A Dart library for building console applications.
This library contains a variety of useful functions for console application development, including:
dart:io
library.The library has been used to implement a Dart version of the
Kilo text editor; when compiled with Dart it results in a self-contained
kilo
executable. The library is sufficient for a reasonably complete set of
usage, including readline
-style CLI and basic text games.
The library assumes a terminal that recognizes and implements common ANSI escape sequences. The package has been tested on macOS, Linux and Windows 10. Note that Windows did not support ANSI escape sequences in earlier versions.
The library uses the win32 package for accessing the Win32 API through FFI. That package contains many examples of using Dart FFI for more complex examples.
A simple example for the dart_console
package:
import 'package:dart_console/dart_console.dart';
main() {
final console = Console();
console.clearScreen();
console.resetCursorPosition();
console.writeLine(
'Console size is ${console.windowWidth} cols and ${console.windowHeight} rows.',
TextAlignment.center,
);
console.writeLine();
return 0;
}
More comprehensive demos of the Console
class are provided, as follows:
Example | Description |
---|---|
demo.dart |
Suite of test demos that showcase various capabilities |
main.dart |
Basic demo of how to get started with the dart_console |
keys.dart |
Demonstrates how dart_console processes control characters |
readline.dart |
Sample command-line interface / REPL |
kilo.dart |
Rudimentary text editor |
life.dart |
Game of Life |
table.dart |
Demonstrates tabular data display |
calendar.dart |
Prints a monthly calendar on the screen |
Special thanks to Matt Sullivan (@mjohnsullivan) and Samir Jindel (@sjindel-google) for their help in explaining FFI to me when it was first introduced and still undocumented.
Thanks to @erf for contributing the Game of Life example.
Please file feature requests and bugs at the issue tracker.