.TH ACMEEVENT 1 .SH NAME acmeevent, acme.rc \- shell script support for acme clients .SH SYNOPSIS .B 9p .B read .B acme/acme/$winid/event | acmeevent .PP .B \&. /usr/local/plan9/lib/acme.rc .PP .B newwindow .PP .B winread .I file .PP .B winwrite .I file .PP .B winctl .I cmd .PP .B windump [ .I dumpdir | .B - ] [ .I dumpcmd | .B - ] .PP .B winname .I name .PP .B windel [ .B sure ] .PP .B winwriteevent .I c1 .I c2 .I q0 .I q1 [ .I eq0 .I eq1 .I flag .I textlen .I text .I chordarg .I chordaddr ] .PP .B wineventloop .SH DESCRIPTION .I Acmeevent and .I acme.rc make it easy to write simple .IR acme (1) client programs as shell scripts. .PP .I Acme clients read the .B event files (see .IR acme (4)) for the windows they control, reacting to the events. The events are presented in a format that is easy to read with C programs but hard to read with shell scripts. .PP .I Acmeevent reads an .IR acme (4) event stream from standard input, printing a shell-friendly version of the events, one per line, on standard output. Each output line from .I acmeevent has the form: .IP .B event .I c1 .I c2 .I q0 .I q1 .I eq0 .I eq1 .I flag .I textlen .I text .I chordarg .I chordaddr .PP The fields are: .TP .I c1 A character indicating the origin or cause of the action. The possible causes are: a write to the body or tag file .RB ( E ), a write to the window's other files .RB ( F ), input via the keyboard .RB ( K ), and input via the mouse .RB ( M ). .TP .I c2 A character indicating the type of action. The possible types are: text deleted from the body .RB ( D ), text deleted from the tag .RB ( d ), text inserted in the body .RB ( I ), text inserted in the tag .RB ( i ), a button 3 action in the body .RB ( L ), a button 3 action in the tag .RB ( l ), a button 2 action in the body .RB ( X ), and a button 2 action in the tag .RB ( x ). .TP .I q0 .TP .I q1 .TP .I eq0 .TP .I eq1 .TP .I flag .TP .I textlen .TP .I text .TP .I chordarg .TP .I chordorigin .PP .I Acme.rc is a library of .IR rc (1) shell functions useful for writing acme clients. .PP .I Newwindow creates a new acme window and sets .B $winid to the new window's id. The other commands all use .B $winid to determine which window to operate on. .PP .I Winread prints the current window's .I file to standard output. It is equivalent to .B cat .BI /mnt/acme/acme/$winid/ file on Plan 9. Similarly, .I winwrite writes standard input to the current window's .IR file . .I Winread and .I winwrite are useful mainly in building more complex functions. .PP .I Winctl writes .I cmd to the window's .B ctl file. The most commonly-used command is .BR clean , which marks the window as clean. See .IR acme (4) for a full list of commands. .PP .I Windump sets the window's dump directory and dump command (see .IR acme (4)). If either argument is omitted or is .BR - , that argument is not set. .PP .I Winname sets the name displayed in the window's tag. .PP .I Windel simulates the .B Del command. If the argument .B sure is given, it simulates the .B Delete command. .PP .I Winwriteevent writes an event to the window's event file. The event is in the format produced by .IR acmeevent . Only the first four arguments are necessary: the rest are ignored. Event handlers should call .I winwriteevent to pass unhandled button 2 or button 3 events back to .I acme for processing. .PP .I Wineventloop executes the current window's event file, as output by .IR acmeevent . It returns when the window has been deleted. Before running .I wineventloop , clients must define a shell function named .BR event , which will be run for each incoming event, as .I rc executes the output of .IR acmeevent . A typical event function need only worry about button 2 and button 3 events. Those events not handled should be sent back to .I acme with .IR winwriteevent . .SH EXAMPLE .IR Adict , a dictionary browser, is implemented using .I acmeevent and .IR acme.rc . The .I event handler is: .IP .EX .ta +4n +4n +4n +4n +4n +4n fn event { switch($1$2){ case Mx MX # button 2 - pass back to acme winwriteevent $* case Ml ML # button 3 - open new window on dictionary or entry { if(~ $dict NONE) dictwin /adict/$7/ $7 if not dictwin /adict/$dict/$7 $dict $7 } & } } .EE .LP Note that the button 3 handler starts a subshell in which to run .IR dictwin . That subshell will create a new window, set its name, possibly fill the window with a dictionary list or dictionary entry, mark the window as clean, and run the event loop: .IP .EX fn dictwin { newwindow winname $1 dict=$2 if(~ $dict NONE) dict -d '?' >[2=1] | sed 1d | winwrite body if(~ $#* 3) dict -d $dict $3 >[2=1] | winwrite body winctl clean wineventloop } .EE .LP The script starts with an initial window: .IP .EX dictwin /adict/ NONE .EE .LP Button 3 clicking on a dictionary name in the initial window will create a new empty window for that dictionary. Typing and button 3 clicking on a word in that window will create a new window with the dictionary's entry for that word. .PP See .B /usr/local/plan9/bin/adict for the full implementation. .SH SOURCE .B /usr/local/plan9/src/cmd/acmeevent.c .br .B /usr/local/plan9/lib/acme.rc .SH SEE ALSO .IR acme (1), .IR acme (4), .IR rc (1) .SH BUGS There is more that could be done to ease the writing of complicated clients.