editline 0.0.11

A platform-agnostic line editor with history and full editing capabilities
Documentation

editline

A platform-agnostic line editor library for Rust with full editing capabilities, command history, and cross-platform terminal support.

Crates.io Documentation License

Overview

editline provides a powerful, flexible line editing library with a clean separation between I/O and editing logic. Unlike traditional readline implementations that are tightly coupled to specific terminal APIs, editline uses a trait-based design that works with any byte-stream I/O.

Perfect for:

  • Desktop CLIs and REPLs
  • Embedded systems (UART, custom displays)
  • Network services (telnet/SSH servers)
  • Custom terminal emulators
  • Testing with mock I/O

Why editline?

  • Platform-agnostic core - editing logic has zero I/O dependencies
  • No global state - create multiple independent editors
  • Type-safe - Rust enums and Result types throughout
  • Memory-safe - no manual memory management
  • Full-featured - history, word navigation, editing operations
  • Cross-platform - Unix (termios/ANSI) and Windows (Console API) included

Features

  • Full line editing: Insert, delete, cursor movement
  • Word-aware navigation: Ctrl+Left/Right, Alt+Backspace, Ctrl+Delete
  • Command history: 50-entry circular buffer with up/down navigation
  • Smart history: Automatically skips duplicates and empty lines
  • Cross-platform: Unix (termios/ANSI) and Windows (Console API)
  • Zero global state: All state is explicitly managed
  • Type-safe: Strong typing with Result-based error handling

Usage

Add to your Cargo.toml:

[dependencies]
editline = "0.0.5"

# For micro:bit support
[target.'cfg(target_os = "none")'.dependencies]
editline = { version = "0.0.5", features = ["microbit"], default-features = false }

Basic REPL Example

use editline::terminals::StdioTerminal;
use editline::LineEditor;

fn main() {
    let mut editor = LineEditor::new(1024, 50);  // buffer size, history size
    let mut terminal = StdioTerminal::new();

    loop {
        print!("> ");
        std::io::Write::flush(&mut std::io::stdout()).unwrap();

        match editor.read_line(&mut terminal) {
            Ok(line) => {
                if line == "exit" {
                    break;
                }

                if !line.is_empty() {
                    println!("typed: {}", line);
                }
            }
            Err(e) => {
                // Handle Ctrl-C and Ctrl-D
                match e.kind() {
                    std::io::ErrorKind::UnexpectedEof => {
                        // Ctrl-D pressed - exit gracefully
                        println!("\nGoodbye!");
                        break;
                    }
                    std::io::ErrorKind::Interrupted => {
                        // Ctrl-C pressed - show message and continue
                        println!("\nInterrupted. Type 'exit' or press Ctrl-D to quit.");
                        continue;
                    }
                    _ => {
                        eprintln!("\nError: {}", e);
                        break;
                    }
                }
            }
        }
    }
}

Custom Terminal Implementation

Implement the Terminal trait for your platform:

use editline::{Terminal, KeyEvent};
use std::io;

struct MyCustomTerminal {
    // Your platform-specific fields
}

impl Terminal for MyCustomTerminal {
    fn read_byte(&mut self) -> io::Result<u8> {
        // Read from your input source
    }

    fn write(&mut self, data: &[u8]) -> io::Result<()> {
        // Write to your output
    }

    fn flush(&mut self) -> io::Result<()> {
        // Flush output
    }

    fn enter_raw_mode(&mut self) -> io::Result<()> {
        // Configure for character-by-character input
    }

    fn exit_raw_mode(&mut self) -> io::Result<()> {
        // Restore normal mode
    }

    fn cursor_left(&mut self) -> io::Result<()> {
        // Move cursor left
    }

    fn cursor_right(&mut self) -> io::Result<()> {
        // Move cursor right
    }

    fn clear_eol(&mut self) -> io::Result<()> {
        // Clear from cursor to end of line
    }

    fn parse_key_event(&mut self) -> io::Result<KeyEvent> {
        // Parse input bytes into key events
    }
}

Running the Examples

Standard Terminal (Linux/Windows/macOS)

cargo run --example simple_repl

Embedded micro:bit Example

For embedded targets, you need to:

  1. Build with --no-default-features to disable the std feature
  2. Provide the appropriate target and build configuration
cargo build --example microbit_repl --no-default-features --target thumbv7em-none-eabihf -Z build-std=core,alloc

For convenience when developing embedded applications, create a .cargo/config.toml in your project:

[target.thumbv7em-none-eabihf]
runner = "probe-rs run --chip nRF52833_xxAA"
rustflags = ["-C", "link-arg=-Tlink.x"]

[build]
target = "thumbv7em-none-eabihf"

[unstable]
build-std = ["core", "alloc"]

Then use editline in your Cargo.toml:

[dependencies]
editline = { version = "0.0.3", default-features = false }

Try these features:

  • Arrow keys for cursor movement
  • Home/End keys
  • Up/Down for history
  • Ctrl+Left/Right for word navigation
  • Alt+Backspace to delete word left
  • Ctrl+Delete to delete word right
  • Ctrl-D to exit (EOF)
  • Ctrl-C to interrupt current line (continues REPL)

Architecture

┌───────────────────────────────────────┐
│         LineEditor (lib.rs)           │
│  ┌───────────┐  ┌──────────────────┐  │
│  │LineBuffer │  │ History          │  │
│  │           │  │ (circular buffer)│  │
│  └───────────┘  └──────────────────┘  │
└──────────────────┬────────────────────┘
                   │ Terminal trait
        ┌──────────┴──────────┐
        │                     │
┌───────▼────────┐   ┌────────▼─────────┐
│ Unix Terminal  │   │ Windows Terminal │
│ (termios/ANSI) │   │  (Console API)   │
└────────────────┘   └──────────────────┘

Contributing

Contributions are welcome! Areas for enhancement:

  • Tab completion callback hooks
  • Multi-line editing support
  • Syntax highlighting callbacks
  • Additional platform implementations
  • More comprehensive tests

License

Licensed under either of:

at your option.