HiTECNOLOGYs / cl-charms

More up-to-date version of cl-charms. Forked it because it was, apparently, abandoned by author and I couldn't contact him.
https://gitorious.org/cl-charms
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Introduction

cl-charms is an interface to libcurses in Common Lisp. It provides both a raw, low-level interface to libcurses via CFFI, and a more higher-level lispier interface.

It is intended to succeed cl-ncurses, which used the less portable UFFI instead of CFFI for foreign bindings. Indeed, cl-charms includes portions of code from cl-ncurses, and is largely a direct translation of the latter's UFFI definitions to CFFI.

Currently, the low-level interface (the package charms/ll) is probably feature-equivalent to cl-ncurses and compatible with client code. In the future, however, cl-charms may break compatibility with cl-ncurses.

cl-charms has been developed by its original author, Abhishek Reddy (abhishek@abhishek.geek.nz), since beginning of October 2010 for quite some time, then abandoned for unknown reason. After that, in 2014, Mark Fedurin (hitecnologys@gmail.com) took responsibility for keeping the library in working state. Robert Smith (quad@symbo1ics.com) began to fix up the CFFI bindings and provide a friendlier interface.

The software is released under an MIT-style license. See the file COPYING for details.

The imitator dooms himself to hopeless mediocrity. The inventor did it because it was natural to him, and so in him it has a charm. In the imitator something else is natural, and he bereaves himself of his own beauty, to come short of another man's. -- R.W. Emerson on originality.

Version

Versioning roughly follows the scheme described in Semantic Versioning. Only "releases" will be versioned.

Since we are still pre-1.0.0, the minor version will indicate API breakage. Despite being pre-1.0.0, what exists in the low-level interface as of now is quite usable for ASCII usage. We consider this "beta" quality. The high-level functionality is considered "alpha" quality.

Portability

cl-charms has been tested to work to a reasonable extent (e.g., example code runs) on the following platforms:

It may work on other implementations and system but there's no guarantee. More testing is really appreciated.

cl-charms ought to function on other implementations of Common Lisp and libcurses on various distributions of UNIX and UNIX-like systems. See the section on Bugs and Contributing below for how to help test and realize this.

cl-charms is supposed to be only bindings along with a separate, no-frills interface atop: nothing more, nothing less. For full-featured TUI see: https://github.com/naryl/cl-tui

Windows

cl-charms works on Windows with some limitations. Currently colours are not supported and some other features like bold might not work correctly. In order to use cl-charms on Windows, you'll need PDCurses library that is available at http://pdcurses.sourceforge.net/. If you want to use GDI instead of console http://www.projectpluto.com/win32a.htm would be a good option.

While the original PDCurses project offers prebuilt binaries, using project pluto requires you to compile your own binaries.

Usage is as simple as placing the pdcurses.dll (optionally renaming it libcurses.dll) either in PATH or in the directory where you're running your cl-charms program. Project pluto will require additional dependencies, namely libgcc_s_dw2-1.dll and SDL.dll.

Installation

If you're Quicklisp user, then simple

(ql:quickload :cl-charms)

would suffice, as cl-charms is in Quicklisp.

If you're not, then install Quicklisp and follow to the previous paragraph.

Usage

The low-level library is contained within the package cl-charms/low-level, nicknamed charms/ll. This is mostly a one-to-one equivalent to standard curses functions.

The high-level library is contained within the package cl-charms, nicknamed charms.

Examples and Tutorials

There are currently two examples included with the source code, all of which you can find in the examples directory.

You might also want to check out the following applications written using cl-charms:

Daniel Kochmanski has written a nice tutorial about CL-CHARMS here.

Timer

A minimal, simple timer/stopwatch program.

* (ql:quickload :cl-charms-timer)
* (charms-timer:main)

Paint

A simple ASCII art drawing program.

* (ql:quickload :cl-charms-paint)
* (charms-paint:main)

Marquee

A program that horizontally scrolls text across the screen.

* (ql:quickload :cl-charms-marquee)
* (charms-marquee:main)

Testing

As a minimum, it would be appreciated if the library was compiled and loaded on various Lisp systems on a variety of operating systems.

[TODO]

Note about SLIME

The libcurses library handles terminal, and emacs is not a terminal it can handle. So if you run lisp from SLIME (inside emacs), libcurses functions won't work properly.

If you want to use SLIME, a possible way (to e.g. run the timer example) is:

  1. run lisp from terminal
  2. (ql:quickload '(:swank) :silent t) ;; from terminal
  3. (swank:create-server :port 5555 :dont-close t) ;; from terminal, too
  4. (loop (sleep 1)) ;; from terminal, prevents read-line in console REPL
  5. go to emacs and M-x slime-connect RET localhost RET 5555 RET
  6. (ql:quickload :cl-charms-timer) ;; from emacs repl
  7. (charms-timer:main) ;; from emacs repl

Now you should see timer running on terminal.

Step 1. ~ 3. can be done as a one-liner:

Bugs and Contributing

You can use GitHub project's (which is located here: https://github.com/HiTECNOLOGYs/cl-charms) issues tracker or wiki to contribute bug reports/patches/etc. or just send an email to one of the maintainers.

Major areas of work to be done:

Current Maintainers