Lugaru's Epsilon Programmer's Editor 14.04
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Epsilon User's Manual and Reference >
Primitives and EEL Subroutines >
Input Primitives >
Other Input Functions
get_strdef(char *res, char *pr, char *def)
get_strnone(char *res, char *pr, char *def)
get_string(char *res, char *pr)
get_str_auto_def(char *res, char *pr)
get_strpopup(char *res, char *title,
char *def, char *help)
The subroutines get_string( ), get_strdef( ), and
the rest each get a string from the user, and perform no completion.
They each display the prompt, and accept a line of input with editing.
The get_strdef( ) routine additionally displays the default
string (indicated by def ) and allows the user to select the
default by typing just the <Enter> key. The user can also pull
in the default with Ctrl-s, and then edit the string if desired. While
the other two functions use their prompt arguments as-is,
get_strdef( ) constructs the actual prompt by adding a colon and
space. If insert-default-response is zero, they also include
the default value in the prompt, inside square brackets.
The get_strnone( ) subroutine works like get_strdef( ),
except that the default string is not displayed in the prompt (even
when insert-default-response is zero), and Epsilon won't
replace an empty response with the default string. Use this instead
of get_strdef( ) if an empty response is valid.
The get_str_auto_def( ) subroutine is like
get_strdef( ), except it automatically provides the last
response to the current prompt as a default.
The get_strpopup( ) subroutine is a variation of
get_strnone( ) that is only available under Epsilon for
Windows. It displays a simple dialog. The parameter title
provides the dialog's title, and def provides the initial
contents of the response area, which is returned in res . If the
user presses the Help button, Epsilon will look up help for the
specified command or variable name or other topic name in its help
file.
int get_number(char *pr)
int numtoi(char *str)
int numtoi_with_base(char *str, int base)
int strtoi(char *str, int base)
int exptoi(char *str)
int evaluate_numeric_expression(char *expr)
char got_bad_number;
The get_number( ) subroutine is handy when a command needs a
number. It prompts for the number using get_string( ), but
uses the prefix argument instead if one is provided. It returns the
number obtained, and also takes care of resetting iter if
necessary. It also understands numbers such as 0x10 in EEL's
hexadecimal (base 16) format, binary and octal numbers, and character
codes like 'a' .
The numtoi( ) subroutine converts from a string to a number.
It skips over any spaces at the beginning of its string parameter,
determines the base (by seeing if the string starts with "0x" or
similar), and then calls strtoi( ) to perform the actual
conversion. The subroutine strtoi( ) takes a string and a base,
and returns the value of the string assuming it is a number in that
base. It handles bases from 2 to 16, and negative numbers too. It
stops when it finds a character that is not a legal digit in the
requested base. The numtoi_with_base( ) subroutine is
similar, but where numtoi( ) assumes base 10 numbers when the
user doesn't specify a base, with numtoi_with_base( ) you can
specify a default base.
The evaluate_numeric_expression( ) subroutine evaluates an
arithmetic expression that may contain operators like + , - ,
* , or / , returning its numeric value. It runs the EEL
compiler to do this. The exptoi( ) subroutine does the same.
However, it examines the expression first. If it contains no
arithmetic operators, it calls numtoi( ) instead, which is
significantly faster.
The numtoi( ) and exptoi( ) subroutines both also recognize
a key name inside angle brackets, such as <Tab> , and return the
key's numeric value. (The evaluate_numeric_expression( )
subroutine doesn't, only permitting proper EEL expressions.) The
exptoi( ) subroutine is usually the best choice for evaluating
numeric user input. The get_number( ) subroutine mentioned above
calls it.
All these subroutines set the variable got_bad_number to a
nonzero value if the string they receive doesn't indicate a valid
number. They return the value zero in this case. If the string does
represent a number, they set got_bad_number to zero.
int get_choice(int list, char *resp, char *title,
char *msg, char *b1, char *b2,
char *b3)
int get_key_choice(int list, char *resp, char *title,
char *msg, char *b1, char *b2, char *b3)
int select_menu_item(int resbuf, int menuwin,
int owin, int dir)
The get_choice( ) subroutine provides a way to ask the user
to select one of a list of choices. The choices must appear in the
buffer list , one to a line. The subroutine displays a pop-up
window with the indicated title and shows the specified message.
Epsilon for Windows instead displays a dialog with the indicated
title, and doesn't use the message. It uses the specified button
labels (see the description of the button_dialog( ) primitive in Button Dialogs for details). The get_choice( )
subroutine puts the user's choice in resp and returns 1 . If
the user cancels, the subroutine returns 0 .
If resp is initially nonempty, get_choice( ) will position
point on the first line starting with that text. If resp is
initially "" , the subroutine won't change point in list .
The get_key_choice( ) subroutine is a variation on
get_choice( ), designed to let the user select one of a series of
options. Each of the lines in the buffer list should begin with a
unique character. When the user presses that character, Epsilon moves
to that entry in the list. This subroutine's behavior is otherwise
identical to get_choice( ).
The get_choice( ) subroutine uses the
select_menu_item( ) subroutine to handle user interaction.
It takes the window handle menuwin of a window containing a list
of choices and returns when the user has selected one. The parameter
owin should be the handle of the window that was current before
displaying menuwin . If resbuf is nonzero, Epsilon will copy
the selected line to the specified buffer.
The parameter dir tells Epsilon how to behave when the user
presses self-inserting keys like "a". If dir is zero, the
subroutine interprets N and P to move forward and back, and Q to
quit. Other normal keys are ignored. If dir is 1 or -1 ,
and search-in-menu is nonzero, normal keys are added to the
result, and Epsilon searches for the first (if 1 ) or last (if
-1 ) item that matches.
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Epsilon Programmer's Editor 14.04 manual. Copyright (C) 1984, 2021 by Lugaru Software Ltd. All rights reserved.
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