• Stars
    star
    28
  • Rank 882,216 (Top 18 %)
  • Language
    Ruby
  • License
    MIT License
  • Created over 8 years ago
  • Updated 10 months ago

Reviews

There are no reviews yet. Be the first to send feedback to the community and the maintainers!

Repository Details

Opens a file or text in the user's preferred editor
TTY Toolkit logo

TTY::Editor

Gem Version Actions CI Build status Maintainability Coverage Status

Open a file or text in a preferred terminal text editor.

TTY::Editor provides independent component for TTY toolkit.

Installation

Add this line to your application's Gemfile:

gem "tty-editor"

And then execute:

$ bundle

Or install it yourself as:

$ gem install tty-editor

Contents

1. Usage

To edit a file in a default text editor do:

TTY::Editor.open("/path/to/file")

To edit text in a default editor:

TTY::Editor.open(text: "Some text")

You can also open multiple existing and/or new files:

TTY::Editor.open("file_1", "file_2", "new_file_3")

Note that the VISUAL or EDITOR shell environment variables take precedence when auto detecting available editors.

You can also set your preferred editor command(s) and ignore VISUAL and EDITOR as well as other user preferences:

TTY::Editor.open("/path/to/file", command: "vim -f")

When VISUAL or EDITOR are not specified, a selection menu will be presented to the user.

For example, if an user has code, emacs and vim editors available on their system, they will see the following menu:

Select an editor?
  1) code
  2) emacs
  3) vim
  Choose 1-3 [1]:

You can further customise this behaviour with :prompt, :hide_menu, :enable_color and :menu_interrupt.

2. API

2.1 new

Instantiation of an editor will trigger automatic search for available command-line editors:

editor = TTY::Editor.new

You can change default search with the :command keyword argument.

2.1.1 :command

You can force to always use a specific editor by passing :command option:

editor = TTY::Editor.new(command: "vim")

Or you can specify multiple commands and give a user a choice:

editor = TTY::Editor.new(command: ["vim", "emacs"])

The class-level open method accepts the same parameters:

TTY::Editor.open("/path/to/file", command: "vim")

2.1.2 :env

Use :env key to forward environment variables to the text editor launch command:

TTY::Editor.new(env: {"FOO" => "bar"})

The class-level open method accepts the same parameters:

TTY::Editor.open("/path/to/file", env: {"FOO" => "bar"})

2.1.3 :raise_on_failure

By default when editor fails to open a false status is returned:

TTY::Editor.open("/path/to/unknown/file") # => false

Alternatively, you can use :raise_on_failure to raise an error on failure to open a file.

The TTY::Editor::CommandInvocationError will be raised anytime an editor fails to open a file:

editor = TTY::Editor.new(raise_on_failure: true)
editor.open("/path/to/unknown/file")
# => raises TTY::Editor::ComandInvocationError

2.1.4 :prompt

When more than one editor is available and user hasn't specified their preferred choice via VISUAL or EDITOR variables, a selection menu is presented.

For example, when code, emacs and vim executable exists on the system, the following menu will be displayed:

Select an editor?
  1) code
  2) emacs
  3) vim
  Choose 1-3 [1]:

If you would like to change the menu prompt use :prompt keyword:

editor = TTY::Editor.new(prompt: "Which one do you fancy?")
editor.open("/path/to/file")

This may produce the following in the terminal:

Which one do you fancy?
  1) code
  2) emacs
  3) vim
  Choose 1-3 [1]:

2.1.5 :hide_menu

When more than one editor is available from the default list, a selection menu will be displayed in the console:

Select an editor?
  1) code
  2) emacs
  3) vim
  Choose 1-3 [1]:

To hide the menu and automatically choose the first available editor use the :hide_menu keyword option:

editor = TTY::Editor.new(hide_menu: true)

2.1.6 :enable_color

An editor selection menu will display the first choice in colour on terminals that support colours. However, you can turn off colouring with the :enable_color keyword option:

editor = TTY::Editor.new(enable_color: false)

Equally, you can enforce the current menu choice to be always coloured:

editor = TTY::Editor.new(enable_color: true)

2.1.7 :menu_interrupt

When an editor selection menu gets interrupted by the Ctrl+C key, an InputInterrupt error is raised. To change this, provide the :menu_interrupt option with one of the following:

  • :error - raises InputInterrupt error
  • :exit - exits with 130 status code
  • :noop - skips handler
  • :signal - sends interrupt signal
  • proc - custom proc handler

For example, to immediately exit the menu and program do:

editor = TTY::Editor.new(menu_interrupt: :exit)

2.2 open

There is a class-level and instance-level open method. These are equivalent:

editor = TTY::Editor.new
editor.open(...)
# or
TTY::Editor.open(...)

Creating TTY::Editor instance means that the search for a command editor will be performed only once. Then the editor command will be shared between invocations of open call.

Conversely, the class-level open method will search for an editor each time it is invoked.

The following examples of using the open method apply to both the instance and class level invocations.

If you wish to open an editor without giving a file or content do:

TTY::Editor.open

To open a file, pass a path as an argument to open:

TTY::Editor.open("../README.md")
# => true

When editor successfully opens a file or content then true is returned, false otherwise.

You can change this with :raise_on_failure keyword to raise a TTY::Editor::CommandInvocation error when an editor cannot be opened.

In order to open text content inside an editor use :text keyword like so:

TTY::Editor.open(text: "Some text")

You can also provide filename that will be created with specified content before editor is opened:

TTY::Editor.open("/path/to/new-file", text: "Some text")

If you open a filename with already existing content then the new content will be appended at the end of the file.

You can also open multiple existing and non-existing files providing them as consecutive arguments:

TTY::Editor.open("file_1", "file_2", "new_file_3")

3. Default Editors

When an editor in EDITOR and VISUAL environment variables can't be found or isn't specified, a choice menu is displayed. The menu includes available editors from the default list of text editors:

  • Atom
  • Emacs
  • gedit
  • JED
  • Kate
  • Mg
  • Nano
  • Notepad
  • Pico
  • Sublime Text
  • TextMate
  • Vi
  • Vim
  • Visual Studio Code

Development

After checking out the repo, run bin/setup to install dependencies. Then, run rake spec to run the tests. You can also run bin/console for an interactive prompt that will allow you to experiment.

To install this gem onto your local machine, run bundle exec rake install. To release a new version, update the version number in version.rb, and then run bundle exec rake release, which will create a git tag for the version, push git commits and tags, and push the .gem file to rubygems.org.

Contributing

Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/piotrmurach/tty-editor. This project is intended to be a safe, welcoming space for collaboration, and contributors are expected to adhere to the code of conduct.

License

The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.

Code of Conduct

Everyone interacting in the TTY::Editor project's codebases, issue trackers, chat rooms and mailing lists is expected to follow the code of conduct.

Copyright

Copyright (c) 2017 Piotr Murach. See LICENSE for further details.

More Repositories

1

tty

Toolkit for developing sleek command line apps.
Ruby
2,505
star
2

tty-prompt

A beautiful and powerful interactive command line prompt
Ruby
1,467
star
3

github

Ruby interface to GitHub API
Ruby
1,151
star
4

finite_machine

A minimal finite state machine with a straightforward syntax.
Ruby
807
star
5

pastel

Terminal output styling with intuitive and clean API.
Ruby
638
star
6

rspec-benchmark

Performance testing matchers for RSpec
Ruby
602
star
7

tty-spinner

A terminal spinner for tasks that have non-deterministic time frame.
Ruby
428
star
8

tty-progressbar

Display a single or multiple progress bars in the terminal.
Ruby
422
star
9

loaf

Manages and displays breadcrumb trails in Rails app - lean & mean.
Ruby
407
star
10

tty-command

Execute shell commands with pretty output logging and capture stdout, stderr and exit status.
Ruby
400
star
11

tty-markdown

Convert a markdown document or text into a terminal friendly output.
Ruby
307
star
12

tty-logger

A readable, structured and beautiful logging for the terminal
Ruby
294
star
13

github_cli

GitHub on your command line. Use your terminal, not the browser.
Ruby
266
star
14

tty-table

A flexible and intuitive table generator
Ruby
190
star
15

tty-box

Draw various frames and boxes in your terminal window
Ruby
183
star
16

awesome-ruby-cli-apps

A curated list of awesome command-line applications in Ruby.
Ruby
169
star
17

rack-policy

Rack middleware for the EU ePrivacy Directive compliance in Ruby Web Apps
Ruby
147
star
18

tty-pie

Draw pie charts in your terminal window
Ruby
140
star
19

necromancer

Conversion from one object type to another with a bit of black magic.
Ruby
135
star
20

strings

A set of useful functions for transforming strings.
Ruby
129
star
21

coinpare

Compare cryptocurrency trading data across multiple exchanges and blockchains in the comfort of your terminal
Ruby
113
star
22

tty-exit

Terminal exit codes.
Ruby
99
star
23

strings-case

Convert strings between different cases.
Ruby
97
star
24

tty-reader

A set of methods for processing keyboard input in character, line and multiline modes.
Ruby
89
star
25

tty-screen

Terminal screen detection - cross platform, major ruby interpreters
Ruby
86
star
26

tty-option

A declarative command-line parser
Ruby
85
star
27

merkle_tree

A merkle tree is a data structure used for efficiently summarizing sets of data, often one-time signatures.
Ruby
82
star
28

verse

[DEPRECATED] Text transformations
Ruby
71
star
29

tty-cursor

Terminal cursor movement and manipulation of cursor properties such as visibility
Ruby
70
star
30

tty-file

File manipulation utility methods
Ruby
67
star
31

supervision

Write distributed systems that are resilient and self-heal.
Ruby
65
star
32

tty-config

A highly customisable application configuration interface for building terminal tools.
Ruby
63
star
33

tty-font

Terminal fonts
Ruby
60
star
34

benchmark-trend

Measure performance trends of Ruby code
Ruby
60
star
35

lex

Lex is an implementation of lex tool in Ruby.
Ruby
56
star
36

tty-tree

Print directory or structured data in a tree like format
Ruby
56
star
37

strings-truncation

Truncate strings with fullwidth characters and ANSI codes.
Ruby
50
star
38

slideck

Present Markdown-powered slide decks in the terminal.
Ruby
44
star
39

tty-pager

Terminal output paging - cross-platform, major ruby interpreters
Ruby
40
star
40

tty-color

Terminal color capabilities detection
Ruby
35
star
41

tty-link

Hyperlinks in your terminal
Ruby
32
star
42

strings-inflection

Convert between singular and plural forms of English nouns
Ruby
31
star
43

tty-platform

Operating system detection
Ruby
29
star
44

tty-sparkline

Sparkline charts for terminal applications.
Ruby
29
star
45

communist

Library for mocking CLI calls to external APIs
Ruby
25
star
46

splay_tree

A self-balancing binary tree optimised for fast access to frequently used nodes.
Ruby
24
star
47

equatable

Allows ruby objects to implement equality comparison and inspection methods.
Ruby
24
star
48

minehunter

Terminal mine hunting game.
Ruby
23
star
49

rotation.js

Responsive and mobile enabled jQuery plugin to help create rotating content.
JavaScript
22
star
50

strings-ansi

Handle ANSI escape codes in strings
Ruby
20
star
51

benchmark-malloc

Trace memory allocations and collect stats
Ruby
20
star
52

strings-numeral

Express numbers as string numerals
Ruby
20
star
53

tty-which

Cross-platform implementation of Unix `which` command
Ruby
19
star
54

benchmark-perf

Benchmark execution time and iterations per second
Ruby
13
star
55

tty-runner

A command routing tree for terminal applications
Ruby
12
star
56

queen

English language linter to hold your files in high esteem.
Ruby
8
star
57

impact

Ruby backend for Impact.js framework
Ruby
8
star
58

pastel-cli

CLI tool for intuitive terminal output styling
Ruby
7
star
59

dotfiles

Configuration files for Unix tools
Vim Script
7
star
60

tty-markdown-cli

CLI tool for displaying nicely formatted Markdown documents in the terminal
Ruby
6
star
61

static_deploy

Automate deployment of static websites
Ruby
6
star
62

tenpin

Terminal tenpin bowling game
Ruby
4
star
63

tty.github.io

TTY toolkit website.
SCSS
3
star
64

tytus

Helps you manage page titles in your Rails app.
Ruby
3
star
65

peter-murach.github.com

Personal webpage
JavaScript
2
star
66

wc.rb

A Ruby clone of Unix wc utility.
Ruby
2
star
67

exportable

Rails plugin to ease exporting tasks.
Ruby
1
star
68

capistrano-git-stages

Multistage capistrano git tags
Ruby
1
star
69

leek

Cucumber steps and RSpec expectations for command line apps
Ruby
1
star
70

tabster

Ruby
1
star
71

unicorn.github.io

Website for the github_api and github_cli ruby gems.
CSS
1
star
72

tty-color-cli

CLI tool for terminal color capabilities detection
Ruby
1
star
73

finite_machine.github.io

Website for finite_machine Ruby gem
SCSS
1
star
74

strings-wrapping

Wrap strings with fullwidth characters and ANSI codes
Ruby
1
star