Simple CLI Menus
Project description
simple CLI menu
examples
features
Sane defaults (see the simple cli menu prompting example)
custom pre-prompt
You may specify any pre-prompt you wish to appear before the list of options:
from pimento import menu
result = menu(
['red', 'blue', 'green', 'grey'],
pre_prompt="Which color?"
)
Prints:
Which color? red blue green grey Enter an option to continue:
custom post-prompt
You may specify any post-propmt you wish to appear after the list of options:
from pimento import menu
result = menu(
['red', 'blue', 'green', 'grey'],
post_prompt="Please select one: "
)
Prints:
Options: red blue green grey Please select one:
partial matches
The user can select either a full option or a partial match. All of the following will result in the user selecting blue:
b
bl
blu
blue
re-prompting
When an invalid option is entered, an actionable error message is printed, and the menu is re-prompted.
when no choice is entered:
which color? red blue green grey Please select one: [!] an empty response is not valid.
when an invalid choice is entered:
which color? red blue green grey Please select one: brown [!] "brown" does not match any of the valid choices.
when an ambiguous choice is entered:
If gre was entered…
which color? red blue green grey Please select one: gre [!] "gre" matches multiple choices: [!] green [!] grey [!] Please specify your choice further.
tab-completion
Tab completion of options is supported! At the moment, this is supported via readline, so this is a *nix-only feature. Arrow-key navigation of history and current line is also supported via the readline library.
using a default
menu will accept a default_index keyword argument. items[default_index] must be valid. An invalid index will result in an exception being raised at call time.
from pimento import menu
result = menu(
['red', 'blue', 'green'],
"which color?",
"Please select one [{}]: ",
default_index=0
)
Prints:
which color? red blue green Please select one [red]:
When a default_index is provided, it is valid to enter no value. In this case, the default value (red, in this example) is returned.
When a default_index is provided, if {} is present in the post-prompt, it will be replaced with the value of items[default_index]. It is recommended, but not required, that if you set a default_index, you should display the default value to the users via this substitution mechanism.
using indices
menu will accept an indexed argument. When set to True, indices will be printed with each option, and it will be valid to enter an index to choose an option.
from pimento import menu
result = menu(
['red', 'blue', 'green'],
"which color?",
"Please select one [{}]: ",
default_index=0,
indexed=True
)
Prints:
which color? [0] red [1] blue [2] green Please select one [red]:
Choosing any of the following will return red:
<enter> (to select the default)
r
re
red
0 (index)
When using indices, the selection is matched first by index, then by item. Given the following menu…
which number? [0] 100 [1] 200 [2] 300 Please select one:
…the selection/result pairs are:
0 -> 100 (selection treated as index)
1 -> 200 (selection treated as index)
2 -> 300 (selection treated as index)
3 -> 300 (selection matched no index, matched against items)
10 -> 100 (selection matched no index, matched against items)
20 -> 200 (selection matched no index, matched against items)
30 -> 300 (selection matched no index, matched against items)
deduplication
If you pass multiple matching items into menu, it will deduplicate them for you. This is to prevent the following scenario:
pimento foo foo Options: foo foo Please select an option: foo [!] "foo" matches multiple choices: [!] foo [!] foo [!] Please specify your choice further.
You can’t specify a choice any further in this case, so pimento deduplicates the list for you. If you expect your list of items not to need deduplication, you should check that prior to calling menu.
case-insensitivity
menu will accept an insensitive argument, which will make the menu match user input to the menu options in a case-insensitive manner.
from pimento import menu
result = menu(
['RED', 'Blue', 'green'],
insensitive=True
)
Prints:
Options: RED Blue green Enter an option to continue:
Entering red will get you RED, blue will get you Blue, and GREEN will get you green.
fuzzy matching
menu will accept a fuzzy argument, which will make the menu search for the words in the user input in the words of the item string, rather than just matching the user input from the start of the option:
from pimento import menu
result = menu(
['a blue thing', 'one green thing'],
fuzzy=True
)
Prints:
Options: a blue thing one green thing Enter an option to continue:
Entering thing n will return one green thing.
This method matches thing to both options (both contain the full word thing), then matches n only to one green thing, because that’s the only option with an unmatched n (in both one and green).
arrow keys
When running in a *nix environment, menu will use the Gnu readline library to provide support for command history and the use of arrow keys to edit entered text:
Options: foo Enter an option to continue: oo [!] "oo" does not match any of the valid choices. Options: foo Enter an option to continue: <up><left><left>f<enter> foo
In the above example, the user hit <up>, which brought back ‘oo’ and put the cursor at the end. They then hit <left> twice to get the cursor back to the beginning of the word, inserted ‘f’ to spell the valid option ‘foo’, and hit enter.
CLI
There is a standalone CLI tool of the same name (pimento), which is a wrapper for pimento.menu, and can be used to create simple menus quickly on the command line:
pimento --help usage: pimento [-h] [--pre TEXT] [--post TEXT] [--default-index INT] [--indexed] option [option ...] Present the user with a simple CLI menu, and return the option chosen. The menu is presented via stderr. The output is printed to stdout for piping. positional arguments: option The option(s) to present to the user. optional arguments: -h, --help show this help message and exit --pre TEXT, -p TEXT The pre-prompt/title/introduction to the menu. [Options:] --post TEXT, -P TEXT The prompt presented to the user after the menu items. --default-index INT, -d INT The index of the item to use as the default --indexed, -i Print indices with the options, and allow the user to use them to choose. --insensitive, -I Perform insensitive matching. Also drops any items that case-insensitively match prior items. --fuzzy, -f search for the individual words in the user input anywhere in the item strings. The default for the post prompt is "Enter an option to continue: ". If --default-index is specified, the default option value will be printed in the post prompt as well.
installation
Latest pushed to Pypi (v0.6.0)
pip install pimento
Latest
pip install git+https://github.com/toejough/pimento
testing
pimento has been tested on python 2.7.9 and 3.4.3 on OSX. To test yourself:
git clone https://github.com/toejough/pimento cd pimento pip install tox tox
API deprecation notices
Prompt ordering
Prior to version 0.4.0, the signature for menu was:
def menu(pre_prompt, items, post_prompt=DEFAULT, default_index=None, indexed=False):
In v0.4.0, the signature changed to:
def menu(items, pre_prompt=DEFAULT, post_prompt=DEFAULT, default_index=None, indexed=False):
To ease transition of any users, there is special code in place to determine which order the caller is passing in items and pre_prompt. All pre-0.4.0 code should continue to work, but passing pre_prompt as the first argument is a deprecated use and should be discontinued. Old code should be updated. The compatibility mode will be discontinued soon, but definitely by 1.0.0.
The API was changed to allow the simplest possible calling/use of the menu function. The original signature was chosen because I thought that there wasn’t a sensible default value, but “Options:” seems sensible enough for a generic default.
Search matching
As of version 0.6.0, the search method of matching is deprecated. It will be removed within a few releases, but definitely by v1.0.0.
fuzzy matching matches the same cases, and is more versatile.
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