Example #1
0
/*
add_menu(windid window, int glyph, const anything identifier,
                                char accelerator, char groupacc,
                                int attr, char *str, boolean preselected)
                -- Add a text line str to the given menu window.  If identifier
                   is 0, then the line cannot be selected (e.g. a title).
                   Otherwise, identifier is the value returned if the line is
                   selected.  Accelerator is a keyboard key that can be used
                   to select the line.  If the accelerator of a selectable
                   item is 0, the window system is free to select its own
                   accelerator.  It is up to the window-port to make the
                   accelerator visible to the user (e.g. put "a - " in front
                   of str).  The value attr is the same as in putstr().
                   Glyph is an optional glyph to accompany the line.  If
                   window port cannot or does not want to display it, this
                   is OK.  If there is no glyph applicable, then this
                   value will be NO_GLYPH.
                -- All accelerators should be in the range [A-Za-z].
                -- It is expected that callers do not mix accelerator
                   choices.  Either all selectable items have an accelerator
                   or let the window system pick them.  Don't do both.
                -- Groupacc is a group accelerator.  It may be any character
                   outside of the standard accelerator (see above) or a
                   number.  If 0, the item is unaffected by any group
                   accelerator.  If this accelerator conflicts with
                   the menu command (or their user defined alises), it loses.
                   The menu commands and aliases take care not to interfere
                   with the default object class symbols.
                -- If you want this choice to be preselected when the
                   menu is displayed, set preselected to TRUE.
*/
void dummy_add_menu(winid wid, int glyph, int cnt, const ANY_P * identifier,
		CHAR_P accelerator, CHAR_P group_accel, int attr, 
		const char *str, BOOLEAN_P presel)
{
	/* Do Nothing */
	printf("dummy_add_menu(%s, %d, %d, %d, %c, %c, %d, %s, %d\n", winid2str(wid),
	       glyph, cnt, (int)identifier, accelerator, group_accel, attr, str, presel);
}
Example #2
0
/*
add_menu(windid window, int glyph, const anything identifier,
                                char accelerator, char groupacc,
                                int attr, char *str, boolean preselected)
                -- Add a text line str to the given menu window.  If identifier
                   is 0, then the line cannot be selected (e.g. a title).
                   Otherwise, identifier is the value returned if the line is
                   selected.  Accelerator is a keyboard key that can be used
                   to select the line.  If the accelerator of a selectable
                   item is 0, the window system is free to select its own
                   accelerator.  It is up to the window-port to make the
                   accelerator visible to the user (e.g. put "a - " in front
                   of str).  The value attr is the same as in putstr().
                   Glyph is an optional glyph to accompany the line.  If
                   window port cannot or does not want to display it, this
                   is OK.  If there is no glyph applicable, then this
                   value will be NO_GLYPH.
                -- All accelerators should be in the range [A-Za-z].
                -- It is expected that callers do not mix accelerator
                   choices.  Either all selectable items have an accelerator
                   or let the window system pick them.  Don't do both.
                -- Groupacc is a group accelerator.  It may be any character
                   outside of the standard accelerator (see above) or a
                   number.  If 0, the item is unaffected by any group
                   accelerator.  If this accelerator conflicts with
                   the menu command (or their user defined alises), it loses.
                   The menu commands and aliases take care not to interfere
                   with the default object class symbols.
                -- If you want this choice to be preselected when the
                   menu is displayed, set preselected to TRUE.
*/
void dummy_add_menu(winid wid, int glyph, const ANY_P * identifier,
		char accelerator, char group_accel, int attr, 
		const char *str, boolean presel)
{
	/* Do Nothing */
	printf("dummy_add_menu(%s, %d, %d, %c, %c, %d, %s, %d\n", winid2str(wid),
	       glyph, (int)identifier, accelerator, group_accel, attr, str, presel);
}
Example #3
0
/*
int select_menu(windid window, int how, menu_item **selected)
                -- Return the number of items selected; 0 if none were chosen,
                   -1 when explicitly cancelled.  If items were selected, then
                   selected is filled in with an allocated array of menu_item
                   structures, one for each selected line.  The caller must
                   free this array when done with it.  The "count" field
                   of selected is a user supplied count.  If the user did
                   not supply a count, then the count field is filled with
                   -1 (meaning all).  A count of zero is equivalent to not
                   being selected and should not be in the list.  If no items
                   were selected, then selected is NULL'ed out.  How is the
                   mode of the menu.  Three valid values are PICK_NONE,
                   PICK_ONE, and PICK_N, meaning: nothing is selectable,
                   only one thing is selectable, and any number valid items
                   may selected.  If how is PICK_NONE, this function should
                   never return anything but 0 or -1.
                -- You may call select_menu() on a window multiple times --
                   the menu is saved until start_menu() or destroy_nhwindow()
                   is called on the window.
                -- Note that NHW_MENU windows need not have select_menu()
                   called for them. There is no way of knowing whether
                   select_menu() will be called for the window at
                   create_nhwindow() time.
*/
int dummy_select_menu(winid wid, int how, MENU_ITEM_P **selected)
{
	int nReturned = -1;
	printf("dummy_select_menu(%s, %d, ...)\n", winid2str(wid), how);

	/*if (wid != -1 && dummy_windowlist[wid].win != NULL &&
			dummy_windowlist[wid].type == NHW_MENU)
	{
		nReturned=ghack_menu_window_select_menu (dummy_windowlist[wid].win,
				selected, how);
	}*/

	return nReturned;
}
Example #4
0
/*
end_menu(window, prompt)
                -- Stop adding entries to the menu and flushes the window
                   to the screen (brings to front?).  Prompt is a prompt
                   to give the user.  If prompt is NULL, no prompt will
                   be printed.
                ** This probably shouldn't flush the window any more (if
                ** it ever did).  That should be select_menu's job.  -dean
*/
void dummy_end_menu(winid wid, const char *prompt)
{
	/* Do Nothing */
	printf("dummy_end_menu(%s, %s)\n", winid2str(wid), prompt);
}
Example #5
0
/* Start using window as a menu.  You must call start_menu()
   before add_menu().  After calling start_menu() you may not
   putstr() to the window.  Only windows of type NHW_MENU may
   be used for menus.
*/
void dummy_start_menu(winid wid)
{
	/* Do Nothing */
	printf("dummy_start_menu(%s)\n", winid2str(wid));
}
Example #6
0
/*
putstr(window, attr, str)
                -- Print str on the window with the given attribute.  Only
                   printable ASCII characters (040-0126) must be supported.
                   Multiple putstr()s are output on separate lines.
Attributes
                   can be one of
                        ATR_NONE (or 0)
                        ATR_ULINE
                        ATR_BOLD
                        ATR_BLINK
                        ATR_INVERSE
                   If a window-port does not support all of these, it may map
                   unsupported attributes to a supported one (e.g. map them
                   all to ATR_INVERSE).  putstr() may compress spaces out of
                   str, break str, or truncate str, if necessary for the
                   display.  Where putstr() breaks a line, it has to clear
                   to end-of-line.
                -- putstr should be implemented such that if two putstr()s
                   are done consecutively the user will see the first and
                   then the second.  In the tty port, pline() achieves this
                   by calling more() or displaying both on the same line.
*/
void dummy_putstr(winid wid, int attr, const char *text)
{
	printf("winid %s, %s, attr %d\n", winid2str(wid), text, attr);
}
Example #7
0
/* Next output to window will start at (x,y), also moves
 displayable cursor to (x,y).  For backward compatibility,
 1 <= x < cols, 0 <= y < rows, where cols and rows are
 the size of window.
*/
void dummy_curs(winid wid, int x, int y)
{
	printf("winid %s, x %d, y %d\n", winid2str(wid), x, y);
}
Example #8
0
/* Destroy will dismiss the window if the window has not 
 * already been dismissed.
*/
void dummy_destroy_nhwindow(winid wid)
{
	printf("dummy_destroy_nhwindow(%s)\n", winid2str(wid));
}
Example #9
0
/* -- Display the window on the screen.  If there is data
                   pending for output in that window, it should be sent.
                   If blocking is TRUE, display_nhwindow() will not
                   return until the data has been displayed on the screen,
                   and acknowledged by the user where appropriate.
                -- All calls are blocking in the tty window-port.
                -- Calling display_nhwindow(WIN_MESSAGE,???) will do a
                   --more--, if necessary, in the tty window-port.
*/
void dummy_display_nhwindow(winid wid, BOOLEAN_P block)
{
	printf("dummy_display_nhwindow(%s, %d)\n", winid2str(wid), block);
}
Example #10
0
/* Clear the given window, when asked to. */
void dummy_clear_nhwindow(winid wid)
{
	printf("dummy_clear_nhwindow(%s)\n", winid2str(wid));
}
Example #11
0
/*  Create a window of type "type" which can be 
        NHW_MESSAGE     (top line)
        NHW_STATUS      (bottom lines)
        NHW_MAP         (main dungeon)
        NHW_MENU        (inventory or other "corner" windows)
        NHW_TEXT        (help/text, full screen paged window)
*/
winid 
dummy_create_nhwindow(int type)
{
	printf("dummy_create_nhwindow(%s)\n", winid2str(type));
	return type;
}
Example #12
0
/* -- Display the window on the screen.  If there is data
                   pending for output in that window, it should be sent.
                   If blocking is TRUE, display_nhwindow() will not
                   return until the data has been displayed on the screen,
                   and acknowledged by the user where appropriate.
                -- All calls are blocking in the tty window-port.
                -- Calling display_nhwindow(WIN_MESSAGE,???) will do a
                   --more--, if necessary, in the tty window-port.
*/
void dummy_display_nhwindow(winid wid, boolean block)
{
	printf("dummy_display_nhwindow(%s, %d)\n", winid2str(wid), block);
}