I would use ncurses but I want it to run on Windows. In C++, I could use kbhit()
and getch()
from conio to first check if a character was pressed, then get it.
I would like something similar in Rust.
With the crate device_query you can query the keyboard state without requiring an active window. You just need to add in your Cargo.toml
file the dependency to this crate:
[dependencies]
device_query = "0.1.0"
The usage is straightforward and similar to kbhit()
and getch()
. The difference is you'll receive a Vec
of pressed keys (Keycode
) and this Vec
will be empty if no key is pressed. A single call covers the functionality of both kbhit()
and getch()
combined.
use device_query::{DeviceQuery, DeviceState, Keycode};
fn main() {
let device_state = DeviceState::new();
loop {
let keys: Vec<Keycode> = device_state.get_keys();
for key in keys.iter() {
println!("Pressed key: {:?}", key);
}
}
}
This program will print out all pressed keys on the console. To instead just check if any key is pressed (like with kbhit()
only), you could use is_empty()
on the returned Vec<>
like this:
let keys: Vec<Keycode> = device_state.get_keys();
if !keys.is_empty(){
println!("kbhit");
}
get_keys()
is non-blocking , it will return immediately , so the main program keep polling ?
Dec 1, 2021 at 12:46
You still can do something like
extern {
fn _getch() -> core::ffi::c_char;
}
fn getch() -> char {
unsafe {
_getch() as char
}
}
You can get the keyboard events in rust without pressing enter adding as a development dependency to k_board a lightweight crate developed with the purpose of offering a listener to the keyboard in raw mode using low-level resources (it does not have dependencies like other crates), I attach how you could capture any letter from the keyboard
cargo add k_board
use k_board::{keyboard::Keyboard, keys::Keys};
fn main() {
println!("[*] I use k_board lightweight software");
println!("[ ] I use heavyweight software");
for key in Keyboard::new() {
match key {
Keys::Up => {
std::process::Command::new("clear").status().unwrap();
println!("[*] I use k_board lightweight software");
println!("[ ] I use heavyweight software");
}
Keys::Down => {
std::process::Command::new("clear").status().unwrap();
println!("[ ] I use k_board lightweight software");
println!("[*] I use heavyweight software");
}
Keys::Enter => {
break;
}
_ => {}
}
}
}
Here I attach the list of keys and events
pub enum Keys {
Up,
Down,
Left,
Right,
Enter,
Space,
Delete,
Escape,
Char(char)
F(u8),
Ctrl(char),
Alt(char),
AltGr(char),
Null,
}
Considering that efficiency in code is vital for developing a high-performance program, you can choose which parts of the keyboard will be listened to during runtime. If you only want to use the arrow keys and enter for your program, you can simply add it to your repository without features. However, if you want to use letters, numbers, special combinations, then you'll have to add it as a feature.
kbhit()
andgetch()
?nix
crate for example.