askio contains highly configurable and powerful command line interface tools. With the use of askio creating interactive command-line tools becomes an ease. We've integrated beautiful UI's using the Callista package to integrate professional Cli's. askio only philosophy is to help people maintain the professional attitude in the most easiest way.
Most of the askio library is based off of functions, although yes we have two modules that use classes because of their complex structural root.
The secret function is pretty useful when it comes to password prompting and full security of its getting leaked. A example with the secret
function would be:
let askio = require('askio');
let secret = askio.Secret;//Note: no braces
(async () => {
const value = await secret({
message: "Enter your password.",
})
/*
This is a non-masked password i.e, no masks will be shown as well as the password being invisible.
*/
console.log("You sent", value)
/*
With a mask
*/
const answer = await secret({
message: "Enter your password.",
mask: '.'
})
console.log('You sent',`${answer}`)
})();
Options
name
,message
,maskWith
This module prompts for multiple option questions which can be moved about using the keyboard arrows, selected using the spacebar, all of them selected(or toggle all) with the a key and inverted using the i. Note: Not only can you use the keyboard arrows but also the w and s keys instead of up arrow and down arrow respectively An example of this module in use would be:
const {Check} = require('askio');
(async () => {
const choice = await Check({
message:'What do you prefer?',
choices:[
{ name: "Apple",
value: "apple"
},
{
name:"Orange",
value:"orange"
} // this can go on!
/*
, {
name: "Kiwi",
value:"kiwi",
disabled: true
}
this disables a package to be selected although shown!
*/
]
});
})();
options
name
,message
,choices
extend => [{name, value, disabled(optional, checked(optional))}]
The checked option checks a choice by default which can not be overwritten.
Survey is a very intutive and interesting module which looks beautiful as well as breath-taking, with the help of askio survey creatings become a piece of cake.
An example of creating a survey with askio would be:
const { Survey } = require('askio');
const form = new Survey({
name: 'Movie Review',
message: 'How\'d you like the movie?',
scale: [
{ name: '1', message: 'Coolish' },
{ name: '2', message: 'Dumbish' }
],
margin: [0, 0, 2, 1],
choices: [
{
name:"Its theme",
value: "Its theme was okay, or bad?"
},
{
name:"Its fantasy?",
value:"did you like its fantasizing background?"
}
]
});
form.go()
.then(value => console.log('ANSWERS:', value))
.catch(console.error);
options
name
, message
, scale
, margin
, choices
extends => [{name, value}]
askio provides an autocomplete module, which trys to understand an answer based upon user values.
An example would be:
const { AutoComplete } = require('askio');
const autocomp = new AutoComplete({
name: 'color',
message: 'Pick your favourite color',
limit: 10,
initial: 2,
choices: [
'Red',
'Green',
'blue',
'orange',
'magenta'
]
});
autocomp.go()
.then(answer =>
console.log('Fetched', answer))
.catch(console.error);
options
name
, message
, limit
, initial
, choices
, multiple
initial
specifies the number of already selected options
multiple
(default:
boolean
) specifies if there should be multiple choices.
Takes an input from the user
Example:
const {Input} = require('askio');
(async() => {
const answer = await Input({
message: "enter yer name"
})
console.log(answer+" was your name")
})();
options
message
, default
, validate
default
sets a default answer if no answer was provided.
validate
validates the answer. Returns a promise
Select out of a lot of options! Example:
const select = require('askio');
(async () => {
const answer = await select({
message: 'Select your favorite letter',
choices: [
{value: "Dog", description: "An animal"},
{value: "Stuff toy", description: "Non-living"}
],
});
console.log('Answer:', answer);
})();
options
message
, choices
extends => [{value, description}]
Expand to show the definitions of the options.
Example:
const {Expand} = require('askio');
const {Logger} = require("callista");
(async () => {
const answer = await Expand({
message: 'Are you 18?',
default: 'n',
choices: [
{
key:'n',
id: "No",
value:"No you aren't"
},
{
key:'y',
id:"Yes",
value:"Yes you are"
}
]
});
Logger.write(`You said ${answer}`)
})();
Create placeholders for completing task, with an awesome percentage marker!
const { Snippet } = require('askio');
const question = new Snippet({
name: 'username',
message: 'Fill out the fields in package.json',
required: true,
fields:[
{
name:"Age",
value:"Enter your age"
},
{
name:"Name",
value:"Enter your name"
/*
, validate() { <- This is optional
}
*/
}
],
template: `{
"name":"\${name}",
"age":"\${age}"
}`
});
question.go()
.then(answer => console.log('You said', answer.result))
.catch(console.error);
options
name
,message
, fields
extends -> [{name, value, validate(optional)}], template
template
-> Specifies the template in which the prompt should go on!
Although each library in this module already consists of incredible UI's as default we've also added user interface classes just for you!
Using the UI BottomBar is extremely easy, here's an example:
var {uiBottomBar} = require('askio');
var bar = new uiBottomBar;
bar.updateBottomBar('Lol');
// or as a simple logger
bar.log('haha')
This just provides a footer, at the bottom, like a text zone.
Well as the main motive of the askio library is to let developers ask questions from the user via cli, we must provide a simple prompt library to provide flow.
You can ask questions using the Ask
class.
new askio.Ask(question, answer)