Ada95 Binding for ncurses
by Jürgen Pfeifer.
General Remarks
- This document describes Version 01.00 of the binding.
- The functionality is modeled to be compatible with the ncurses
package, a clone of the SVr4 curses model.
I did the development on an Intel box running the latest stable release of
Linux, ncurses and the most recent released
GNU Ada Translator
gnat versions. For any older versions of ncurses and gnat
it is not guaranteed to work.
- You must have the m4 macroprocessor to build this package.
If you don't have this program, you can get the FSF version
here.
- Ada programs are supposed to be readable. One of my
favorite methods to make code readable is to use expressive
names for the identifiers. You can find a list of a mapping
of the cryptic curses names to the Ada names in this table.
- This is not a typical one-to-one interface mapping. It is
close to one-to-one on the functional level. Each (n)curses function
has it's counterpart with a more or less similar formal parameter list
in the binding. It is not one-to-one with respect to the datatypes.
I tried to make records out of the flat chtype and similar structures,
so you don't have to do bit operations to mark an attributed character
as bold. Just make the boolean member bold of the record
true. The binding also hides the structures like WINDOW, PANEL, MENU, FORM
etc. ! It's a pure functional API.
- I try to do as much error checking as possible and feasible
in the binding. I will raise an Ada exception when something
went wrong in the low-level curses. This has the effect that - at least
first time in my life - (n)curses programs have now a very rigid error
checking, but - thanks to Ada - you don't have to code the orgiastic
error checking style of C.
- Support for wide characters is currently not in the binding, as it
is not really in ncurses at this point in time.
Limitations
- I provide no SCREEN datatype and functions to set a new screen.
If you need this (mostly for debugging I guess), write a small
C routine doing all this and import it into your Ada program.
- I provide no functions to switch on/off curses tracing options.
Same suggestion as above.
- Although Ada95 is an OO Language, this binding doesn't provide
an OO abstraction of the (n)curses functionality. As mentioned above
it's a thin binding for the (n)curses functions. But without any
doubt it would be nice to build on top of this an OO abstraction
of (n)curses functionality.
The only exception is the method how fieldtypes are represented in
this Binding. We provide an abstract tagged type Field_Type from
which the various fieldtypes are derived.
- I currently do not support the link_fieldtype functionality of the
forms subsystem.
- The *_IO packages are currently output only.
Hierarchy of packages
If you want to navigate through the html pages of the package specs, click here.
Implementation Details
Behind the abstraction
All the new types like Window, Panel,
Menu, Form etc. are just
opaque representations of the pointers to the corresponding
low level (n)curses structures like
WINDOW *, PANEL *,
MENU * or FORM *.
So you can safely pass them to C routines that expect a pointer
to one of those structures.
Extended ripoffline() usage
The official documentation of (n)curses says, that the line parameter
determines only whether or not exactly one line is
stolen from the top or bottom of the screen. So essentially only the
sign of the parameter is evaluated. ncurses has internally implemented
it in a way, that uses the line parameter also to control the amount of
lines to steal. This mechanism is used in the Rip_Off_Lines
routine of the binding.
TBD
Enumeration fields handling
The (n)curses documentation says, that the String arrays to be passed to
an TYPE_ENUM fieldtype must not be automatic variables. This is not true
in this binding, because it is internally arranged to safely copy these
values.
This should basically not be a problem.
Port to other curses implementations
Basically it should not be too hard to make all this run on a regular SVr4
implementation of curses. The problems are probably these:
- ncurses has some additional features which are presented in this binding. You
have two choices to deal with this:
- Emulate the feature in this binding
- Raise an exception for non implemented features
Most likely you will follow a mixed approach. Some features are easy to simulate,
others will be hard if not impossible.
I'm quite sure I forgot something.