Expand description
Crokey helps incorporate configurable keybindings in crossterm based terminal applications by providing functions
- parsing key combinations from strings
- describing key combinations in strings
- parsing key combinations at compile time
Parse a string
Those strings are usually provided by a configuration file.
use crossterm::event::{KeyCode, KeyEvent, KeyModifiers};
assert_eq!(
crokey::parse("alt-enter").unwrap(),
KeyEvent::new(KeyCode::Enter, KeyModifiers::ALT),
);
assert_eq!(
crokey::parse("shift-F6").unwrap(),
KeyEvent::new(KeyCode::F(6), KeyModifiers::SHIFT),
);Use key event “literals” thanks to procedural macros
Those key events are parsed at compile time and have zero runtime cost.
They’re efficient and convenient for matching events or defining hardcoded keybindings.
let fmt = KeyEventFormat::default();
match key_event {
key!(ctrl-c) => {
println!("Arg! You savagely killed me with a {}", fmt.to_string(key_event).red());
break;
}
key!(ctrl-q) => {
println!("You typed {} which gracefully quits", fmt.to_string(key_event).green());
break;
}
_ => {
println!("You typed {}", fmt.to_string(key_event).blue());
}
}Complete example in /examples/print_key
Display a string with a configurable format
use crokey::*;
use crossterm::event::{KeyCode, KeyEvent, KeyModifiers};
// The default format
let format = KeyEventFormat::default();
assert_eq!(format.to_string(key!(shift-a)), "Shift-a");
assert_eq!(format.to_string(key!(ctrl-c)), "Ctrl-c");
// A more compact format
let format = KeyEventFormat::default()
.with_implicit_shift()
.with_control("^");
assert_eq!(format.to_string(key!(shift-a)), "A");
assert_eq!(format.to_string(key!(ctrl-c)), "^c");Macros
check and expand at compile-time the provided expression into a valid KeyEvent.