Files
Terminal.Gui/Examples/UICatalog
Thomas Nind ec827e901e Fixes #4172 Timeout revamp and remove continuous mouse (#4173)
* Remove continous press code from Application

* WIP prototype code to handle continuous press as subcomponent of View

* Prototype with Button

* Implement CWP

* Move to seperate classes and prevent double entry to Start

* Fix repeat clicking when moving mouse by removing phantom click code (old implementation of WantContinuousButtonPressed)

* Remove initial tick because it results in double activation e.g. button firing twice immediately as mouse is pressed down.

* Refactor DatePicker lamdas

* WIP investigate subcomponents instead of statics

* Add IMouseGrabHandler to IApplication

* Make mouse grabbing non static activity

* Make MouseHeldDown suppress when null fields e.g. app not initialized in tests

* Update test and remove dependency on Application

* Fix other mouse click and hold tests

* Code cleanup

* Update class diagram

* Fix bad xml doc references

* Fix timed events not getting passed through in v2 applications

* Make timed events nullable for tests that dont create an Application

* Remove strange blocking test

* WIP remove all idles and replace with zero timeouts

* Fix build of tests

* Fix unit tests

* Add wakeup call back in

* Comment out incredibly complicated test and fix others

* Fix test

* test fix

* Make Post execute immediately if already on UI thread

* Re enable test and simplify Invoke to just execute if in UI thread (up front)

* Remove xml doc references to idles

* Remove more references to idles

* Make Screen initialization threadsafe

* Add more exciting timeouts

* WIP add tests

* fix log

* fix test

* make continuous key press use smoth acceleration

* Rename _lock to _lockScreen

* Remove section on idles, they are not a thing anymore - and they kinda never were.

* Add nullable enable

* Add xml comment

* Fix namings and cleanup code

* xmldoc fix

* Rename LockAndRunTimers to just RunTimers

* Rename AddTimeout and RemoveTimeout (and event) to just Add/Remove

* Update description of MainLoop

* Commented out Run_T_Call_Init_ForceDriver_Should_Pick_Correct_Driver

* Again? Commented out Run_T_Call_Init_ForceDriver_Should_Pick_Correct_Driver

* Revert Commented out Run_T_Call_Init_ForceDriver_Should_Pick_Correct_Driver

* When mouse is released from MouseHeldDown reset host MouseState

* Fix namespaces in class diagram

* Apply @BDisp suggested fix

* Fix class diagrams

* Add lock

* Make TimeSpan.Zero definetly run

* Fix duplicate entry in package props

---------

Co-authored-by: Tig <tig@users.noreply.github.com>
2025-07-10 11:59:27 -06:00
..
2025-06-12 13:45:39 -06:00
2025-06-12 13:45:39 -06:00

Terminal.Gui UI Catalog

UI Catalog is a comprehensive sample library for Terminal.Gui. It attempts to satisfy the following goals:

  1. Be an easy-to-use showcase for Terminal.Gui concepts and features.
  2. Provide sample code that illustrates how to properly implement said concepts & features.
  3. Make it easy for contributors to add additional samples in a structured way.

screenshot

Motivation

The original demo.cs sample app for Terminal.Gui is neither good to showcase, nor does it explain different concepts. In addition, because it is built on a single source file, it has proven to cause friction when multiple contributors are simultaneously working on different aspects of Terminal.Gui. See Issue #368 for more background.

API Reference

How To Use

Build and run UI Catalog by typing dotnet run from the UI Catalog folder or by using the Terminal.Gui Visual Studio solution.

Program.cs is the main UI Catalog app and provides a UI for selecting and running Scenarios. Each *Scenario is implemented as a class derived from Scenario and Program.cs uses reflection to dynamically build the UI.

Scenarios are tagged with categories using the [ScenarioCategory] attribute. The left pane of the main screen lists the categories. Clicking on a category shows all the scenarios in that category.

Scenarios can be run either from the UICatalog.exe app UI or by being specified on the command line:

UICatalog.exe <Scenario Name>

e.g.

UICatalog.exe Buttons

Hitting ENTER on a selected Scenario or double-clicking on a Scenario runs that scenario as though it were a stand-alone Terminal.Gui app.

When a Scenario is run, it runs as though it were a standalone Terminal.Gui app. However, scaffolding is provided (in the Scenario base class) that (optionally) takes care of Terminal.Gui initialization.

Contributing by Adding Scenarios

To add a new Scenario simply:

  1. Create a new .cs file in the Scenarios directory that derives from Scenario.
  2. Add a [ScenarioMetaData] attribute to the class specifying the scenario's name and description.
  3. Add one or more [ScenarioCategory] attributes to the class specifying which categories the sceanrio belongs to. If you don't specify a category the sceanrio will show up in "All".
  4. Implement the Setup override which will be called when a user selects the scenario to run.
  5. Optionally, implement the Init and/or Run overrides to provide a custom implementation.

The sample below is provided in the .\UICatalog\Scenarios directory as a generic sample that can be copied and re-named:


namespace UICatalog {
	[ScenarioMetadata (Name: "Generic", Description: "Generic sample - A template for creating new Scenarios")]
	[ScenarioCategory ("Controls")]
	class MyScenario : Scenario {
		public override void Setup ()
		{
			// Put your scenario code here, e.g.
			Win.Add (new Button () { 
Text = "Press me!", 
				X = Pos.Center (),
				Y = Pos.Center (),
				Clicked = () => MessageBox.Query (20, 7, "Hi", "Neat?", "Yes", "No")
			});
		}
	}
}

Scenario provides Win, a Window object that provides a canvas for the Scenario to operate.

The default Window shows the Scenario name and supports exiting the Scenario through the Esc key.

screenshot

To build a more advanced scenario, where control of the Toplevel and Window is needed (e.g. for scenarios using MenuBar or StatusBar), simply use Application.Top per normal Terminal.Gui programming, as seen in the Notepad scenario.

For complete control, the Init and Run overrides can be implemented. The base.Init creates Win. The base.Run simply calls Application.Run(Application.Top).

Contribution Guidelines

  • Provide a terse, descriptive Name for Scenarios. Keep them short.
  • Provide a clear Description.
  • Comment Scenario code to describe to others why it's a useful Scenario.
  • Annotate Scenarios with [ScenarioCategory] attributes. Minimize the number of new categories created.
  • Use the Bug Repo Category for Scenarios that reproduce bugs.
    • Include the Github Issue # in the Description.
    • Once the bug has been fixed in develop submit another PR to remove the Scenario (or modify it to provide a good regression test/sample).
  • Tag bugs or suggestions for UI Catalog as Terminal.Gui Github Issues with "UICatalog: ".