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461 lines
17 KiB
Markdown
461 lines
17 KiB
Markdown
<!-- <img align="right" width="350px" src="doc/completion-macos.png"/> -->
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<img align="left" src="doc/isocline-inline.svg"/>
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# Isocline: a portable readline alternative.
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Isocline is a pure C library that can be used as an alternative to the GNU readline library (latest release v1.0.9, 2022-01-15).
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- Small: less than 8k lines and can be compiled as a single C file without
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any dependencies or configuration (e.g. `gcc -c src/isocline.c`).
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- Portable: works on Unix, Windows, and macOS, and uses a minimal
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subset of ANSI escape sequences.
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- Features: extensive multi-line editing mode (`shift-tab`), (24-bit) color, history, completion, unicode,
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undo/redo, incremental history search, inline hints, syntax highlighting, brace matching,
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closing brace insertion, auto indentation, graceful fallback, support for custom allocators, etc.
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- License: MIT.
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- Comes with a Haskell binding ([`System.Console.Isocline`][hdoc].
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Enjoy,
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Daan
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<!-- <img align="right" width="350px" src="doc/history-win.png"/> -->
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# Demo
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![recording](doc/record-macos.svg)
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Shows in order: unicode, syntax highlighting, brace matching, jump to matching brace, auto indent, multiline editing, 24-bit colors, inline hinting, filename completion, and incremental history search.
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<sub>(screen capture was made with [termtosvg] by Nicolas Bedos)</sub>
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# Usage
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Include the isocline header in your C or C++ source:
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```C
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#include <include/isocline.h>
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```
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and call `ic_readline` to get user input with rich editing abilities:
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```C
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char* input;
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while( (input = ic_readline("prompt")) != NULL ) { // ctrl+d/c or errors return NULL
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printf("you typed:\n%s\n", input); // use the input
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free(input);
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}
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```
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See the [example] for a full example with completion, syntax highligting, history, etc.
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# Run the Example
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You can compile and run the [example] as:
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```
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$ gcc -o example -Iinclude test/example.c src/isocline.c
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$ ./example
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```
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or, the Haskell [example][HaskellExample]:
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```
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$ ghc -ihaskell test/Example.hs src/isocline.c
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$ ./test/Example
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```
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# Editing with Isocline
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Isocline tries to be as compatible as possible with standard [GNU Readline] key bindings.
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### Overview:
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```apl
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home/ctrl-a cursor end/ctrl-e
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┌─────────────────┼───────────────┐ (navigate)
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│ ctrl-left │ ctrl-right │
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│ ┌───────┼──────┐ │ ctrl-r : search history
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▼ ▼ ▼ ▼ ▼ tab : complete word
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prompt> it is the quintessential language shift-tab: insert new line
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▲ ▲ ▲ ▲ esc : delete input, done
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│ └──────────────┘ │ ctrl-z : undo
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│ alt-backsp alt-d │
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└─────────────────────────────────┘ (delete)
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ctrl-u ctrl-k
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```
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<sub>Note: on macOS, the meta (alt) key is not directly available in most terminals.
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Terminal/iTerm2 users can activate the meta key through
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`Terminal` → `Preferences` → `Settings` → `Use option as meta key`.</sub>
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### Key Bindings
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These are also shown when pressing `F1` on a Isocline prompt. We use `^` as a shorthand for `ctrl-`:
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| Navigation | |
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|-------------------|-------------------------------------------------|
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| `left`,`^b` | go one character to the left |
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| `right`,`^f ` | go one character to the right |
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| `up ` | go one row up, or back in the history |
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| `down ` | go one row down, or forward in the history |
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| `^left ` | go to the start of the previous word |
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| `^right ` | go to the end the current word |
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| `home`,`^a ` | go to the start of the current line |
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| `end`,`^e ` | go to the end of the current line |
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| `pgup`,`^home ` | go to the start of the current input |
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| `pgdn`,`^end ` | go to the end of the current input |
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| `alt-m ` | jump to matching brace |
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| `^p ` | go back in the history |
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| `^n ` | go forward in the history |
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| `^r`,`^s ` | search the history starting with the current word |
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| Deletion | |
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|-------------------|-------------------------------------------------|
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| `del`,`^d ` | delete the current character |
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| `backsp`,`^h ` | delete the previous character |
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| `^w ` | delete to preceding white space |
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| `alt-backsp ` | delete to the start of the current word |
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| `alt-d ` | delete to the end of the current word |
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| `^u ` | delete to the start of the current line |
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| `^k ` | delete to the end of the current line |
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| `esc ` | delete the current input, or done with empty input |
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| Editing | |
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|-------------------|-------------------------------------------------|
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| `enter ` | accept current input |
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| `^enter`,`^j`,`shift-tab` | create a new line for multi-line input |
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| `^l ` | clear screen |
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| `^t ` | swap with previous character (move character backward) |
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| `^z`,`^_ ` | undo |
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| `^y ` | redo |
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| `tab ` | try to complete the current input |
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| Completion menu | |
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|-------------------|-------------------------------------------------|
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| `enter`,`left` | use the currently selected completion |
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| `1` - `9` | use completion N from the menu |
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| `tab, down ` | select the next completion |
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| `shift-tab, up` | select the previous completion |
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| `esc ` | exit menu without completing |
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| `pgdn`,`^enter`,`^j` | show all further possible completions |
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| Incremental history search | |
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|-------------------|-------------------------------------------------|
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| `enter ` | use the currently found history entry |
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| `backsp`,`^z ` | go back to the previous match (undo) |
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| `tab`,`^r`,`up` | find the next match |
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| `shift-tab`,`^s`,`down` | find an earlier match |
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| `esc ` | exit search |
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# Build the Library
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### Build as a Single Source
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Copy the sources (in `include` and `src`) into your project, or add the library as a [submodule]:
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```
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$ git submodule add https://github.com/daanx/isocline
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```
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and add `isocline/src/isocline.c` to your build rules -- no configuration is needed.
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### Build with CMake
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Clone the repository and run cmake to build a static library (`.a`/`.lib`):
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```
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$ git clone https://github.com/daanx/isocline
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$ cd isocline
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$ mkdir -p build/release
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$ cd build/release
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$ cmake ../..
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$ cmake --build .
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```
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This builds a static library `libisocline.a` (or `isocline.lib` on Windows)
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and the example program:
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```
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$ ./example
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```
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### Build the Haskell Library
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See the Haskell [readme][Haskell] for instructions to build and use the Haskell library.
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# API Reference
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* See the [C API reference][docapi] and the [example] for example usage of history, completion, etc.
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* See the [Haskell API reference][hdoc] on Hackage and the Haskell [example][HaskellExample].
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# Motivation
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Isocline was created for use in the [Koka] interactive compiler.
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This required: pure C (no dependency on a C++ runtime or other libraries),
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portable (across Linux, macOS, and Windows), unicode support,
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a BSD-style license, and good functionality for completion and multi-line editing.
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Some other excellent libraries that we considered:
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[GNU readline],
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[editline](https://github.com/troglobit/editline),
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[linenoise](https://github.com/antirez/linenoise),
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[replxx](https://github.com/AmokHuginnsson/replxx), and
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[Haskeline](https://github.com/judah/haskeline).
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# Formatted Output
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Isocline also exposes functions for rich terminal output
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as `ic_print` (and `ic_println` and `ic_printf`).
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Inspired by the (Python) [Rich][RichBBcode] library,
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this supports a form of [bbcode]'s to format the output:
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```c
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ic_println( "[b]bold [red]and red[/red][/b]" );
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```
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Each print automatically closes any open tags that were
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not yet closed. Also, you can use a general close
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tag as `[/]` to close the innermost tag, so the
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following print is equivalent to the earlier one:
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```c
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ic_println( "[b]bold [red]and red[/]" );
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```
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There can be multiple styles in one tag
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(where the first name is used for the closing tag):
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```c
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ic_println( "[u #FFD700]underlined gold[/]" );
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```
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Sometimes, you need to display arbitrary messages
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that may contain sequences that you would not like
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to be interpreted as bbcode tags. One way to do
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this is the `[!`_tag_`]` which ignores formatting
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up to a close tag of the form `[/`_tag_`]`.
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```c
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ic_printf( "[red]red? [!pre]%s[/pre].\n", "[blue]not blue!" );
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```
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Predefined styles include `b` (bold),
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`u` (underline), `i` (italic), and `r` (reverse video), but
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you can (re)define any style yourself as:
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```c
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ic_style_def("warning", "crimson u");
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```
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and use them like any builtin style or property:
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```c
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ic_println( "[warning]this is a warning![/]" );
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```
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which is great for adding themes to your application.
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Each `ic_print` function always closes any unclosed tags automatically.
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To open a style persistently, use `ic_style_open` with a matching
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`ic_style_close` which scopes over any `ic_print` statements in between.
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```c
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ic_style_open("warning");
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ic_println("[b]crimson underlined and bold[/]");
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ic_style_close();
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```
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# Advanced
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## BBCode Format
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An open tag can have multiple white space separated
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entries that are
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either a _style name_, or a primitive _property_[`=`_value_].
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### Styles
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Isocline provides the following builtin styles as property shorthands:
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`b` (bold), `u` (underline), `i` (italic), `r` (reverse video),
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and some builtin styles for syntax highlighting:
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`keyword`, `control` (control-flow keywords), `string`,
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`comment`, `number`, `type`, `constant`.
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Predefined styles used by Isocline itself are:
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- `ic-prompt`: prompt style, e.g. `ic_style_def("ic-prompt", "yellow on blue")`.
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- `ic-info`: information (like the numbers in a completion menu).
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- `ic-diminish`: dim text (used for example in history search).
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- `ic-emphasis`: emphasized text (also used in history search).
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- `ic-hint`: color of an inline hint.
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- `ic-error`: error color (like an unmatched brace).
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- `ic-bracematch`: color of matching parenthesis.
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### Properties
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Boolean properties are by default `on`:
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- `bold` [`=`(`on`|`off`)]
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- `italic` [`=`(`on`|`off`)]
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- `underline` [`=`(`on`|`off`)]
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- `reverse` [`=`(`on`|`off`)]
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Color properties can be assigned a _color_:
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- `color=`_color_
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- `bgcolor=`_color_
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- _color_: equivalent to `color=`_color_.
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- `on` _color_: equivalent to `bgcolor=`_color_.
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A color value can be specified in many ways:
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- any standard HTML [color name][htmlcolors].
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- any of the 16 standard ANSI [color names][ansicolors] by prefixing `ansi-`
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(like `ansi-black` or `ansi-maroon`).
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The actual color value of these depend on the a terminal theme.
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- `#`_rrggbb_ or `#`_rgb_ for a specific 24-bit color.
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- `ansi-color=`_idx_: where 0 <= _idx_ <= 256 specifies an entry in the
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standard ANSI 256 [color palette][ansicolor256], where 256 is used for the ANSI
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default color.
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## Environment Variables
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- `NO_COLOR`: if present no colors are displayed.
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- `CLICOLOR=1`: if set, the `LSCOLORS` or `LS_COLORS` environment variables are used to colorize
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filename completions.
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- `COLORTERM=`(`truecolor`|`256color`|`16color`|`8color`|`monochrome`): enable a certain color palette, see the next section.
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- `TERM`: used on some systems to determine the color
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## Colors
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Isocline supports 24-bit colors and any RGB colors are automatically
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mapped to a reduced palette on older terminals if these do not
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support true color. Detection of full color support
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is not always possible to do automatically and you can
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set the `COLORTERM` environment variable expicitly to force Isocline to use
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a specific palette:
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- `COLORTERM=truecolor`: use 24-bit colors.
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<img width="500px" src="doc/color/ansi-truecolor.png"/>
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- `COLORTERM=256color`: use the ANSI 256 color palette.
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<img width="500px" src="doc/color/ansi-256color.png"/>
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- `COLORTERM=16color` : use the regular ANSI 16 color
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palette (8 normal and 8 bright colors).
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<img width="500px" src="doc/color/ansi-16color.png"/>
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- `COLORTERM=8color`: use bold for bright colors.
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- `COLORTERM=monochrome`: use no color.
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The above screenshots are made with the
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[`test_colors.c`](https://github.com/daanx/isocline/blob/main/test/test_colors.c) program. You can test your own
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terminal as:
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```
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$ gcc -o test_colors -Iinclude test/test_colors.c src/isocline.c
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$ ./test_colors
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$ COLORTERM=truecolor ./test_colors
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$ COLORTERM=16color ./test_colors
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```
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## ANSI Escape Sequences
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Isocline uses just few ANSI escape sequences that are widely
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supported:
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- `ESC[`_n_`A`, `ESC[`_n_`B`, `ESC[`_n_`C`, and `ESC[`_n_`D`,
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for moving the cursor _n_ places up, down, right, and left.
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- `ESC[K` to clear the line from the cursor.
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- `ESC[`_n_`m` for colors, with _n_ one of: 0 (reset), 1,22 (bold), 3,23 (italic),
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4,24 (underline), 7,27 (reverse), 30-37,40-47,90-97,100-107 (color),
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and 39,49 (select default color).
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- `ESC[38;5;`_n_`m`, `ESC[48;5;`_n_`m`, `ESC[38;2;`_r_`;`_g_`;`_b_`m`, `ESC[48;2;`_r_`;`_g_`;`_b_`m`:
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on terminals that support it, select
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entry _n_ from the
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256 color ANSI palette (used with `XTERM=xterm-256color` for example), or directly specify
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any 24-bit _rgb_ color (used with `COLORTERM=truecolor`) for the foreground or background.
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On Windows the above functionality is implemented using the Windows console API
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(except if running in the new Windows Terminal which supports these escape
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sequences natively).
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## Async and Threads
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Isocline is _not_ thread-safe and `ic_readline`_xxx_ and `ic_print`_xxx_ should
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be used from one thread only.
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The best way to use `ic_readline` asynchronously is
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to run it in a (blocking) dedicated thread and deliver
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results from there to the async event loop. Isocline has the
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```C
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bool ic_async_stop(void)
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```
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function that is thread-safe and can deliver an
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asynchronous event to Isocline that unblocks a current
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`ic_readline` and makes it behave as if the user pressed
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`ctrl-c` (which returns NULL from the read line call).
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## Color Mapping
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To map full RGB colors to an ANSI 256 or 16-color palette
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Isocline finds a palette color with the minimal "color distance" to
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the original color. There are various
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ways of calculating this: one way is to take the euclidean distance
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in the sRGB space (_simple-rgb_), a slightly better way is to
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take a weighted distance where the weight distribution is adjusted
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according to how big the red component is ([redmean](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Color_difference),
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denoted as _delta-rgb_ in the figure),
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this is used by Isocline),
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and finally, we can first translate into a perceptually uniform color space
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(CIElab) and calculate the distance there using the [CIEDE2000](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Color_difference)
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algorithm (_ciede2000_). Here are these three methods compared on
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some colors:
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![color space comparison](doc/color/colorspace-map.png)
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Each top row is the true 24-bit RGB color. Surprisingly,
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the sophisticated CIEDE2000 distance seems less good here compared to the
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simpler methods (as in the upper left block for example)
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(perhaps because this algorithm was created to find close
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perceptual colors in images where lightness differences may be given
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less weight?). CIEDE2000 also leads to more "outliers", for example as seen
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in column 5. Given these results, Isocline uses _redmean_ for
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color mapping. We also add a gray correction that makes it less
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likely to substitute a color for a gray value (and the other way
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around).
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## Possible Future Extensions
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- Vi key bindings.
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- kill buffer.
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- make the `ic_print`_xxx_ functions thread-safe.
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- extended low-level terminal functions.
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- status and progress bars.
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- prompt variants: confirm, etc.
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- ...
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Contact me if you are interested in doing any of these :-)
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# Releases
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* `2022-01-15`: v1.0.9: fix missing `ic_completion_arg` (issue #6),
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fix null ptr check in ic_print (issue #7), fix crash when using /dev/null as both input and output.
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* `2021-09-05`: v1.0.5: use our own wcwidth for consistency;
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thanks to Hans-Georg Breunig for helping with testing on NetBSD.
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* `2021-08-28`: v1.0.4: fix color query on Ubuntu/Gnome
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* `2021-08-27`: v1.0.3: fix duplicates in completions
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* `2021-08-23`: v1.0.2: fix windows eol wrapping
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* `2021-08-21`: v1.0.1: fix line-buffering
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* `2021-08-20`: v1.0.0: initial release
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[GNU readline]: https://tiswww.case.edu/php/chet/readline/rltop.html
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[koka]: http://www.koka-lang.org
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[submodule]: https://git-scm.com/book/en/v2/Git-Tools-Submodules
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[Haskell]: https://github.com/daanx/isocline/tree/main/haskell
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[HaskellExample]: https://github.com/daanx/isocline/blob/main/test/Example.hs
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[example]: https://github.com/daanx/isocline/blob/main/test/example.c
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[termtosvg]: https://github.com/nbedos/termtosvg
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[Rich]: https://github.com/willmcgugan/rich
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[RichBBcode]: https://rich.readthedocs.io/en/latest/markup.html
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[bbcode]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BBCode
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[htmlcolors]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Web_colors#HTML_color_names
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[ansicolors]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Web_colors#Basic_colors
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[ansicolor256]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ANSI_escape_code#8-bit
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[docapi]: https://daanx.github.io/isocline
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[hdoc]: https://hackage.haskell.org/package/isocline/docs/System-Console-Isocline.html
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