On a project I'm working on, I'm trying to make it accept user commands and provide history with the up arrow. I'm aiming to keep this project free of dependencies, and I don't want to have to require people to also install the readline development files just to compile my project. Does anyone know of a simple drop-in replacement for GNU Readline that provides only simple functionality?
|
Most systems have readline installed, so I don't see that as being too much of an issue. Secondly, I don't think there's any drop-in replacement for the GNU Readline library. You're going to have to stick with it. :( |
|||||
|
|
Editline. It has a BSD-style license. EDIT: Older versions of editline were quite simple. Here's one with just two C files and a header, a total of about 1500 lines of code. We've been using it for years. |
||||
|
|
|
I found one. antirez of Redis fame has come up with linenoise, a much simpler alternative. |
|||
|
|
BusyBox contains command line editing code similar to readline, but much smaller and simpler, with full support for UTF-8. It would probably be easy to make it into an independent library. |
|||
|
|
|
editline(libedit) doesn't support multi-byte characters yet. I also agree with Dan Loewenherz, the readline library is wide spread. For example, most linux distribution ships bash with readline. Most python distribution also ships with readline. If your project needs a readline-like library, it's a good idea to use GNU readline library since it's a popular choice and users may have it installed on the OS already. |
|||
|
|
|
The editline library is yet another alternative. From the README:
[...]
|
|||
|
|