tuig-iosys

Crates.iotuig-iosys
lib.rstuig-iosys
version0.0.5
sourcesrc
created_at2023-03-20 05:05:39.474773
updated_at2023-11-10 03:54:42.723512
descriptionMulti-backend terminal-like text grid rendering.
homepage
repositoryhttps://github.com/nic-hartley/tuig
max_upload_size
id814917
size324,009
Nic Hartley (nic-hartley)

documentation

README

tuig-iosys

tuig-iosys is the textmode renderer used by tuig. You can use it separately if all you want is to render a character grid.

Usage

tuig-iosys is a typical Rust crate, so you can add it to your project with cargo add tuig-iosys. And then the docs, especially the docs module, will tell you how to use the library.

Do keep in mind that tuig-iosys is a pretty low-level crate. It's a little like the textmode equivalent of softbuffer: You can use it to render a character grid, rather than a pixel grid, and get basic events back. That's about it.

FAQ

(Don't forget to check out the repo's README for the cross-crate FAQ, too!)

What's textmode?

Textmode, text UI, or text-based interfaces are those whose output is exclusively a grid of typical text characters. Think nmtui, or Dwarf Fortress, and contrast it with a GUI or a webpage -- which might only have text content, but can render more complex shapes than

The line tuig-iosys draws is the same as tuig: Can it run in a terminal?

There's some hidden technical complexity underlying that intuition, but mostly it lines up.

What hidden technical complexity?

First, you can actually do a lot with traditional "textmode" systems. For example, custom character sets can allow for extremely complex graphics, even pixel-perfect rendering. Check out your local demo scene sometime; they do really cool stuff. tuig-iosys doesn't try to replicate that -- theoretically you could use its font support to accomplish the same thing, but you're more or less on your own there. (This also covers using ▀/▄ or Braille.) The most it supports easily is bitmap-based fonts for tilesets.

Similarly, modern terminals are actually... really cool. Some allow embedding images, some can be drawn to like any pixel buffer, some are just magic. Again, tuig-iosys doesn't try to replicate any of that functionality. You get character grids, and you like it! More seriously, if you want advanced terminal features, use an advanced terminal library. This isn't meant to provide access to every feature your terminal supports, it's meant to render things in a retro style.

The most frustrating bit of complexity for users of the library, though, is that even among reasonable character grids, there's some wide variance between available features. Neither tuig-iosys nor tuig tries to normalize them, because there's no one obvious "right way" to replace e.g. underline on backends without support for it. Instead, it's left up to the library user to figure out what common idioms to use, and how they should degrade.

(Tip: Try creating a trait MyFormatting: FormattedExt, and using that to define things like "highlight" or "trim color".)

Finally: Terminals have differing behavior on special characters. tuig-iosys usually tries to normalize to the lowest common denominator. It might not behave how you expect if you write an ASCII BEL, for example.

Commit count: 489

cargo fmt