prompt-with-list-non-focus items &key owner x y bottom right choice-class vertical-scroll print-function selection selected-item visible-items selection-callback action-callback destroy-callback list-updater gesture-callbacks add-gesture-callbacks alternative-y alternative-x alternative-bottom alternative-right widget-name filtering-gesture filtering-toggle &allow-other-keys => interface
A displayed CAPI pane.
An integer, or one of the keywords :left
, :right
, :center
and :centre
.
An integer, or one of the keywords :left
, :right
, :center
and :centre
, or t
.
An integer, or one of the keywords :top
, :bottom
, :center
and :centre
.
An integer, or one of the keywords :top
, :bottom
, :center
and :centre
, or t
.
A subclass of list-panel.
An integer.
An item.
A positive integer.
A boolean.
A function designator or nil
.
A function designator or nil
.
A function designator or nil
.
A function designator or nil
.
A function designator or nil
.
A list of pairs of the form (
gesture
.
callback
)
.
A list of pairs of the form (
gesture
.
callback
)
.
A Gesture Spec.
A Gesture Spec.
A string.
The function prompt-with-list-non-focus
raises a non-focus window, displaying the items
items
in a list of class
choice-class
, which should be list-panel or a subclass.
The non-focus window does not take the input focus, and hence does not see any keyboard input unless this is passed to it by non-focus-maybe-capture-gesture. It responds to mouse gestures.
Note that even moving the selection in the list vertically in response to the arrow keys cannot happen without non-focus-maybe-capture-gesture.
owner is required, and must be a CAPI pane visible on the screen. The position of the non-focus window is determined relative to owner , and the callbacks are invoked in the process of owner .
x
,
y
,
right
,
bottom
,
alternative-x
,
alternative-y
,
alternative-right
, and
alternative-bottom
are used for positioning the window.
x
,
alternative-right
,
alternative-x
and
right
are the horizontal keywords, and one of them determines the horizontal position as described below.
y
,
alternative-bottom
,
alternative-y
and
bottom
are the vertical keywords, and one of them determines the vertical position. The values :center
and :centre
are synonyms here.
x
and
y
specify the positioning of the left and top sides of the window, except for :center
/:centre
. An integer means offset in pixels from the left or top of
owner
. :left
, :right
, :top
and :bottom
mean the left/right/top/bottom of
owner
. :center
means the center of the owner, and in this case it specifies the location of the center of the window in the
x
or
y
dimension.
x
must be supplied, unless
right
is supplied.
y
must be supplied, unless
bottom
is supplied.
right
and
bottom
override
x
and
y
respectively. They specify the positioning of the right or bottom of the window, except for :center
/:centre
, where they are interpreted in the same way as
x
and
y
.
alternative-x
,
alternative-y
,
alternative-right
, and
alternative-bottom
are used if positioning the window using
x
or
right
and
y
or
bottom
would place it outside of the screen, and are interpreted the same way as the non-alternative keywords. For example, both Editor completion and text-input-pane completion specify a
y
coordinate below the text, and
alternative-bottom
above the text. The decision to use the alternative variables is made independently in the horizontal and vertical directions.
alternative-right
and
alternative-bottom
can both take the special value t
, meaning the
height
or
width
of the screen.
The default value of choice-class is list-panel.
selection or selected-item can be used to specify the initially selected item in the list. If neither of these initargs is supplied, the first item is selected.
visible-items specifies the height of the list panel when the filter is not visible. The default value of visible-items is 20.
vertical-scroll
is supplied to cl:make-instance
when making the list. The default value of
vertical-scroll
is t
.
print-function
is also supplied to cl:make-instance
when making the list. The default value of
print-function
is nil
.
selection-callback , if non-nil, should be a function of two arguments, the selected item and the non-focus interface. selection-callback is called (in the process of owner) when an item is selected in the list panel. Note that callback-type does not affect the arguments passed to selection-callback .
action-callback
, if non-nil, should also be a function of two arguments, the selected item and the non-focus interface.
action-callback
is called (in the process of
owner
) when an item is double-clicked in the list panel, or when Return
is passed to non-focus-maybe-capture-gesture (by default, see
gesture-callbacks
). Note that
callback-type
does not affect the arguments passed to
action-callback
.
destroy-callback , if non-nil, should be a function of one argument, the non-focus window (a CAPI interface). destroy-callback is called when the non-focus window is destroyed. It is invoked in the process of owner .
list-updater , if non-nil, should be a function with signature
list-updater =>
result
list-updater
is called in the process of
owner
whenever non-focus-update is called.
result
must be a list of items to put into the list panel, or one of the special values t
(meaning no effect) and :destroy
(meaning destroy the non-focus window).
gesture-callbacks
and
add-gesture-callbacks
define gesture callbacks which the non-focus window can "capture" (when non-focus-maybe-capture-gesture is called).
gesture-callbacks
and
add-gesture-callbacks
should both be a list of pairs of the form (
gesture
.
callback
)
. Each
gesture
must be a gesture specifier, that is an object that sys:coerce-to-gesture-spec
can coerce to a Gesture Spec. Each
callback
is either a callable (symbol or function) which takes one argument, the non-focus window, or a list of the form (
function
arguments
)
. Note that when it is a list, the window is not automatically passed to the function
function
amongst the arguments
arguments
. The gesture callbacks are used only when non-focus-maybe-capture-gesture is called.
add-gesture-callbacks adds more gesture callbacks to those that are implicitly defined for controlling the list panel (see non-focus-maybe-capture-gesture). gesture-callbacks , if supplied, replaces the gesture callbacks that are implicitly defined for the list panel. In both cases, a gesture callback that is defined explicitly overrides any implicitly define gesture callback.
filtering-gesture
defines whether it is possible for the user to add a filter to the non-focus window with a keyboard gesture, and defines that gesture. The gesture is actually a toggle: it destroys a filter that is on, and adds a filter when none is present. When the filter is added, its text is reset and it is always enabled, that is it captures characters and Backspace
. While the filter is visible, the list panel displays only items that match the filter (see Filters). The default value of
filtering-gesture
is a Gesture Spec matching Control+Return
.
filtering-toggle
defines whether it is possible for the user to disable/enable the filter with a keyboard gesture, and defines that gesture. When a filter is visible and enabled, the non-focus window captures characters and Backspace
(when non-focus-maybe-capture-gesture is called) and passes them to the filter. When the filter is visible and disabled, characters and Backspace
are captured. The default value of
filtering-toggle
is a Gesture Spec matching Control+Shift+Return
.
widget-name
has an effect only on GTK+ and Motif. It defines the widget name of the interface, which can then be used to define resources specific to the non-focus window. Note that the non-focus completers in editor-pane and text-input-pane use the default
widget-name
which is "non-focus-list-prompter"
, so defining resources for non-focus-list-prompter will affect them.
If
items
is nil
, prompt-with-list-non-focus
returns nil
without doing anything. Otherwise, it raises the non-focus window and returns the interface, which is of class non-focus-list-interface.
The non-focus window is "passive", because it does not see keyboard input. It is the responsibility of the caller to pass any keyboard input that the non-focus window needs to process to the window, by using non-focus-maybe-capture-gesture. In general, that should be all keyboard gestures, and non-focus-maybe-capture-gesture decides which gestures it wants to process.
The caller can also use non-focus-terminate, non-focus-update, non-focus-list-toggle-filter, non-focus-list-add-filter, non-focus-list-remove-filter and non-focus-list-toggle-enable-filter to control the non-focus window.
list-panel
non-focus-terminate
non-focus-update
non-focus-list-toggle-filter
non-focus-list-toggle-enable-filter
non-focus-maybe-capture-gesture
In-place completion
CAPI User Guide and Reference Manual (Unix version) - 3 Aug 2017