lib | ||
.gitignore | ||
cl_01.png | ||
LICENSE-MIT | ||
package.json | ||
README.md |
readlineSync
Synchronous Readline for interactively running.
The interface is used with process.stdin
and process.stdout
in order to accept user input.
Example
var readlineSync = require('readline-sync');
var userName = readlineSync.question('May I have your name? :'); // Wait for user's response.
var favFood = readlineSync.question('Hi ' + userName + '! What is your favorite food? :');
console.log('Oh, ' + userName + ' likes ' + favFood + '!');
May I have your name? :AnSeki
Hi AnSeki! What is your favorite food? :chocolate
Oh, AnSeki likes chocolate!
Installation
npm install readline-sync
Methods
question
line = readlineSync.question([query[, options]])
Displays the query
to the user, and then returns the user's response after it has been typed.
The query
may be string, or may not be (e.g. number, Date, Object, etc.). This is converted to string (i.e. toString
method is called) before it is displayed every time.
noEchoBack
If {noEchoBack: true}
is specified to options
, echo back is avoided. It is used to hide the secret text (e.g. password) which is typed by user on screen.
For example:
password = readlineSync.question('PASSWORD :', {noEchoBack: true});
console.log('Login ...');
The typed text is not shown on screen.
PASSWORD :
Login ...
noTrim
By default, the leading and trailing white spaces are removed from typed text. If {noTrim: true}
is specified to options
, those are not removed.
prompt
line = readlineSync.prompt([options])
Displays the current prompt (See setPrompt
method) to the user, and then returns the user's response after it has been typed.
noEchoBack
If {noEchoBack: true}
is specified to options
, echo back is avoided. It is used to hide the secret text (e.g. password) which is typed by user on screen. (See noEchoBack
option of question
method)
noTrim
By default, the leading and trailing white spaces are removed from typed text. If {noTrim: true}
is specified to options
, those are not removed.
setPrompt
currentPrompt = readlineSync.setPrompt([prompt])
Sets the prompt, for example when you run node
on the command line, you see >
, which is node's prompt. (See prompt
method)
The prompt
may be string, or may not be (e.g. number, Date, Object, etc.). This is converted to string (i.e. toString
method is called) before it is displayed every time.
For example, [foo-directory]#
like a bash shell that show the current directory.
// Object that has toString method.
readlineSync.setPrompt({
toString: function() {
return '[' + require('path').basename(process.cwd()) + ']# '; // Get and show current directory.
}
})
setEncoding
currentEncoding = readlineSync.setEncoding([encoding])
Set the encoding method of input (user's response) and output (prompt
method and question
method). Defaults to 'utf8'.
setPrint
readlineSync.setPrint([funcPrint])
The specified funcPrint
Function is called when any outputs (prompt
method and question
method). Defaults to undefined
.
The funcPrint
is given two arguments the output text and encoding
.
For example, this is used to pass plain texts to the Logger, when texts are colored.
var readlineSync = require('readline-sync'),
user, pw, cmd;
require('colors');
readlineSync.setPrint(function(display, encoding) {
logger.log(display.stripColors); // Remove control characters.
});
console.log('Your account required.'.grey);
user = readlineSync.question('USER NAME'.white.inverse + ': ');
pw = readlineSync.question('PASSWORD'.white.inverse + ': ', {noEchoBack: true});
// Authorization ...
console.log(('Welcome, ' + user + '!').green.bold);
readlineSync.setPrompt('> '.bold.red);
cmd = readlineSync.prompt();
With Task Runner
The easy way to control the flow of task runner by the user's response:
- Grunt plugin: grunt-confirm
- gulp plugin: gulp-confirm
If you want to control the flow of task runner (e.g. Grunt), call readlineSync in a task callback that is called by task runner. Then the flow of tasks is paused and it is controlled by user.
Example: by using grunt-task-helper
$ grunt
Running "fileCopy" task
Files already exist:
file-a.png
file-b.js
Overwrite? (y/n) :y
file-a.png copied.
file-b.js copied.
Done.
Gruntfile.js
grunt.initConfig({
taskHelper: {
fileCopy: {
options: {
handlerByTask: function() {
// Abort the task if user don't want.
return readlineSync.question('Overwrite? (y/n) :')
.toLowerCase() === 'y';
// Or process.exit()
},
filesArray: []
},
...
}
},
copy: {
fileCopy: {
files: '<%= taskHelper.fileCopy.options.filesArray %>'
}
}
});
Note
Platforms
The your Node and OS may not support interactively reading from stdin. The stdin interfaces are different by platforms.
If in those platforms, an error is thrown.
try {
answer = readlineSync.question('What is your favorite food? :');
} catch (e) {
console.error(e);
process.exit(1);
}
Reading by shell
readlineSync tries reading from stdin by shell if it is needed. And, it use "piping via files" for synchronous running.
As everyone knows, "piping via files" is no good. It blocks event loop and a process. It may make your script be slow.
Why did I choose it? :
- The best solution is child_process.execSync in core modules of Node. But it is not supported by current version.
- The good modules (native addon) for synchronous execution exist. But node-gyp can't compile those in some platforms or Node versions.
- I think that the security is important more than the speed. Some modules have problem about security. (Those don't protect data.) I think that the speed is not needed usually, because readlineSync is used while user types keys.
Someday, I may rewrite readlineSync to use child_process.execSync, or safety module.
Release History
- 2015-01-27 v0.5.0 Add
options.noTrim
. - 2014-07-12 v0.4.0 Add
options.noEchoBack
. - 2014-07-12 v0.3.0 Add
setPrint()
. - 2013-08-30 v0.2.0 Rewrite exporting methods.
- 2013-08-29 v0.1.0 Initial release.