SwiftCursesTerm

0.1.2

A Swift library for building text bases interface for your command-line tools - based on C ncurses
rderik/SwiftCursesTerm

What's New

0.1.2

2020-08-06T13:22:11Z

Add Type liases for SCTWindowId and SCTColorPair for ease of use.

SwiftCursesTerm

You can use the SwiftcursesTerm library to create text based interfaces for your command-line tools. The library uses C ncurses(3) library. Currently the library is a work in progress, so the API might change to prived a more Swifty library.

Using it on your command-line tools

You need to add it as a dependencty to your package manifesto Package.swift. For example:

// swift-tools-version:5.2
// The swift-tools-version declares the minimum version of Swift required to build this package.

import PackageDescription

let package = Package(
    name: "clock",
    dependencies: [
        // Dependencies declare other packages that this package depends on.
        // .package(url: /* package url */, from: "1.0.0"),
        .package(name: "SwiftCursesTerm", url: "https://github.com/rderik/SwiftCursesTerm.git", from: "0.1.1"),
    ],
    targets: [
        // Targets are the basic building blocks of a package. A target can define a module or a test suite.
        // Targets can depend on other targets in this package, and on products in packages which this package depends on.
        .target(
            name: "clock",
            dependencies: ["SwiftCursesTerm"]),
        .testTarget(
            name: "clockTests",
            dependencies: ["clock"]),
    ]
)

Check the latest release version at https://github.com/rderik/SwiftCursesTerm/Releases/latest.

Now you can import SwiftCursesTerm and use all of its functionality.

#Example usage

Text format:

import Foundation
import SwiftCursesTerm

var term = SwiftCursesTerm()
term.addStr(content: "Hello, world!", refresh: true)
let green = term.defineColorPair(foreground: CursesColor.white, background: CursesColor.green)
term.setAttributes([TextAttribute.bold, TextAttribute.underline], colorPair: green)
term.addStr(content: "Hello, in Green!", refresh: true)
getch()
term.shutdown()
exit(EXIT_SUCCESS)

The SwiftCursesTerm object frees memory when it is deinitilized, but if you want to make sure it frees the memory call the function shutdown() and it'll close the ncurses session and free any window you created.

Windows

import Foundation
import SwiftCursesTerm

var term = SwiftCursesTerm()
term.refresh()
var win1 = term.newWindow(height: 20, width: 20, line: 0, column: 0)
var win2 = term.newWindow(height: 20, width: 20, line: 0, column: 21)
term.addStr(window: win1, content: "Hello, world!", refresh: true)
let green = term.defineColorPair(foreground: CursesColor.white, background: CursesColor.green)
term.setWindowColorPair(window: win2, colorPair: green)
term.setAttributes(window: win2, [TextAttribute.dim, TextAttribute.underline], colorPair: green)
term.addStrTo(window: win2, content: "Hello, in Green!", line: 10, column: 0, refresh: true)
getch()
term.shutdown()
exit(EXIT_SUCCESS)

Notice that you can call addStr to add a String on the current cursor position or call addStrTo to move to a position and then add the string.

I encourage you to read the SwiftCursesTerm.swift file to view all the available options.

Contributing

If you want to contribute:

  • Fork the project
  • Create a branch to hold your changes
  • Create a pull request

Author

Derik Ramirez - https://rderik.com

Description

  • Swift Tools 5.2.0
View More Packages from this Author

Dependencies

  • None
Last updated: Thu Apr 09 2026 03:35:18 GMT-0900 (Hawaii-Aleutian Daylight Time)