IO::Interactive - Utilities for interactive I/O
This document describes IO::Interactive version 1.02
use IO::Interactive qw(is_interactive interactive busy);
if ( is_interactive() ) {
print "Running interactively\n";
}
# or...
print {interactive} "Running interactively\n";
$fh = busy {
do_noninteractive_stuff();
}
This module provides three utility subroutines that make it easier to
develop interactive applications.
The ARGV filehandle, the one that <> or an empty
readline() uses, has various magic associated with it. It's not
actually opened until you try to read from it. Checking -t ARGV
before you've tried to read from it might give you the wrong answer.
Not only that, you might not read from ARGV. If the value in
@ARGV is the magic filename - (a convention to mean the standard
filehandle for input or output), ARGV might actually be STDIN.
You don't want to think about all of this. This module is discussed in
Perl Best Practices on page 218. Also see the ARGV entry in
perlvar and the readline entry in perlfunc.
- is_interactive()
-
This subroutine returns true if
*ARGV and the currently selected
filehandle (usually *STDOUT) are connected to the terminal. The
test is considerably more sophisticated than:
-t *ARGV && -t *STDOUT
as it takes into account the magic behaviour of *ARGV.
You can also pass is_interactive a writable filehandle, in which case it
requires that filehandle be connected to a terminal (instead of the
currently selected). The usual suspect here is *STDERR:
if ( is_interactive(*STDERR) ) {
carp $warning;
}
- interactive()
-
This subroutine returns
*STDOUT if is_interactive is true. If
is_interactive() is false, interactive returns a filehandle that
does not print.
This makes it easy to create applications that print out only when the
application is interactive:
print {interactive} "Please enter a value: ";
my $value = <>;
You can also pass interactive a writable filehandle, in which case it
writes to that filehandle if it is connected to a terminal (instead of
writing to *STDOUT). Once again, the usual suspect is *STDERR:
print {interactive(*STDERR)} $warning;
- busy {...}
-
This subroutine takes a block as its single argument and executes that block.
Whilst the block is executed,
*ARGV is temporarily replaced by a closed
filehandle. That is, no input from *ARGV is possible in a busy block.
Furthermore, any attempts to send input into the busy block through
*ARGV is intercepted and a warning message is printed to *STDERR.
The busy call returns a filehandle that contains the intercepted input.
A busy block is therefore useful to prevent attempts at input when the
program is busy at some non-interactive task.
- Unknown subroutine (%s) requested
-
This module only exports the three subroutines described above.
You asked for something else. Maybe you misspelled the subroutine you wanted.
IO::Interactive requires no configuration files or environment variables.
This module requires the openhandle() subroutine from the
Scalar::Util module.
None reported.
No bugs have been reported.
Please report any bugs or feature requests to Github
https://github.com/briandfoy/io-interactive/issues.
This code is in GitHub:
https://github.com/briandfoy/io-interactive
Damian Conway <DCONWAY@cpan.org>
Currently maintained by brian d foy <bdfoy@cpan.org>.
1.01 patch DMUEY dmuey@cpan.org
Copyright © 2005-2021, Damian Conway <DCONWAY@cpan.org>. All rights reserved.
This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
BECAUSE THIS SOFTWARE IS LICENSED FREE OF CHARGE, THERE IS NO WARRANTY
FOR THE SOFTWARE, TO THE EXTENT PERMITTED BY APPLICABLE LAW. EXCEPT WHEN
OTHERWISE STATED IN WRITING THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND/OR OTHER PARTIES
PROVIDE THE SOFTWARE ``AS IS'' WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EITHER
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ENTIRE RISK AS TO THE QUALITY AND PERFORMANCE OF THE SOFTWARE IS WITH
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