This Go package provides commonly needed components for terminal based user interfaces.
Among these components are:
- Input forms (include input/password fields, drop-down selections, checkboxes, and buttons)
- Navigable multi-color text views
- Sophisticated navigable table views
- Flexible tree views
- Selectable lists
- Grid, Flexbox and page layouts
- Modal message windows
- An application wrapper
They come with lots of customization options and can be easily extended to fit your needs.
go get github.com/rivo/tview
This basic example creates a box titled "Hello, World!" and displays it in your terminal:
package main
import (
"github.com/rivo/tview"
)
func main() {
box := tview.NewBox().SetBorder(true).SetTitle("Hello, world!")
if err := tview.NewApplication().SetRoot(box, true).Run(); err != nil {
panic(err)
}
}
Check out the GitHub Wiki for more examples along with screenshots. Or try the examples in the "demos" subdirectory.
For a presentation highlighting this package, compile and run the program found in the "demos/presentation" subdirectory.
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- Window manager for
tview
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- kubectl-lazy: kubectl plugin to easy to view pod
- podman-tui: podman user interface
- tvxwidgets: tview extra widgets
- Domino card game on terminal
- goaround: Query stackoverflow API and get results on terminal
- resto: 🔗 a CLI app can send pretty HTTP & API requests with TUI
- twad: a WAD launcher for the terminal
Refer to https://pkg.go.dev/github.com/rivo/tview for the package's documentation. Also check out the Wiki.
This package is based on github.com/gdamore/tcell (and its dependencies) as well as on github.com/rivo/uniseg.
I try really hard to keep this project backwards compatible. Your software should not break when you upgrade tview
. But this also means that some of its shortcomings that were present in the initial versions will remain. In addition, at least for the time being, you won't find any version tags in this repo. The newest version should be the one to upgrade to. It has all the bugfixes and latest features. Having said that, backwards compatibility may still break when:
- a new version of an imported package (most likely
tcell
) changes in such a way that forces me to make changes intview
as well, - I fix something that I consider a bug, rather than a feature, something that does not work as originally intended,
- I make changes to "internal" interfaces such as
Primitive
. You shouldn't need these interfaces unless you're writing your own primitives fortview
. (Yes, I realize these are public interfaces. This has advantages as well as disadvantages. For the time being, it is what it is.)
Add your issue here on GitHub. Feel free to get in touch if you have any questions.
We follow Golang's Code of Conduct which you can find here.