Textual extensions for creating Terminal User Interfaces
Project description
Textology
The study of making interactive UIs with text.
Why should GUIs have all the fun? Textology extends the amazing functionality of Textual and Rich, to help create TUIs with popular UI design patterns and principals from web and mobile frameworks. Refer to Top Features for a summary of the extensions provided.
Additional Background
Commonly known as Text (or Terminal) User Interfaces, the goal of a TUI (Tooey) is to provide as close as possible to a traditional GUI experience straight from a terminal. Why? Not all environments allow full graphical library access, web access, etc., but almost all provide access from a terminal. Yes, even terminals can provide mouse support, sophisticated layouts, animations, and a wide range of colors!
Like Textual, Textology is inspired by modern web development. Textology extends Textual by bringing together, and expanding upon, designs from other frameworks such as Dash/FastAPI/Flask, including their use of routing, annotations, and observation patterns. Why? To increase developer velocity based on existing experience. Textology also receives inspiration from other UI frameworks external to Python, such as iOS, Android, and Web frameworks. Most importantly however, Textology is an extension of Textual: it does not replace Textual, but rather provides additional options on top of the core Textual framework.
Before using Textology, be comfortable with Textual. For tutorials, guides, etc., refer to the Textual Documentation. Textology is NOT a replacement for Textual, it is an extension. Callbacks, widgets, screens, event lifecycles, etc., from Textual still apply to Textology extended widgets and applications. For other advanced features, familiarity with Dash/FastAPI/Flask principles will help. Examples for Textology extensions, such as callback based applications, are included in this documentation.
Table Of Contents
Top Features
- Multiple theme support
- Swap CSS themes live
- Apply multiple CSS themes simultaneously
- Extended callbacks
- Declare Widget callbacks/event handling without subclassing
- Declare Apps with "event driven architecture/observation pattern" to detect changes and automatically update UI
- Listen to reactive attribute changes.
- Listen to events/messages/errors.
- Extended native widgets, including (but not limited to):
- All widgets: ability to disable event messages and declare styles without subclassing
- ListItems with data objects
- Buttons with automatic tracking of click counts
- New widgets, including (but not limited to):
- ListItemHeaders (non-interactive ListItems)
- HorizontalMenus (walkable list of ListViews with peeking at following lists)
- MultiSelect (dropdown list with ability to select multiple items).
- Enhanced testing support
- Parallel tests via python-xdist
- Custom testing arguments, such as updating snapshots on failures
Compatibility
Textology follows Textual Compatibility guidelines with one exception: Python3.10 minimum requirement.
Getting Started
Installation
Install Textology via pip:
pip install textology
For development of applications based on Textual/Textology (but not development of Textology itself), use the
[dev]
package. This installs extra Textual development tools, and requirements for Textology testing extensions.
pip install textology[dev]
For full development of Textology itself, refer to Contributing. This installs Textual development tools, requirements for Textology testing extensions, and full QA requirements to meet commit standards. This version has the highest library requirements, in order to match the versions used by Textology itself for testing. Required if developing Textology itself, or recommended if looking to match/exceed the level of QA testing used by Textology.
Extended Widgets
Native Textual widgets can be directly swapped out with Textology extended equivalents. They can then be used as is (standard Textual usage), or with extensions (via extra keyword arguments).
- Basic swap (no extensions):
# Replace:
from textual.widgets import Button
# With:
from textology.widgets import Button
- Instance callback extension (avoid global watchers, name/ID checks in the event watchers, and event chaining):
from textology.widgets import Button
button = Button(
callbacks={"on_button_pressed": lambda event: print("Don't press my buttons...")},
)
- Instance style extension (set styles directly at instantiation based on logic):
from textology.widgets import Button
feeling_blue = True
button = Button(
styles={
"background": "blue" if feeling_blue else "green",
},
)
- Instance message disable extension (avoid unused event chains, such as in large ListViews):
from textual import events
from textology.widgets import ListItem
item = ListItem(
disabled_messages=[events.Mount, events.Show],
)
Extended Applications
Textology App classes, such as WidgetApp
, can replace any regular Textual App, and be used as is without any
extensions turned on. Here are examples of the most commonly used application subclasses, WidgetApp
and
ExtendedApp
, and their primary extended functionality being used. More detailed examples of applications based
around routes, callbacks, and standard Textual applications can be found in Examples.
-
Basic App without subclassing:
from textology.apps import WidgetApp from textology.widgets import Button, Container, Label app = WidgetApp( Container( Button("Ping", callbacks={ "on_button_pressed": lambda event: app.query_one('#label').update("Ping") }), Button("Pong", callbacks={ "on_button_pressed": lambda event: app.query_one('#label').update("Pong") }), Button("Sing-a-long", callbacks={ "on_button_pressed": lambda event: app.query_one('#label').update("Sing-a-long") }), Label(id="label") ) ) app.run()
-
Observer/callback application (automatic attribute monitoring and updates by element IDs without manual queries):
from textology.apps import ExtendedApp from textology.observers import Modified, Select, Update from textology.widgets import Button, Container, Label app = ExtendedApp( child=Container( Button("Ping", id="ping-btn"), Button("Pong", id="pong-btn"), Button("Sing-a-long", id="sing-btn"), Container( id="content", ), ) ) @app.when( Modified("ping-btn", "n_clicks"), Update("content", "children"), ) def ping(clicks): return Label(f"Ping pressed {clicks}") @app.when( Modified("pong-btn", "n_clicks"), Update("content", "children"), ) def pong(clicks): return Label(f"Pong pressed {clicks}") @app.when( Modified("sing-btn", "n_clicks"), Select("ping-btn", "n_clicks"), Select("pong-btn", "n_clicks"), Update("content", "children"), ) def song(song_clicks, ping_clicks, pong_clicks): if not ping_clicks or not pong_clicks: return Label(f"Press Ping and Pong first to complete the song!") return Label(f"Ping, pong, sing-a-long song pressed {song_clicks}") app.run()
-
Callbacks can also be async:
@app.when( Modified("pong-btn", "n_clicks"), Update("content", "children"), ) async def delayed_pong(clicks): await asyncio.sleep(3) return Label(f"Pong pressed {clicks} and updated 3 seconds later")
-
Callbacks can also catch Exceptions from other callbacks:
@app.when( Raised(Exception), ) def error_notification(error): app.notify(f"An unknown error occurred: {error}", title="Error")
-
Callbacks can also listen for stateless events, not just stateful attribute updates
from textology.apps import ExtendedApp from textology.observers import Published, Select, Update from textology.widgets import Button, Container, Label app = ExtendedApp( child=Container( Button("Ping", id="ping-btn"), Button("Pong", id="pong-btn"), Button("Sing-a-long", id="sing-btn"), Container( id="content", ), ) ) @app.when( Published("ping-btn", Button.Pressed), Update("content", "children"), ) def ping(event): return Label(f"Ping pressed {event.button.n_clicks}") @app.when( Published("pong-btn", Button.Pressed), Update("content", "children"), ) def pong(event): return Label(f"Pong pressed {event.button.n_clicks}") @app.when( Published("sing-btn", Button.Pressed), Select("ping-btn", "n_clicks"), Select("pong-btn", "n_clicks"), Update("content", "children"), ) def song(event, ping_clicks, pong_clicks): if not ping_clicks or not pong_clicks: return Label(f"Press Ping and Pong first to complete the song!") return Label(f"Ping, pong, sing-a-long song pressed {event.button.n_clicks}") app.run()
-
Callbacks can also be registered on methods, to share across all application instances
from textology.apps import ExtendedApp from textology.observers import Published, Select, Update, when from textology.widgets import Button, Container, Label class Page(Container): def compose(self): yield Button("Ping", id="ping-btn") yield Button("Pong", id="pong-btn") yield Button("Sing-a-long", id="sing-btn") yield Container( id="content", ) @when( Published("ping-btn", Button.Pressed), Update("content", "children"), ) def ping(self, event): return Label(f"Ping pressed {event.button.n_clicks}") @when( Published("pong-btn", Button.Pressed), Update("content", "children"), ) def pong(self, event): return Label(f"Pong pressed {event.button.n_clicks}") @when( Published("sing-btn", Button.Pressed), Select("ping-btn", "n_clicks"), Select("pong-btn", "n_clicks"), Update("content", "children"), ) def song(self, event, ping_clicks, pong_clicks): if not ping_clicks or not pong_clicks: return Label(f"Press Ping and Pong first to complete the song!") return Label(f"Ping, pong, sing-a-long song pressed {event.button.n_clicks}") app = ExtendedApp( child=Page() ) app.run()
-
Callbacks can also use Dash code style (Same as others, but with Dash compatibility object and calls)
from textology.dash_compat import DashCompatApp, Input, Output, State from textology.widgets import Button, Container, Label app = DashCompatApp( layout=Container( Button("Ping", id="ping-btn"), Button("Pong", id="pong-btn"), Button("Sing-a-long", id="sing-btn"), Container( id="content", ), ) ) @app.callback( Input("ping-btn", "n_clicks"), Output("content", "children"), ) def ping(clicks): return Label(f"Ping pressed {clicks}") @app.callback( Input("pong-btn", "n_clicks"), Output("content", "children"), ) def pong(clicks): return Label(f"Pong pressed {clicks}") @app.callback( Input("sing-btn", "n_clicks"), State("ping-btn", "n_clicks"), State("pong-btn", "n_clicks"), Output("content", "children"), ) def song(song_clicks, ping_clicks, pong_clicks): if not ping_clicks or not pong_clicks: return Label(f"Press Ping and Pong first to complete the song!") return Label(f"Ping, pong, sing-a-long song pressed {song_clicks}") app.run()
Extended Testing
Don't want to serialize your pytests? Looking for the ability to quickly visualize differences when UIs change?
You came to the right place. Textology extends Textual SVG snapshot capabilities to add support for parallel processing
during tests (python-xdist), and custom options such as auto updating SVG snapshots on failures. In order to use the
pytest extensions automagically, add the following to a conftest.py
in the root of the project. This will enable
usage of the compare_snapshots
fixture, and HTML report generation on failure, automatically.
pytest_plugins = ("textology.pytest_utils",)
- Basic snapshot test:
import pytest from textual import App from textual.widgets import Button class BasicApp(App): def compose(self): yield Button("Click me!") @pytest.mark.asyncio async def test_snapshot_with_app(compare_snapshots): assert await compare_snapshots(BasicApp())
Other advanced testing features include:
- Ability to pass an App, App Pilot, or a module containing an instantiated App or Pilot, to fixtures
- Custom snapshot paths, including reusing the same snapshot across multiple tests
- Automatic SVG updates with
pytest --txtology-snap-update
View all options by running pytest -h
and referring to Custom options:
section.
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