sourCEntral - mobile manpages

pdf

Curses::UI::Menubar

NAME

Curses::UI::Menubar - Create and manipulate menubar widgets

CLASS HIERARCHY

Curses::UI::Widget
|
+----Curses::UI::Container
|
+----Curses::UI::Window
|
+----Curses::UI::Menubar

SYNOPSIS

use Curses::UI;
my $cui = new Curses::UI;
# define the menu datastructure.
my $menu_data = [....];
my $menu = $cui->add(
'menu', 'Menubar',
-menu => $menu_data
);
$menu->focus();

DESCRIPTION

This class can be used to add a menubar to Curses::UI. This menubar can contain a complete submenu hierarchy. It looks (remotely :-) like this:

-------------------------------------
menu1 | menu2 | menu3 | ....
-------------------------------------
+-------------+
|menuitem 1 |
|menuitem 2 |+--------------+
|menuitem 3 >>||submenuitem 1 |
|menuitem 4 ||submenuitem 2 |
+-------------+|submenuitem 3 |
|submenuitem 4 |
|submenuitem 5 |
+--------------+

See exampes/demo-Curses::UI::Menubar in the distribution for a short demo.

STANDARD OPTIONS

This class does not use any of the standard options that are provided by Curses::UI::Widget.

WIDGET-SPECIFIC OPTIONS

There is only one option: -menu. The value for this option is an ARRAYREF. This ARRAYREF behaves exactly like the one that is described in Curses::UI::MenuListbox. The difference is that for the top-level menu, you will only use -submenu’s. Example data structure:

my $menu1 = [
{ -label => 'option 1', -value => '1-1' },
{ -label => 'option 2', -value => '1-2' },
{ -label => 'option 3', -value => '1-3' },
];
my $menu2 = [
{ -label => 'option 1', -value => \&sel1 },
{ -label => 'option 2', -value => \&sel2 },
{ -label => 'option 3', -value => \&sel3 },
];
my $submenu = [
{ -label => 'suboption 1', -value => '3-3-1' },
{ -label => 'suboption 2', -callback=> \&do_it },
];
my $menu3 = [
{ -label => 'option 1', -value => \&sel2 },
{ -label => 'option 2', -value => \&sel3 },
{ -label => 'submenu 1', -submenu => $submenu },
];
my $menu = [
{ -label => 'menu 1', -submenu => $menu1 },
{ -label => 'menu 2', -submenu => $menu2 }
{ -label => 'menu 3', -submenu => $menu3 }
];

METHODS

new ( OPTIONS )

layout ( )

draw ( BOOLEAN )

focus ( )

These are standard methods. See Curses::UI::Widget for an explanation of these.

DEFAULT BINDINGS

<escape>

Call the ’escape’ routine. This will have the menubar loose its focus and return the value ’ ESCAPE ’ to the calling routine.

<tab>

Call the ’return’ routine. This will have the menubar loose its focus and return the value ’ LOOSE_FOCUS ’ to the calling routine.

<cursor-down>, <j>, <enter>

Call the ’pulldown’ routine. This will open the menulistbox for the current menu and give that menulistbox the focus. What happens after the menulistbox loses its focus, depends upon the returnvalue of it:

* the value ’ CURSOR_LEFT

Call the 'cursor-left' routine and after that
call the 'pulldown' routine. So this will open
the menulistbox for the previous menu.

* the value ’ CURSOR_RIGHT

Call the 'cursor-right' routine and after that
call the 'pulldown' routine. So this will open
the menulistbox for the next menu.

* the value ’ LOOSE_FOCUS

The menubar will keep the focus, but no
menulistbox will be open.

* the value ’ ESCAPE

The menubar will loose its focus and return the
value 'ESCAPE' to the calling routine.

* A CODE reference

The code will be excuted, the menubar will loose its
focus and the returnvalue of the CODE will be
returned to the calling routine.

* Any other value

The menubar will loose its focus and the value will
be returned to the calling routine.

<cursor-left>, <h>

Call the ’cursor-left’ routine. This will select the previous menu. If the first menu is already selected, the last menu will be selected.

<cursor-right>, <l>

Call the ’cursor-right’ routine. This will select the next menu. If the last menu is already selected, the first menu will be selected.

SEE ALSO

Curses::UI, Curses::UI::MenuListbox, Curses::UI::Listbox

AUTHOR

Copyright (c) 2001-2002 Maurice Makaay. All rights reserved.

Maintained by Marcus Thiesen (marcus AT cpan DOT thiesenweb DOT de)

This package is free software and is provided "as is" without express or implied warranty. It may be used, redistributed and/or modified under the same terms as perl itself.

pdf