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elinks/doc/introduction.txt

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Introduction to the World of ELinks
-----------------------------------
The goal of this introduction is to explain the basic concepts in ELinks,
give an overview of how to get started and serve as an entry point to many
of the (undocumented) features of ELinks. It won't tell you all the
details, but should hopefully give you an idea of how things work and make
it possible for you to even figure out how to go further.
Although ELinks is text-based, the user interface has many of interaction
methods normally found in graphical environments. There are menus, dialogs
with buttons and hierarchic list boxes with folders. Care has been taken to
make the interaction between various dialogs consistent, so the controls
will quickly become familiar to new users.
The user interface can be controlled using both mouse and keyboard, but
currently it is only possible to configure keybindings. Looking back, the
key-controls have been more advanced than the mouse support, but during the
0.10 prereleases the mouse support has been much improved. You will now find
find stuff like contextual menus when right-clicking in different document
zones.
Overview of the User Interface
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The main user interface of ELinks consists of the document view and dialog
bars displaying the information such as the title of the currently viewed
document, all opened tabs and the browsing status. The 3 bars are elaborated
further below.
The most important dialogs that you will meet include the Main, Link and Tab
menus and the different managers. The menus serve as entry points to the
actions available from different contexts, while the managers let you check
the state and control the various subsystems, such as loaded cookies and the
global history. The utility menus and the manager tools are investigated
further below.
The document viewer in ELinks provides a feature-rich set of ways to browse
documents. That is, multiple options exist for navigating, searching and
displaying documents and you will hopefully figure in time what works best
for you. The basic browsing possibilities are presented below.
ELinks is highly configurable, so if there is something that you would like
to change, it is most likely possible. The best overview of the many options
are given in the `elinks.conf(5)` man page. Keybindings are discussed in the
`elinkskeys(5)` man page. It is not always up-to-date, so you should also
check the keybinding manager and the overview of all the configured
keybindings given in the Help -> Keys dialog. The Keys dialogs serves as a
good introduction to the most common keybindings.
The Title, Tab and Status bar
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The title bars main purpose is to display the title of the current document.
Documents bigger than can be displayed with the current screen size are
divided into subpages. In this case the current document position is
indicated in the far right of the title bar as a suffix to the actual
document title. The syntax is: ( current-subpage / total-subpages ), an
example is `(4/9)` that indicates the 4th subpage of 9 subpages.
The tab bar by default is only visible when 2 or more tabs are open. It is
divided into slots containing the trimmed title of the tabs' loaded
document. Between each tab is a separator. The current tab is highlighted
and all tabs that has not been viewed after being loaded are highlighted as
fresh. Tabs are explained in details in the tabs.txt file.
The status bar has multiple purposes. Most of the time it will contain the
URI (and title) of the currently selected link. If a link is followed,
connection information is shown in the status bar. When using cursor
routing, the status bar will show the coordinates of the cursor when a link
is not followed.
The Main, Link and Tab Menus
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The Main Menu gives you access to many of the features of ELinks via
submenus and serves as a good entry point for performing actions on the
different objects of interest, such as links, documents and tabs. The Link
menu and Tab menus are more specialized and targeted to a specific context,
such as link handling or managing the tab bar. Actually, the Link Menu is
accessible from the Main Menu as a submenu.
Once you have familiarized yourself with the menus, you will have a good
chance at gradually learning the most common keybinding, since all the
configured keybindings are shown as right aligned text. Menu entries can
also be quickly accessed using hotkeys. Hotkeys appear highlighted in the
menu entry text. For example the key-combo "Alt-v i" will open the document
info dialog accessible from the View sub menu in the Main menu.
The Managers
~~~~~~~~~~~~
The managers let you control the state of subsystems, such as cookies and
the global history. They are accessible from the Tools or Setup submenu in
the Main Menu. The managers consists of an area showing a hierarchic listbox
and buttons at the bottom. Below, a view of the cookie manager is shown.
+------------------------- Cookie manager -------------------------+
| |
| [-]- bugzilla.elinks.cz |
| | |-- BUGLIST |
| | `-- LASTORDER |
| [+]- kerneltrap.org |
| [+]-*dictionary.reference.com |
| [+]-*bjork.com |
| [-]- www.google.com |
| `-- PREF |
| |
| |
| |
| |
| [ Info ] [ Add ] [ Edit ] [ Delete ] [ Save ] [ Close ] |
+------------------------------------------------------------------+
Each item is either a folder or a leaf. A folder is displayed with a `[-]`
or `[+]` before the name telling whether the folder is currently open or
closed. Nested items are displayed indented compared to the folder they are
nested in. In the cookie manager example above "bjork.com" is a folder and
"PREF" is a leaf.
Items can be "marked", which makes it possible to select a group of items
and perform an action on them, such as deleting all marked items. If any
item has been marked the currently selected item is ignored when performing
the action. Marked items are displayed with an asterisk ('*') prefixing the
name.
The buttons make it possible to perform actions either on selected or marked
items or on all items in the manager. Buttons named 'Clear' and 'Save' are
performed on all items; 'Clear' will delete all items and 'Save' will update
the runtime state file associated with the manager in the `~/.elinks/`
directory. Most buttons presses will query you before completing the
action.
At any time, both the currently selected item and button are highlighted.
The same goes for marked items. Most manager dialogs also maintains the
state, so that when you reopen the manager later it will have the same items
selected and the same folders opened or closed.
The basic default controls for managers are the following:
`--------------`--------------------------------------------------------------
Keys Action
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Up/Down Select the item above/below.
'*' Toggle marking of a item.
Space Open and close folders.
Left/Right Select the button to the left/right.
Home/End Select the first/last item.
Enter Press the currently selected button.
Esc Close the manager dialog.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Some managers also supports searching, either by pressing the 'Search'
button or by pressing '/'. By searching the empty string, all hidden items
from the previous search will be shown again.
LED status indicators
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
As an optional feature it is possible to have tiny LED-like status
indicators shown at the bottom-right of the screen. They are used for
displaying an overview of the current browsing state, ie. whether you are
currently talking through a SSL-secured connection, what is the current
input mode (normal or insert), JavaScript errors etc.
An example display may look like: `[SIJP--]`. Each position in the LED
display is associated with the following state:
`--------------`--------------------------------------------------------------
Symbol Description
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
'S' Whether an SSL connection was used.
'i'/'I' The state of insert mode for text-input form-fields: 'i' \
means modeless, 'I' means insert mode is on.
'J' A JavaScript error has occurred.
'P' A JavaScript pop-up window was blocked.
- Unused.
- Unused.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
`-` generally indicates that the LED is off.
The above information is also available in the LED dialog available by
either clicking on the LED display or via the Help menu.
Navigation
~~~~~~~~~~
ELinks provides various ways to navigate documents. Depending on how
documents are structured, it can be a great help to change navigation style.
The navigation styles can roughly be divided into page-oriented,
link-oriented and screen-oriented. They overlap in many ways, so this
separation is mostly used as a mean to present them.
Page-Oriented Navigation
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
This involves scrolling documents horizontally and vertically. Documents
can be scrolled page-wise, where the next or previous subpage will be
displayed. It is also possible to scroll documents in steps, either
line-wise (vertically) or column-wise (horizontally). The step size can be
configured and by default is 2 lines and 8 columns. Alternatively, whole
documents can be scrolled to the start or the end.
The basic default controls:
`--------------`--------------------------------------------------------------
Keys Action
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Insert/Delete Scroll up/down line-wise. (vertically)
PageUp/PageDown Scroll up/down page-wise.
'['/']' Scroll left/right column-wise. (horizontally)
Home/End Scroll to the start/end of the document.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Link-Oriented Navigation
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
For hypertext documents, access to the links makes it more practical to
navigate by jumping between links in the document. There are two ways to do
this; either you can move between links relationally or by number. Using
relational link navigation it is possible to focus the next/previous link or
move in a directional manner to the link in a certain direction such as
left/right/up/down.
In order to navigate using link numbers, you have to first toggle link
numbering on; this will prefix all links with a number using the notation
[number]. `[23]` indicates link number 23. When link numbering is enabled,
pressing any number key will pop up a "Go to link"-dialog where the complete
link number can be entered. By pressing Enter the entered link number will
be focused, but only if it is a valid link number.
Note: it is also possible to jump to links by searching the link text; check
the documentation on searching.
The basic default controls:
`--------------`--------------------------------------------------------------
Keys Action
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Up/Down Move to the previous/next link.
'.' Toggle link numbering.
Enter/Right Follow the current focused link.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
No keys are by default configured for directional link navigation.
Position-Oriented Navigation
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Positional navigation (sorry, bad word) uses the either the position of the
cursor or the mouse click to navigate the document. If you are familiar with
the w3m text-browser you will be familiar with cursor routing. Basically,
you move the cursor around -- kind of like a mouse -- in the document area
of the user interface. When the cursor is over a link, the link is
highlighted, and when the cursor moves outside the current document view, it
will cause the document view to scroll.
The possibilities when using the mouse to navigate the document depend on
what terminal you are using. In some terminals, it is possible to scroll by
using the mouse wheel. Scrolling is however also possible by clicking in the
edge areas of the document view. Highlighting links can be done by clicking
on a link but waiting to release the mouse button until the link is no
longer under the mouse pointer.
No keys are by default configured for cursor routing.
Forms
^^^^^
The status bar will indicate the type and name of the field.
Input text/Password fields::
These will be displayed as `________`.
Note that passwords will be obscured using `*` characters.
Status bar will display something like "Text field, name q",
or "Password field, name password" for password fields.
Textarea boxes::
These will be displayed as multiple lines consisting of `_`.
Status bar will display something like "Text area, name comment"
Buttons::
These will be displayed as `[ Go ]`.
Status bar will display something like "Submit form to ...",
"Post form to ..." for submit buttons.
Checkboxes::
These will be displayed as `[ ]` or `[X]`.
Status bar will display something like "Checkbox, name c, value 1".
To set one just press ENTER on it.
Radio buttons::
These will be displayed as `( )` or `(X)`.
Status bar will display something like "Radio button, name radio1".
To set one, you may use ENTER.
Select lists::
These will be displayed as `[first item____]`.
Note that if multiple attribute is used, these are displayed as a
group of checkboxes instead.
Status bar will display something like "Select field, name list"
To select one entry, press ENTER, then navigate using UP/DOWN, then
press ENTER again.
Searching
~~~~~~~~~
Searching is by default available by pressing '/'. This will open a search
dialog with a input text field for entering the search terms and checkboxes
to control how searching is performed. You can indicate whether matching
should be case sensitive and whether regular expressions or normal searching
should be used.
It is also possible to make an incremental search, also called type-ahead
searching. You can search either the whole document text or only link text.
The latter can be useful if you see a link deep inside a page and want to
get to it quickly.
Matches of the search term will be high-lighted. After having performed
document text search all matches will be high-lighted. To get rid of this
high-lighting you have to ``search for the empty string'', that is open a
search dialog and just press Enter in the input field.
2006-01-11 04:31:39 -05:00
Previous search words are saved in the search history, so they can easily be
found and used later. Browsing the history will replace the current entered
search terms.
The basic default controls for searching are the following:
`--------------`--------------------------------------------------------------
Keys Action
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
'/' Open search dialog
'?' Open search dialog for backwards searching
'#' Start incremental link text search
'#/' Start incremental document search
'n'/'N' Show next/previous match
Tab Show next match (only for incremental searching)
Up/Down Insert previous/next search word from history (only when the \
input field is selected)
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hints and Odd Features
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Note: This is still a work in progress and from here on an below
everything is marked TODO!
- Numerical action prefixes. Example: 3<Down> jumps down three links.
- How to move forward in the document history ('u').
- Toggling color modes, plain/html and image link rendering.
- Link numbering.
- Insert mode in text-input form-fields.
- Menu searching.