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311 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
311 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
=head1 NAME
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ELinks Perl Interface
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=head1 INTRODUCTION
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This document aims to describe the ELinks (powerful text WWW browser) interface
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for Perl (powerful and enchanting programming language). This interface falls
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to the "internal scripting" domain of ELinks, therefore it concerns scripts
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which affect ELinks general behaviour, I<not> scripts embedded in the WWW
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documents.
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The interface consists of two largely separate and independent parts. The first
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one is where ELinks is the active party, calling Perl I<hooks> upon certain
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events (going to an URL, about to render an HTML document, exiting) and
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conniving the hook results. This part of the interface is not subject of this
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document, however. There is no document dedicated to this so far, however the
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example Perl hooks file (I<contrib/perl/hooks.pl> in the source distribution)
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has some plentiful POD documentation embedded, which lists the currently
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implemented hooks exhaustively, along with I<Developer's usage> sections which
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describe the Perl side of the hooks interface. If you are also at least mildly
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capable C programmer, you might consider contributing Perl interface for some
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other hooks which are supported by the rest of ELinks; see I<doc/events.txt>
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for detailed listing of these.
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The other part of the interface, which is also the main subject of this
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document, are functions and data structures provided by ELinks for the Perl
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scripts. Here, the Perl script is the active party, accessing ELinks data
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structures and functions.
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While the event hooks are already pretty standardized and settled down, each
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internal scripting language has a very different Perl->ELinks interface; well,
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each of the two who actually provide any interface of this kind. The other
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language having this is Lua, but the author of this document chose to
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completely ignore its interface since he believes it needs a radical redesign
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anyway. It is currently result of some historical features gluing, is pretty
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clumsy, ugly and ad hoc built together. So the author took this opporunity
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to think out something he believes is nice, consistent, and elegant. ;-)
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=head1 ABOUT THIS DOCUMENT
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Please note that this is currently mostly only a design document. Nothing or
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only very little of it is already actually implemented. The unimplemented parts
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are marked by the B<TODO> marker. The whole thing is also still subject of
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discussion and can be changed anytime without any notice or compatibility
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measures.
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=head1 GENERAL USAGE
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The data structures are generally exported to the global namespace (B<TODO>:
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a way to prevent this) for greater convenience, while the functions provided
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are kept in the C<ELinks> (or subsequent) namespace. Please note well that
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B<you do not need to load the ELinks package explicitly>! No
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use ELinks;
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is needed. Don't do it.
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ELinks exports some of its internals as Perl data structures. Especially the
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vectors are usually generated dynamically and behave as tied vectors; therefore
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changes to them propagate as changes to their internal counterparts; e.g.
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adding an item to the array of bookmarks will reflect immediately in the ELinks
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internal bookmarks list.
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=head1 CONFIGURATION SUBSYSTEM
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=over 4
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=item %options
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This hash is keyed by option names and contains the respective value - either
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a stringnumber or a reference to a subsequent hash. Values are automatically
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converted to the option type - e.g. if you set a boolean option to 12938
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or 'pasky' and read it back, you get just 1; if the value is bounded integer,
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you get the value modulo max.
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The first level of the hash is keyed by the option trees; two trees are
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present now, I<config> and I<cmdline>.
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You may not add options (set previously unset keys) through this hash
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except for the I<autocreate> keys (those with a I<_template_> option,
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e.g. B<mime.extension>). Options with the I<deleted> flag appear as
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unset in this hash. Deleting options from this hash merely sets the
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I<deleted> flag on them.
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B<Example:>
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$options{'config'}->{'document'}->{'download'}->{'notify_bell'}++;
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B<TODO>
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=item %extoptions
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This hash is keyed the same way as I<%options>, however it contains all the
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information about the option.
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You may add options (set previously unset keys) through this hash only by
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setting the I<type> member first. You can delete options from this hash,
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which wipes them altogether, but B<never do that>!
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=over 4
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=item type
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String containing I<bool> (B<not> considered an integer type), I<int> (basic
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integer type), I<long> (big integer), I<string>, I<codepage>, I<language>,
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I<color>, I<command> (the I<value> is undefined in this case), I<alias>, or
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I<tree> (the I<value> member is a hash reference).
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=item value
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=item flags
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Reference of array of strings, which can be: I<hidden> (never touch those
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options), I<autocreate> (the tree is magical), I<watermark> (this is for
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internal options marking; you must know what are you doing if you are ever
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going to use it, and you B<must> clear it after you are done; B<never touch
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this flag>), I<touched> (whether this option should be saved/updated in the
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configuration file), I<sort> (the tree shall be kept sorted by ELinks; no
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impact on subtrees), or I<deleted> (the option is already gone; this option is
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merely a shadow neccesary for appropriate edit of the configuration file).
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Note that ELinks internally uses some other flags too, those are of no value
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whatsoever for the Perl scripts though, so you cannot see them.
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=item min
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Meaningful only for integer types.
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=item max
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Meaningful only for integer types.
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=item description
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=item caption
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=item changehook
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B<TODO>: A way to bind Perl coderef as a changehook.
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=back
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B<Example:>
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my $btree = $extoptions{'config'}->{'bookmarks'}->{'value'};
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$btree->{'cute'} = { type => 'bool', value => 1 };
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$btree->{'lovely'}->{'type'} = 'tree';
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$btree->{'lovely'}->{'value'}->{'shiny'}->{'type'} = 'int';
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$btree->{'cool'}->{'type'} = 'string';
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# Equivalent:
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$btree->{'cool'}->{'flags'} = [ 'deleted' ];
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delete $options{'config'}->{'bookmarks'}->{'cool'};
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B<TODO>
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=item %keybindings
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This hash is keyed by the keymap name (I<main>, I<menu>, and I<edit>) on the
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first level and by the key string on the second level (with the same rules
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as in the configuration file). The value is an action name string I<or>
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it can be also a Perl code reference, if you want to bind your own
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subroutine.
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Currently the custom Perl subroutine will get only the key string as its
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first parameter. More parameters (different for each keymap) will be added
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in future as the required infrastructure for them will be added.
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B<Example:>
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my $q = $keybindings{'main'}->{'q'};
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ELinks::alert(ref $q ? 'perl hook' : $q);
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$keybindings{'main'}->{'q'} = \&quit_wrapper;
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B<TODO>
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=item %actbindings
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This hash is keyed by the keymap name (I<main>, I<menu>, and I<edit>) on the
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first level and by the action string on the second level (see the configuration
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documentation for the list of actions), I<or> the key can also be a Perl code
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reference (that may sound sick but it is actually cool! ;-). The value is a
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reference to an array of key strings. Therefore, it simply provides reverse
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mapping to the I<%keybindings> map; you could emulate that by some Perl code
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but in this case these two mappings are both so frequently needed that it is
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practical to have both builtin.
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The values are unique, so adding the value at one place will make it disappear
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from another possible occurence.
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B<Example:>
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ELinks::alert(join(' ', @{$keybindings{'main'}->{'quit'}});
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push(@{$keybindings{'main'}->{\&quit_wrapper}}, 'q');
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B<TODO>
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=item ELinks::conf_eval($string)
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This function takes the supplied I<$string> and evaluates it as a [set of]
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configuration command[s] (like the B<-eval> commandline option). It
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returns an array of errors encountered during the evaluation; empty
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array signifies successful evaluation.
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B<Example:>
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ELinks::conf_eval('set connection.async_dns = 0');
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ELinks::conf_eval('bind "main" "q" = "quit"');
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B<TODO>
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=back
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=head1 SIMPLE DIALOGS
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This chapter is concerned of using simple prefabricated dialogs. Explicitly
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construing complex custom dialogs from widgets is described in the CUSTOM
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DIALOGS section.
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=over 4
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=item ELinks::alert(...)
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This function shows a trivial window containing only the supplied text and an
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C<[ OK ]> button.
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The function takes either a single parameter with the text, or a hash with the
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I<message> and optional I<title> key. The window title defaults to "Perl
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Alert").
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The function returns nothing (or rather, anything).
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B<Example:>
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ELinks::alert('They are after you!');
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ELinks::alert(title => 'The Litany Against Fear',
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message => 'I must not fear. Fear is the mind-killer...');
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B<TODO>
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=item ELinks::confirm(...)
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This function shows a simple window containing only the supplied text and two
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C<[ Yes ]> and C<[ No ]> buttons.
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The function takes either a single parameter with the text, or a hash with the
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I<message> and optional I<title> (window title) key, which defaults to "Perl
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Confirmation". You can also pass optional I<yes> and I<no> keys, changing the
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default button labels.
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The function returns true if the yes button was pressed, false otherwise.
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B<Example:>
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ELinks::emit_action('quit') if Elinks::confirm('Quit ELinks?');
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# Abuse example: ;-)
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if (ELinks::confirm(title => 'Candy shop',
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message => 'What will you choose?'
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yes => 'Sweet', no => 'Lollipop')
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{ ELinks::alert('Yummy!'); }
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else
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{ ELinks::alert('*Smack*'); }
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B<TODO>
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=item ELinks::inputbox(...)
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This functionn shows a simple window containing the supplied label, an input
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box, and the C<[ OK ]> and C<[ Cancel ]> buttons. So it will look like e.g.
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the Goto URL dialog.
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The function takes either a single parameter with the label, or a hash with the
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I<label> and and optional I<title> (window title) key, which defaults to "Perl
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Input".
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The function returns the input value if the OK button was pressed, undef
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otherwise.
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B<Example:>
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ELinks::alert('I have ' . ELinks::inputbox('Amount') . ' of '
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. ELinks::inputbox(title => 'Curious',
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label => 'Fruit sort'));
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B<TODO>
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=back
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=head1 AUTHORS
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This document was scribbled by Petr Baudis.
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