Linedit is a readline-style library written in Common Lisp that provides customizable line-editing for Common Lisp programs.
Linedit is basically portable between implementations, but most development and testing has so far been carried out on SBCL - but CCL at least is expected to work as well.
Linedit homepage is technically http://common-lisp.net/project/linedit/ but it is woefully out of date. The canonical place to get linedit is
https://github.com/nikodemus/linedit
but unless you want to hack on linedit you should take the Quicklisp version! To report a bug submit a github issue at the above URL. For patches please submit a pull request from a topic-branch.
> (ql:quickload "linedit")
> (linedit:linedit :prompt "-> ")
> (linedit:formedit :prompt1 "=> " :prompt2 "| ")
SBCL and CCL only for now:
(linedit:install-repl :wrap-current t :eof-quits t)
in eg. your Lisp initialization file (~/.sbclrc for SBCL). If you don't want to preserve your current input handler you can omit the WRAP-CURRENT keyword.
function INSTALL-REPL &key wrap-current eof-quits
Installs Linedit REPL input handler. (SBCL and CCL only.)
function UNINSTALL-REPL
Removes Linedit REPL input handler. (SBCL and CCL only.)
function LINEDIT &rest keys &key prompt
Reads a single line of input with line-editing from standard input of the process and returns it as a string.
Results are unspecified if *STANDARD-INPUT* has been bound or altered.
:PROMPT specifies the string to print to *STANDARD-OUTPUT* before starting to accept input.
Further keyword arguments to LINEDIT are an advanced and undocumented topic, but if you're willing to dive into sources you can eg. use multiple kill-rings not shared between different invocations of LINEDIT, or change the function responsible for providing input completion.
function FORMEDIT &rest keys &key prompt1 prompt2
Reads a single form (s-expession) of input with line-editing from standard input of the process and returns it as a string.
Results are unspecified if *STANDARD-INPUT* has been bound or altered, or if READTABLE is not the standard one.
:PROMPT1 specifies the string to print to *STANDARD-OUTPUT* before starting to accept input.
:PROMPT2 specified the string to print to *STANDARD-OUTPUT* when input spans multiple lines (prefixing every but first line of input from the user perspective.)
Further keyword arguments to FORMEDIT are an advanced and undocumented topic, but if you're willing to dive into sources you can eg. use multiple kill-rings not shared between different invocations of FORMEDIT, or change the function responsible for providing input completion.