""" Renders the command line on the console. (Redraws parts of the input line that were changed.) """ from asyncio import FIRST_COMPLETED, Future, sleep, wait from collections import deque from enum import Enum from typing import TYPE_CHECKING, Any, Callable, Deque, Dict, Hashable, Optional, Tuple from prompt_toolkit.application.current import get_app from prompt_toolkit.data_structures import Point, Size from prompt_toolkit.filters import FilterOrBool, to_filter from prompt_toolkit.formatted_text import AnyFormattedText, to_formatted_text from prompt_toolkit.layout.mouse_handlers import MouseHandlers from prompt_toolkit.layout.screen import Char, Screen, WritePosition from prompt_toolkit.output import ColorDepth, Output from prompt_toolkit.styles import ( Attrs, BaseStyle, DummyStyleTransformation, StyleTransformation, ) if TYPE_CHECKING: from prompt_toolkit.application import Application from prompt_toolkit.layout.layout import Layout __all__ = [ "Renderer", "print_formatted_text", ] def _output_screen_diff( app: "Application[Any]", output: Output, screen: Screen, current_pos: Point, color_depth: ColorDepth, previous_screen: Optional[Screen], last_style: Optional[str], is_done: bool, # XXX: drop is_done full_screen: bool, attrs_for_style_string: "_StyleStringToAttrsCache", style_string_has_style: "_StyleStringHasStyleCache", size: Size, previous_width: int, ) -> Tuple[Point, Optional[str]]: """ Render the diff between this screen and the previous screen. This takes two `Screen` instances. The one that represents the output like it was during the last rendering and one that represents the current output raster. Looking at these two `Screen` instances, this function will render the difference by calling the appropriate methods of the `Output` object that only paint the changes to the terminal. This is some performance-critical code which is heavily optimized. Don't change things without profiling first. :param current_pos: Current cursor position. :param last_style: The style string, used for drawing the last drawn character. (Color/attributes.) :param attrs_for_style_string: :class:`._StyleStringToAttrsCache` instance. :param width: The width of the terminal. :param previous_width: The width of the terminal during the last rendering. """ width, height = size.columns, size.rows #: Variable for capturing the output. write = output.write write_raw = output.write_raw # Create locals for the most used output methods. # (Save expensive attribute lookups.) _output_set_attributes = output.set_attributes _output_reset_attributes = output.reset_attributes _output_cursor_forward = output.cursor_forward _output_cursor_up = output.cursor_up _output_cursor_backward = output.cursor_backward # Hide cursor before rendering. (Avoid flickering.) output.hide_cursor() def reset_attributes() -> None: " Wrapper around Output.reset_attributes. " nonlocal last_style _output_reset_attributes() last_style = None # Forget last char after resetting attributes. def move_cursor(new: Point) -> Point: " Move cursor to this `new` point. Returns the given Point. " current_x, current_y = current_pos.x, current_pos.y if new.y > current_y: # Use newlines instead of CURSOR_DOWN, because this might add new lines. # CURSOR_DOWN will never create new lines at the bottom. # Also reset attributes, otherwise the newline could draw a # background color. reset_attributes() write("\r\n" * (new.y - current_y)) current_x = 0 _output_cursor_forward(new.x) return new elif new.y < current_y: _output_cursor_up(current_y - new.y) if current_x >= width - 1: write("\r") _output_cursor_forward(new.x) elif new.x < current_x or current_x >= width - 1: _output_cursor_backward(current_x - new.x) elif new.x > current_x: _output_cursor_forward(new.x - current_x) return new def output_char(char: Char) -> None: """ Write the output of this character. """ nonlocal last_style # If the last printed character has the same style, don't output the # style again. if last_style == char.style: write(char.char) else: # Look up `Attr` for this style string. Only set attributes if different. # (Two style strings can still have the same formatting.) # Note that an empty style string can have formatting that needs to # be applied, because of style transformations. new_attrs = attrs_for_style_string[char.style] if not last_style or new_attrs != attrs_for_style_string[last_style]: _output_set_attributes(new_attrs, color_depth) write(char.char) last_style = char.style def get_max_column_index(row: Dict[int, Char]) -> int: """ Return max used column index, ignoring whitespace (without style) at the end of the line. This is important for people that copy/paste terminal output. There are two reasons we are sometimes seeing whitespace at the end: - `BufferControl` adds a trailing space to each line, because it's a possible cursor position, so that the line wrapping won't change if the cursor position moves around. - The `Window` adds a style class to the current line for highlighting (cursor-line). """ numbers = [ index for index, cell in row.items() if cell.char != " " or style_string_has_style[cell.style] ] numbers.append(0) return max(numbers) # Render for the first time: reset styling. if not previous_screen: reset_attributes() # Disable autowrap. (When entering a the alternate screen, or anytime when # we have a prompt. - In the case of a REPL, like IPython, people can have # background threads, and it's hard for debugging if their output is not # wrapped.) if not previous_screen or not full_screen: output.disable_autowrap() # When the previous screen has a different size, redraw everything anyway. # Also when we are done. (We might take up less rows, so clearing is important.) if ( is_done or not previous_screen or previous_width != width ): # XXX: also consider height?? current_pos = move_cursor(Point(x=0, y=0)) reset_attributes() output.erase_down() previous_screen = Screen() # Get height of the screen. # (height changes as we loop over data_buffer, so remember the current value.) # (Also make sure to clip the height to the size of the output.) current_height = min(screen.height, height) # Loop over the rows. row_count = min(max(screen.height, previous_screen.height), height) c = 0 # Column counter. for y in range(row_count): new_row = screen.data_buffer[y] previous_row = previous_screen.data_buffer[y] zero_width_escapes_row = screen.zero_width_escapes[y] new_max_line_len = min(width - 1, get_max_column_index(new_row)) previous_max_line_len = min(width - 1, get_max_column_index(previous_row)) # Loop over the columns. c = 0 while c <= new_max_line_len: new_char = new_row[c] old_char = previous_row[c] char_width = new_char.width or 1 # When the old and new character at this position are different, # draw the output. (Because of the performance, we don't call # `Char.__ne__`, but inline the same expression.) if new_char.char != old_char.char or new_char.style != old_char.style: current_pos = move_cursor(Point(x=c, y=y)) # Send injected escape sequences to output. if c in zero_width_escapes_row: write_raw(zero_width_escapes_row[c]) output_char(new_char) current_pos = Point(x=current_pos.x + char_width, y=current_pos.y) c += char_width # If the new line is shorter, trim it. if previous_screen and new_max_line_len < previous_max_line_len: current_pos = move_cursor(Point(x=new_max_line_len + 1, y=y)) reset_attributes() output.erase_end_of_line() # Correctly reserve vertical space as required by the layout. # When this is a new screen (drawn for the first time), or for some reason # higher than the previous one. Move the cursor once to the bottom of the # output. That way, we're sure that the terminal scrolls up, even when the # lower lines of the canvas just contain whitespace. # The most obvious reason that we actually want this behaviour is the avoid # the artifact of the input scrolling when the completion menu is shown. # (If the scrolling is actually wanted, the layout can still be build in a # way to behave that way by setting a dynamic height.) if current_height > previous_screen.height: current_pos = move_cursor(Point(x=0, y=current_height - 1)) # Move cursor: if is_done: current_pos = move_cursor(Point(x=0, y=current_height)) output.erase_down() else: current_pos = move_cursor(screen.get_cursor_position(app.layout.current_window)) if is_done or not full_screen: output.enable_autowrap() # Always reset the color attributes. This is important because a background # thread could print data to stdout and we want that to be displayed in the # default colors. (Also, if a background color has been set, many terminals # give weird artifacts on resize events.) reset_attributes() if screen.show_cursor or is_done: output.show_cursor() return current_pos, last_style class HeightIsUnknownError(Exception): " Information unavailable. Did not yet receive the CPR response. " class _StyleStringToAttrsCache(Dict[str, Attrs]): """ A cache structure that maps style strings to :class:`.Attr`. (This is an important speed up.) """ def __init__( self, get_attrs_for_style_str: Callable[["str"], Attrs], style_transformation: StyleTransformation, ) -> None: self.get_attrs_for_style_str = get_attrs_for_style_str self.style_transformation = style_transformation def __missing__(self, style_str: str) -> Attrs: attrs = self.get_attrs_for_style_str(style_str) attrs = self.style_transformation.transform_attrs(attrs) self[style_str] = attrs return attrs class _StyleStringHasStyleCache(Dict[str, bool]): """ Cache for remember which style strings don't render the default output style (default fg/bg, no underline and no reverse and no blink). That way we know that we should render these cells, even when they're empty (when they contain a space). Note: we don't consider bold/italic/hidden because they don't change the output if there's no text in the cell. """ def __init__(self, style_string_to_attrs: Dict[str, Attrs]) -> None: self.style_string_to_attrs = style_string_to_attrs def __missing__(self, style_str: str) -> bool: attrs = self.style_string_to_attrs[style_str] is_default = bool( attrs.color or attrs.bgcolor or attrs.underline or attrs.blink or attrs.reverse ) self[style_str] = is_default return is_default class CPR_Support(Enum): " Enum: whether or not CPR is supported. " SUPPORTED = "SUPPORTED" NOT_SUPPORTED = "NOT_SUPPORTED" UNKNOWN = "UNKNOWN" class Renderer: """ Typical usage: :: output = Vt100_Output.from_pty(sys.stdout) r = Renderer(style, output) r.render(app, layout=...) """ CPR_TIMEOUT = 2 # Time to wait until we consider CPR to be not supported. def __init__( self, style: BaseStyle, output: Output, full_screen: bool = False, mouse_support: FilterOrBool = False, cpr_not_supported_callback: Optional[Callable[[], None]] = None, ) -> None: self.style = style self.output = output self.full_screen = full_screen self.mouse_support = to_filter(mouse_support) self.cpr_not_supported_callback = cpr_not_supported_callback self._in_alternate_screen = False self._mouse_support_enabled = False self._bracketed_paste_enabled = False # Future set when we are waiting for a CPR flag. self._waiting_for_cpr_futures: Deque[Future[None]] = deque() self.cpr_support = CPR_Support.UNKNOWN if not output.responds_to_cpr: self.cpr_support = CPR_Support.NOT_SUPPORTED # Cache for the style. self._attrs_for_style: Optional[_StyleStringToAttrsCache] = None self._style_string_has_style: Optional[_StyleStringHasStyleCache] = None self._last_style_hash: Optional[Hashable] = None self._last_transformation_hash: Optional[Hashable] = None self._last_color_depth: Optional[ColorDepth] = None self.reset(_scroll=True) def reset(self, _scroll: bool = False, leave_alternate_screen: bool = True) -> None: # Reset position self._cursor_pos = Point(x=0, y=0) # Remember the last screen instance between renderers. This way, # we can create a `diff` between two screens and only output the # difference. It's also to remember the last height. (To show for # instance a toolbar at the bottom position.) self._last_screen: Optional[Screen] = None self._last_size: Optional[Size] = None self._last_style: Optional[str] = None # Default MouseHandlers. (Just empty.) self.mouse_handlers = MouseHandlers() #: Space from the top of the layout, until the bottom of the terminal. #: We don't know this until a `report_absolute_cursor_row` call. self._min_available_height = 0 # In case of Windows, also make sure to scroll to the current cursor # position. (Only when rendering the first time.) # It does nothing for vt100 terminals. if _scroll: self.output.scroll_buffer_to_prompt() # Quit alternate screen. if self._in_alternate_screen and leave_alternate_screen: self.output.quit_alternate_screen() self._in_alternate_screen = False # Disable mouse support. if self._mouse_support_enabled: self.output.disable_mouse_support() self._mouse_support_enabled = False # Disable bracketed paste. if self._bracketed_paste_enabled: self.output.disable_bracketed_paste() self._bracketed_paste_enabled = False # Flush output. `disable_mouse_support` needs to write to stdout. self.output.flush() @property def last_rendered_screen(self) -> Optional[Screen]: """ The `Screen` class that was generated during the last rendering. This can be `None`. """ return self._last_screen @property def height_is_known(self) -> bool: """ True when the height from the cursor until the bottom of the terminal is known. (It's often nicer to draw bottom toolbars only if the height is known, in order to avoid flickering when the CPR response arrives.) """ if self.full_screen or self._min_available_height > 0: return True try: self._min_available_height = self.output.get_rows_below_cursor_position() return True except NotImplementedError: return False @property def rows_above_layout(self) -> int: """ Return the number of rows visible in the terminal above the layout. """ if self._in_alternate_screen: return 0 elif self._min_available_height > 0: total_rows = self.output.get_size().rows last_screen_height = self._last_screen.height if self._last_screen else 0 return total_rows - max(self._min_available_height, last_screen_height) else: raise HeightIsUnknownError("Rows above layout is unknown.") def request_absolute_cursor_position(self) -> None: """ Get current cursor position. We do this to calculate the minimum available height that we can consume for rendering the prompt. This is the available space below te cursor. For vt100: Do CPR request. (answer will arrive later.) For win32: Do API call. (Answer comes immediately.) """ # Only do this request when the cursor is at the top row. (after a # clear or reset). We will rely on that in `report_absolute_cursor_row`. assert self._cursor_pos.y == 0 # In full-screen mode, always use the total height as min-available-height. if self.full_screen: self._min_available_height = self.output.get_size().rows return # For Win32, we have an API call to get the number of rows below the # cursor. try: self._min_available_height = self.output.get_rows_below_cursor_position() return except NotImplementedError: pass # Use CPR. if self.cpr_support == CPR_Support.NOT_SUPPORTED: return def do_cpr() -> None: # Asks for a cursor position report (CPR). self._waiting_for_cpr_futures.append(Future()) self.output.ask_for_cpr() if self.cpr_support == CPR_Support.SUPPORTED: do_cpr() return # If we don't know whether CPR is supported, only do a request if # none is pending, and test it, using a timer. if self.waiting_for_cpr: return do_cpr() async def timer() -> None: await sleep(self.CPR_TIMEOUT) # Not set in the meantime -> not supported. if self.cpr_support == CPR_Support.UNKNOWN: self.cpr_support = CPR_Support.NOT_SUPPORTED if self.cpr_not_supported_callback: # Make sure to call this callback in the main thread. self.cpr_not_supported_callback() get_app().create_background_task(timer()) def report_absolute_cursor_row(self, row: int) -> None: """ To be called when we know the absolute cursor position. (As an answer of a "Cursor Position Request" response.) """ self.cpr_support = CPR_Support.SUPPORTED # Calculate the amount of rows from the cursor position until the # bottom of the terminal. total_rows = self.output.get_size().rows rows_below_cursor = total_rows - row + 1 # Set the minimum available height. self._min_available_height = rows_below_cursor # Pop and set waiting for CPR future. try: f = self._waiting_for_cpr_futures.popleft() except IndexError: pass # Received CPR response without having a CPR. else: f.set_result(None) @property def waiting_for_cpr(self) -> bool: """ Waiting for CPR flag. True when we send the request, but didn't got a response. """ return bool(self._waiting_for_cpr_futures) async def wait_for_cpr_responses(self, timeout: int = 1) -> None: """ Wait for a CPR response. """ cpr_futures = list(self._waiting_for_cpr_futures) # Make copy. # When there are no CPRs in the queue. Don't do anything. if not cpr_futures or self.cpr_support == CPR_Support.NOT_SUPPORTED: return None async def wait_for_responses() -> None: for response_f in cpr_futures: await response_f async def wait_for_timeout() -> None: await sleep(timeout) # Got timeout, erase queue. for response_f in cpr_futures: response_f.cancel() self._waiting_for_cpr_futures = deque() coroutines = [ wait_for_responses(), wait_for_timeout(), ] _, pending = await wait(coroutines, return_when=FIRST_COMPLETED) for task in pending: task.cancel() def render( self, app: "Application[Any]", layout: "Layout", is_done: bool = False ) -> None: """ Render the current interface to the output. :param is_done: When True, put the cursor at the end of the interface. We won't print any changes to this part. """ output = self.output # Enter alternate screen. if self.full_screen and not self._in_alternate_screen: self._in_alternate_screen = True output.enter_alternate_screen() # Enable bracketed paste. if not self._bracketed_paste_enabled: self.output.enable_bracketed_paste() self._bracketed_paste_enabled = True # Enable/disable mouse support. needs_mouse_support = self.mouse_support() if needs_mouse_support and not self._mouse_support_enabled: output.enable_mouse_support() self._mouse_support_enabled = True elif not needs_mouse_support and self._mouse_support_enabled: output.disable_mouse_support() self._mouse_support_enabled = False # Create screen and write layout to it. size = output.get_size() screen = Screen() screen.show_cursor = False # Hide cursor by default, unless one of the # containers decides to display it. mouse_handlers = MouseHandlers() # Calculate height. if self.full_screen: height = size.rows elif is_done: # When we are done, we don't necessary want to fill up until the bottom. height = layout.container.preferred_height( size.columns, size.rows ).preferred else: last_height = self._last_screen.height if self._last_screen else 0 height = max( self._min_available_height, last_height, layout.container.preferred_height(size.columns, size.rows).preferred, ) height = min(height, size.rows) # When te size changes, don't consider the previous screen. if self._last_size != size: self._last_screen = None # When we render using another style or another color depth, do a full # repaint. (Forget about the previous rendered screen.) # (But note that we still use _last_screen to calculate the height.) if ( self.style.invalidation_hash() != self._last_style_hash or app.style_transformation.invalidation_hash() != self._last_transformation_hash or app.color_depth != self._last_color_depth ): self._last_screen = None self._attrs_for_style = None self._style_string_has_style = None if self._attrs_for_style is None: self._attrs_for_style = _StyleStringToAttrsCache( self.style.get_attrs_for_style_str, app.style_transformation ) if self._style_string_has_style is None: self._style_string_has_style = _StyleStringHasStyleCache( self._attrs_for_style ) self._last_style_hash = self.style.invalidation_hash() self._last_transformation_hash = app.style_transformation.invalidation_hash() self._last_color_depth = app.color_depth layout.container.write_to_screen( screen, mouse_handlers, WritePosition(xpos=0, ypos=0, width=size.columns, height=height), parent_style="", erase_bg=False, z_index=None, ) screen.draw_all_floats() # When grayed. Replace all styles in the new screen. if app.exit_style: screen.append_style_to_content(app.exit_style) # Process diff and write to output. self._cursor_pos, self._last_style = _output_screen_diff( app, output, screen, self._cursor_pos, app.color_depth, self._last_screen, self._last_style, is_done, full_screen=self.full_screen, attrs_for_style_string=self._attrs_for_style, style_string_has_style=self._style_string_has_style, size=size, previous_width=(self._last_size.columns if self._last_size else 0), ) self._last_screen = screen self._last_size = size self.mouse_handlers = mouse_handlers output.flush() # Set visible windows in layout. app.layout.visible_windows = screen.visible_windows if is_done: self.reset() def erase(self, leave_alternate_screen: bool = True) -> None: """ Hide all output and put the cursor back at the first line. This is for instance used for running a system command (while hiding the CLI) and later resuming the same CLI.) :param leave_alternate_screen: When True, and when inside an alternate screen buffer, quit the alternate screen. """ output = self.output output.cursor_backward(self._cursor_pos.x) output.cursor_up(self._cursor_pos.y) output.erase_down() output.reset_attributes() output.enable_autowrap() output.flush() self.reset(leave_alternate_screen=leave_alternate_screen) def clear(self) -> None: """ Clear screen and go to 0,0 """ # Erase current output first. self.erase() # Send "Erase Screen" command and go to (0, 0). output = self.output output.erase_screen() output.cursor_goto(0, 0) output.flush() self.request_absolute_cursor_position() def print_formatted_text( output: Output, formatted_text: AnyFormattedText, style: BaseStyle, style_transformation: Optional[StyleTransformation] = None, color_depth: Optional[ColorDepth] = None, ) -> None: """ Print a list of (style_str, text) tuples in the given style to the output. """ fragments = to_formatted_text(formatted_text) style_transformation = style_transformation or DummyStyleTransformation() color_depth = color_depth or output.get_default_color_depth() # Reset first. output.reset_attributes() output.enable_autowrap() # Print all (style_str, text) tuples. attrs_for_style_string = _StyleStringToAttrsCache( style.get_attrs_for_style_str, style_transformation ) for style_str, text, *_ in fragments: attrs = attrs_for_style_string[style_str] if attrs: output.set_attributes(attrs, color_depth) else: output.reset_attributes() # Eliminate carriage returns text = text.replace("\r", "") # Assume that the output is raw, and insert a carriage return before # every newline. (Also important when the front-end is a telnet client.) output.write(text.replace("\n", "\r\n")) # Reset again. output.reset_attributes() output.flush()