# RustyLine
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[![](https://img.shields.io/crates/v/rustyline.svg)](https://crates.io/crates/rustyline)
[![Docs](https://docs.rs/rustyline/badge.svg)](https://docs.rs/rustyline)
Readline implementation in Rust that is based on [Antirez' Linenoise](https://github.com/antirez/linenoise)
**Supported Platforms**
* Unix (tested on FreeBSD, Linux and macOS)
* Windows
* cmd.exe
* Powershell
**Note**:
* Powershell ISE is not supported, check [issue #56](https://github.com/kkawakam/rustyline/issues/56)
* Mintty (Cygwin/MinGW) is not supported
* Highlighting / Colors are not supported on Windows < Windows 10 except with ConEmu and `ColorMode::Forced`.
## Example
```rust
use rustyline::error::ReadlineError;
use rustyline::Editor;
fn main() {
// `()` can be used when no completer is required
let mut rl = Editor::<()>::new();
if rl.load_history("history.txt").is_err() {
println!("No previous history.");
}
loop {
let readline = rl.readline(">> ");
match readline {
Ok(line) => {
rl.add_history_entry(line.as_str());
println!("Line: {}", line);
},
Err(ReadlineError::Interrupted) => {
println!("CTRL-C");
break
},
Err(ReadlineError::Eof) => {
println!("CTRL-D");
break
},
Err(err) => {
println!("Error: {:?}", err);
break
}
}
}
rl.save_history("history.txt").unwrap();
}
```
## crates.io
You can use this package in your project by adding the following
to your `Cargo.toml`:
```toml
[dependencies]
rustyline = "9.1.0"
```
## Features
- Unicode (UTF-8) (linenoise supports only ASCII)
- Word completion (linenoise supports only line completion)
- Filename completion
- History search ([Searching for Commands in the History](http://tiswww.case.edu/php/chet/readline/readline.html#SEC8))
- Kill ring ([Killing Commands](http://tiswww.case.edu/php/chet/readline/readline.html#IDX3))
- Multi line support (line wrapping)
- Word commands
- Hints
## Actions
For all modes:
Home | Move cursor to the beginning of line
End | Move cursor to end of line
Left | Move cursor one character left
Right | Move cursor one character right
Ctrl-C | Interrupt/Cancel edition
Ctrl-D, Del | (if line is *not* empty) Delete character under cursor
Ctrl-D | (if line *is* empty) End of File
Ctrl-J, Ctrl-M, Enter | Finish the line entry
Ctrl-R | Reverse Search history (Ctrl-S forward, Ctrl-G cancel)
Ctrl-T | Transpose previous character with current character
Ctrl-U | Delete from start of line to cursor
Ctrl-V | Insert any special character without performing its associated action (#65)
Ctrl-W | Delete word leading up to cursor (using white space as a word boundary)
Ctrl-Y | Paste from Yank buffer
Ctrl-Z | Suspend (Unix only)
Ctrl-_ | Undo
### Emacs mode (default mode)
Ctrl-A, Home | Move cursor to the beginning of line
Ctrl-B, Left | Move cursor one character left
Ctrl-E, End | Move cursor to end of line
Ctrl-F, Right| Move cursor one character right
Ctrl-H, Backspace | Delete character before cursor
Ctrl-I, Tab | Next completion
Ctrl-K | Delete from cursor to end of line
Ctrl-L | Clear screen
Ctrl-N, Down | Next match from history
Ctrl-P, Up | Previous match from history
Ctrl-X Ctrl-U | Undo
Ctrl-Y | Paste from Yank buffer (Meta-Y to paste next yank instead)
Meta-< | Move to first entry in history
Meta-> | Move to last entry in history
Meta-B, Alt-Left | Move cursor to previous word
Meta-C | Capitalize the current word
Meta-D | Delete forwards one word
Meta-F, Alt-Right | Move cursor to next word
Meta-L | Lower-case the next word
Meta-T | Transpose words
Meta-U | Upper-case the next word
Meta-Y | See Ctrl-Y
Meta-Backspace | Kill from the start of the current word, or, if between words, to the start of the previous word
Meta-0, 1, ..., - | Specify the digit to the argument. `–` starts a negative argument.
[Readline Emacs Editing Mode Cheat Sheet](http://www.catonmat.net/download/readline-emacs-editing-mode-cheat-sheet.pdf)
### vi command mode
$, End | Move cursor to end of line
. | Redo the last text modification
; | Redo the last character finding command
, | Redo the last character finding command in opposite direction
0, Home | Move cursor to the beginning of line
^ | Move to the first non-blank character of line
a | Insert after cursor
A | Insert at the end of line
b | Move one word or token left
B | Move one non-blank word left
c<movement> | Change text of a movement command
C | Change text to the end of line (equivalent to c$)
d<movement> | Delete text of a movement command
D, Ctrl-K | Delete to the end of the line
e | Move to the end of the current word
E | Move to the end of the current non-blank word
f<char> | Move right to the next occurrence of `char`
F<char> | Move left to the previous occurrence of `char`
h, Ctrl-H, Backspace | Move one character left
l, Space | Move one character right
Ctrl-L | Clear screen
i | Insert before cursor
I | Insert at the beginning of line
+, j, Ctrl-N | Move forward one command in history
-, k, Ctrl-P | Move backward one command in history
p | Insert the yanked text at the cursor (paste)
P | Insert the yanked text before the cursor
r | Replaces a single character under the cursor (without leaving command mode)
s | Delete a single character under the cursor and enter input mode
S | Change current line (equivalent to 0c$)
t<char> | Move right to the next occurrence of `char`, then one char backward
T<char> | Move left to the previous occurrence of `char`, then one char forward
u | Undo
w | Move one word or token right
W | Move one non-blank word right
x | Delete a single character under the cursor
X | Delete a character before the cursor
y<movement> | Yank a movement into buffer (copy)
### vi insert mode
Ctrl-H, Backspace | Delete character before cursor
Ctrl-I, Tab | Next completion
Esc | Switch to command mode
[Readline vi Editing Mode Cheat Sheet](http://www.catonmat.net/download/bash-vi-editing-mode-cheat-sheet.pdf)
[Terminal codes (ANSI/VT100)](http://wiki.bash-hackers.org/scripting/terminalcodes)
## Wine
```sh
$ cargo run --example example --target 'x86_64-pc-windows-gnu'
...
Error: Io(Error { repr: Os { code: 6, message: "Invalid handle." } })
$ wineconsole --backend=curses target/x86_64-pc-windows-gnu/debug/examples/example.exe
...
```
## Terminal checks
```sh
$ # current settings of all terminal attributes:
$ stty -a
$ # key bindings:
$ bind -p
$ # print out a terminfo description:
$ infocmp
```
## Similar projects
[go-prompt][] | Go | Ux/win | ANSI | Yes | Yes | any | Emacs/prog | No | No | Yes | Yes |
[Haskeline][] | Haskell | Ux/Win | Any | Yes | Yes | any | Emacs/vi/conf | Yes | Yes | ? | ? |
[linefeed][] | Rust | Ux/Win | Any | | Yes | any | Emacs/conf | Yes | No | ? | No |
[linenoise][] | C | Ux | ANSI | No | Yes | only line | Emacs | No | No | Ux | Yes |
[linenoise-ng][] | C | Ux/Win | ANSI | Yes | Yes | only line | Emacs | Yes | No | ? | ? |
[Liner][] | Rust | Ux | ANSI | | No inc search | only word | Emacs/vi/prog | No | Yes | Ux | History based |
[prompt_toolkit][] | Python | Ux/Win | ANSI | Yes | Yes | any | Emacs/vi/conf | Yes | Yes | Ux/Win | Yes |
[rb-readline][] | Ruby | Ux/Win | ANSI | Yes | Yes | only word | Emacs/vi/conf | Yes | Yes | ? | No |
[reedline][] | Rust | Ux/Win | ANSI | Yes | Yes | any | Emacs/vi/bind | No | Yes | Ux/Win | Yes |
[replxx][] | C/C++ | Ux/Win | ANSI | Yes | Yes | only line | Emacs | Yes | No | Ux/Win | Yes |
Rustyline | Rust | Ux/Win | ANSI | Yes | Yes | any | Emacs/vi/bind | Yes | Yes | Ux/Win 10+ | Yes |
[termwiz][] | Rust | Ux/Win | Any | ? | Yes | any | Emacs | No | No | Ux/Win | No |
[go-prompt]: https://github.com/c-bata/go-prompt
[Haskeline]: https://github.com/judah/haskeline
[linefeed]: https://github.com/murarth/linefeed
[linenoise]: https://github.com/antirez/linenoise
[linenoise-ng]: https://github.com/arangodb/linenoise-ng
[Liner]: https://github.com/redox-os/liner
[prompt_toolkit]: https://github.com/jonathanslenders/python-prompt-toolkit
[rb-readline]: https://github.com/ConnorAtherton/rb-readline
[reedline]: https://github.com/nushell/reedline
[replxx]: https://github.com/AmokHuginnsson/replxx
[termwiz]: https://github.com/wez/wezterm/tree/master/termwiz
## Multi line support
This is a very simple feature that simply causes lines that are longer
than the current terminal width to be displayed on the next visual
line instead of horizontally scrolling as more characters are
typed. Currently this feature is always enabled and there is no
configuration option to disable it.
This feature does not allow the end user to hit a special key
sequence and enter a mode where hitting the return key will cause a
literal newline to be added to the input buffer.
The way to achieve multi-line editing is to implement the `Validator`
trait.