard would mess with the state and garble input since it didn't actually parse ansi codes or even multibyte characters.
While this project has addressed many of Linenoise's shortcomings, we've sought to do it in a way that carries on the Antirez tradition of simple elegant hackable code. It is our hope that should you find opportunities for improvement in this codebase that you'll find it equally pleasurable to work with.
Bestline is written in portable ANSI C99 that conforms to POSIX. We recommend using Cosmopolitan Libc since it produces binaries that work on any operating system including Windows.
Portability across terminals is achieved because literally everything these days supports VT100 control codes which were standardized by ANSI back in the 1970's. This library ignores platform-specific norms for multibyte encoding and it also ignores antiquated terminal capability databases. Libraries like ncurses were designed to reduce bandwidth on 300 bit per second modems. They're bloated and huge because they needed to implement workarounds to all the "incompatible by design" engineering practices used by terminal platforms in the 70's in 80's.
Corporate America has long since moved on to making GUI platforms incompatible instead. Even the Windows command prompt supports VT100 and XTERM sequences these days. Seriously. It's 2021 and everyone in the world finally agrees on UTF-8 and ANSI VT100 style command sequences. That's why bestline is now, for the first time in history, able to offer you a fully featured experience using simple bloat-free code.
We'd love to accept your pull requests! Please send an email beforehand to Justine Tunney jtunney@gmail.com saying that you intend to assign her the copyright to the changes you contribute to bestline.
Please do not contribute changes that have #ifdef
statements. We don't
care if MSVC printed a warning, and we won't accept Windows torture code
since Windows compatibility can be abstracted by Cosmopolitan Libc which
does C on Windows better than Windows does considering how there's about
ten different incompatible libc implementations, provided by the Windows
platform, and they have a history of doing things like adding telemetry.
Bestline is released under the 2-clause BSD license. You have the
freedom to copy the Bestline source code into your codebase, but you
have to keep the license notice at the top of the file. You also have
the freedom to distribute your app as a closed-source binary, but you
have to embed the copyright notice in the executable. We've added an
.ident
assembly directive to the top of the source code file which
should automatically take care of binary notice compliance.
The BSD-2 License
Copyright 2018-2021 Justine Tunney <jtunney@gmail.com>
Copyright 2010-2016 Salvatore Sanfilippo <antirez@gmail.com>
Copyright 2010-2013 Pieter Noordhuis <pcnoordhuis@gmail.com>
All rights reserved.
Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are
met:
* Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
* Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS
"AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT
LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR
A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT
HOLDER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL,
SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT
LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE,
DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY
THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT
(INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE
OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
Please consider tipping the author at https://github.com/sponsors/jart since she needs your support in order to keep going building cool tools and libraries that serve the public interest. So if you like what you've seen and want to encourage more, please consider granting recognition.