Documentation
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Index ¶
- func AcceptsYes(answer string, catalog *i18n.Catalog) bool
- func AskYesNo(r io.Reader, w io.Writer, question string, opts AskOptions) (bool, error)
- func ColorEnabled(w io.Writer, mode ColorMode) bool
- func Confirm(r io.Reader, w io.Writer, question string, opts AskOptions) (bool, error)
- func EnableANSI(w io.Writer) error
- func IsStdinTTY(r io.Reader) bool
- func PromptSuffix(catalog *i18n.Catalog) string
- func Select(question string, labels []string) (int, error)
- type AskOptions
- type ColorMode
- type Progress
Constants ¶
This section is empty.
Variables ¶
This section is empty.
Functions ¶
func AcceptsYes ¶ added in v0.9.1
AcceptsYes reports whether `answer` is an affirmative response. The EN defaults ("y"/"yes") are always accepted. When catalog is non-nil, the catalog's `common.yes_short` / `common.yes_long` strings are added to the accepted set (Turkish: "e"/"evet").
`answer` is assumed already trimmed and lower-cased by the caller. Catalog values are normalised here so a catalog with mixed case still matches.
func AskYesNo ¶
AskYesNo asks question on w and reads a yes/no response from r. AssumeYes short-circuits to true; NonInteractive (without AssumeYes) short-circuits to false. Default (empty answer) is no.
Accepted-yes vocabulary: case-insensitive, trimmed match against "y"/"yes" (always) plus the active catalog's `common.yes_short` / `common.yes_long` (Turkish: "e"/"evet"). See AskOptions.Catalog.
func ColorEnabled ¶
ColorEnabled reports whether color/ANSI escapes should be emitted to w.
- ColorNever or NO_COLOR/COMMITBRIEF_NO_COLOR env set → false
- ColorAlways → true (caller's choice, even when piped)
- ColorAuto → true only if w is a TTY on a terminal that processes ANSI
TERM=dumb is treated as no-color even on a TTY: dumb terminals (emacs M-x shell, some IDE consoles, bare ptys) report as terminals but do NOT honor cursor-movement escapes. Letting the animated progress renderer run there makes every redraw append instead of overwrite — the spinner "floods" the screen with one repeated line per frame. Demoting to plain (one line per stage) keeps those terminals readable. An explicit `--color always` still overrides, for users who know their terminal.
func Confirm ¶ added in v1.5.0
Confirm asks a yes/no question, defaulting to No. On an interactive terminal (opts.Interactive) it renders an arrow-key-selectable Yes/No toggle via huh, read from the controlling terminal directly. Otherwise it falls back to the line-based AskYesNo over r/w — the path tests and non-TTY pipelines exercise. AssumeYes/NonInteractive short-circuit before either path, so the interactive toggle never appears in CI.
func EnableANSI ¶
EnableANSI applies platform-specific tweaks needed to render ANSI escapes (e.g. enabling VT processing on Windows 10+). No-op on POSIX.
func IsStdinTTY ¶
IsStdinTTY reports whether the given reader is a TTY. Used by the CLI to decide whether to set AskOptions.NonInteractive automatically.
func PromptSuffix ¶ added in v0.9.1
PromptSuffix returns the y/N choice suffix for prompts ("y/N" or the catalog's localised form like "e/H"). Falls back to English when catalog is nil or the key is missing.
func Select ¶ added in v1.5.0
Select renders an arrow-key single-choice list on the controlling terminal (input os.Stdin, output os.Stderr so a captured stdout stays clean) and returns the index of the chosen item. labels[i] is shown for item i; the first item is pre-selected. It is interactive-only — callers must guarantee a TTY (the `commit` command errors on non-TTY before reaching the selector). Returns an error if labels is empty or the form is aborted (e.g. Ctrl-C).
Types ¶
type AskOptions ¶
type AskOptions struct {
AssumeYes bool
NonInteractive bool
// Interactive, when true, makes Confirm render an arrow-key
// Yes/No toggle (huh) read from the controlling terminal instead
// of the line-based fallback. Callers derive it from
// IsStdinTTY(os.Stdin) — it is NOT inferred from the reader,
// because the review-scoped shared reader is a *bufio.Reader, not
// the *os.File the TTY check needs. AssumeYes and NonInteractive
// still take precedence. Has no effect on AskYesNo (line-only).
Interactive bool
// Catalog, when non-nil, controls the prompt suffix ("[y/N]" vs
// "[e/H]") and the accepted-affirmative vocabulary
// (common.yes_short / common.yes_long). When nil, falls back to
// English defaults so existing callers that don't have a catalog
// handy keep working — but EVERY interactive caller in the CLI
// should pass one so non-English locales actually get their
// native input accepted (see UC-14 in PATCH_ROADMAP).
//
// The EN forms ("y"/"yes") are accepted unconditionally regardless
// of catalog, so a user typing English in a Turkish session also
// proceeds.
Catalog *i18n.Catalog
// DefaultYes flips the pre-selected answer to Yes. In the interactive
// (huh) path the toggle starts on the affirmative button; in the
// line-based path an empty answer is treated as yes. Off by default so
// every existing caller keeps the safe default-to-No behaviour. Used by
// the `commit` command, whose confirm defaults to Yes (ADR-0019).
DefaultYes bool
}
type Progress ¶ added in v0.9.0
type Progress struct {
// contains filtered or unexported fields
}
Progress is the staged-spinner driving the review pipeline's long-running operations. It renders a `tree` of stage lines on a single writer (typically stderr), animating the leading `⏺` glyph on the *currently active* stage and freezing prior stages with a terminal-state color (green for Finish, red for Fail, muted for Soft).
Three operating modes, decided at construction:
- **Animated** — TTY writer + colors enabled. Full breathing-dot animation, ANSI cursor escapes to redraw the tree, multi-line output. The natural mode for interactive terminals.
- **Plain** — non-TTY writer (CI, pipe) but not silent. One line per stage transition (`[start]`, `[done]`, `[info]`, `[fail]`). No animation. Useful for CI logs.
- **Silent** — caller opts out (Quiet=true). No output at all.
The mode is fixed for the lifetime of the Progress; callers don't need to branch on TTY state at each call.
Concurrency: Start/Info/Finish/Fail/Soft are safe to call from a single goroutine driving the pipeline. The animation lives in its own goroutine that reads the stage list under a mutex.
func NewProgress ¶ added in v0.9.0
NewProgress returns a Progress configured for the given writer. The Animated mode requires a TTY writer and colors enabled (ColorAuto + no NO_COLOR env, or ColorAlways). On non-TTY or NO_COLOR, falls back to Plain mode. Set Quiet=true to suppress every output mode.
func (*Progress) Clear ¶ added in v0.9.0
func (p *Progress) Clear()
Clear stops the animation and erases the rendered progress tree from the terminal. Use this when downstream output (cards / JSON / markdown body) is about to take over the screen and the per-stage breadcrumbs would be redundant clutter — the rendered output is itself proof the pipeline completed.
In plain mode (non-TTY) Clear is a no-op: those per-stage lines already shipped on each Start/Info/Finish call, are useful in CI logs, and aren't visually redundant the way a fixed-viewport tree is. In silent mode there is nothing to erase. Idempotent.
func (*Progress) Close ¶ added in v0.9.0
func (p *Progress) Close()
Close stops the animation goroutine, ensuring the final frame is rendered (so completed stages stay on screen) and the cursor is restored to a known column. Idempotent.
Use Close when the progress tree is the user's primary feedback (empty-diff `no_changes` path, provider-error path). Use Clear instead when downstream output — rendered cards, JSON, markdown — will take over the screen and the tree would just be clutter.
func (*Progress) Fail ¶ added in v0.9.0
Fail marks the current stage as failed (red ⏺) and emits the error indented below it on the next render.
func (*Progress) Finish ¶ added in v0.9.0
func (p *Progress) Finish()
Finish marks the current stage as completed (green ⏺).
func (*Progress) Info ¶ added in v0.9.0
Info appends a static informational line (no animated glyph, no terminal state). Used for stats lines like "36 files +1233 -34".
func (*Progress) Pause ¶ added in v0.9.0
func (p *Progress) Pause()
Pause stops the animation loop and clears the in-progress render so the terminal is handed back to the caller (e.g. an interactive cost prompt). The recorded stage list is preserved; Resume continues from where it left off.
func (*Progress) Resume ¶ added in v0.9.0
func (p *Progress) Resume()
Resume restarts the animation after Pause. No-op if not paused.