1POE::Wheel::Curses(3) User Contributed Perl DocumentationPOE::Wheel::Curses(3)
2
3
4
6 POE::Wheel::Curses - non-blocking input for Curses
7
9 use Curses;
10 use POE qw(Wheel::Curses);
11
12 POE::Session->create(
13 inline_states => {
14 _start => sub {
15 $_[HEAP]{console} = POE::Wheel::Curses->new(
16 InputEvent => 'got_keystroke',
17 );
18 },
19 got_keystroke => sub {
20 my $keystroke = $_[ARG0];
21
22 # Make control and extended keystrokes printable.
23 if ($keystroke lt ' ') {
24 $keystroke = '<' . uc(unctrl($keystroke)) . '>';
25 }
26 elsif ($keystroke =~ /^\d{2,}$/) {
27 $keystroke = '<' . uc(keyname($keystroke)) . '>';
28 }
29
30 # Just display it.
31 addstr($keystroke);
32 noutrefresh();
33 doupdate;
34
35 # Gotta exit somehow.
36 delete $_[HEAP]{console} if $keystroke eq "<^C>";
37 },
38 }
39 );
40
41 POE::Kernel->run();
42 exit;
43
45 POE::Wheel::Curses implements non-blocking input for Curses programs.
46
47 POE::Wheel::Curses will emit an "InputEvent" of your choosing whenever
48 an input event is registered on a recognized input device (keyboard and
49 sometimes mouse, depending on the curses library). Meanwhile,
50 applications can be doing other things like monitoring network
51 connections or child processes, or managing timers and stuff.
52
54 POE::Wheel::Curses is rather simple.
55
56 new
57 new() creates a new POE::Wheel::Curses object. During construction,
58 the wheel registers an input watcher for STDIN (via select_read()) and
59 registers an internal handler to preprocess keystrokes.
60
61 new() accepts only one parameter "InputEvent". "InputEvent" contains
62 the name of the event that the wheel will emit whenever there is input
63 on the console or terminal. As with all wheels, the event will be sent
64 to the session that was active when the wheel was constructed.
65
66 It should be noted that an application may only have one active
67 POE::Wheel::Curses object.
68
70 These are the events sent by POE::Wheel::Curses.
71
72 InputEvent
73 "InputEvent" defines the event that will be emitted when
74 POE::Wheel::Curses detects and reads console input. This event
75 includes two parameters:
76
77 $_[ARG0] contains the raw keystroke as received by Curses::getch(). An
78 application may process the keystroke using Curses::unctrl() and
79 Curses::keyname() on the keystroke.
80
81 $_[ARG1] contains the POE::Wheel::Curses object's ID.
82
83 Mouse events aren't portable. As of October 2009, it's up to the
84 application to decide whether to call mousemask().
85
87 Curses documents what can be done with Curses. Also see the man page
88 for whichever version of libcurses happens to be installed (curses,
89 ncurses, etc.).
90
91 POE::Wheel describes wheels in general.
92
93 The SEE ALSO section in POE contains a table of contents covering the
94 entire POE distribution.
95
97 None known, although curses implementations vary widely.
98
100 Please see POE for more information about authors and contributors.
101
102
103
104perl v5.28.0 2015-06-03 POE::Wheel::Curses(3)