Gowid provides widgets and a framework for making terminal user interfaces. It's written in Go and inspired by urwid.
Widgets out-of-the-box include:
- input components like button, checkbox and an editable text field with support for passwords
- layout components for arranging widgets in columns, rows and a grid
- structured components - a tree, an infinite list and a table
- pre-canned widgets - a progress bar, a modal dialog, a bar graph and a menu
- a VT220-compatible terminal widget, heavily cribbed from urwid 😃
All widgets support interaction with the mouse when the terminal allows.
Gowid is built on top of the fantastic tcell package.
There are many alternatives to gowid - see Similar Projects
The most developed gowid application is currently termshark, a terminal UI for tshark.
go get github.com/gcla/gowid/...Make sure $GOPATH/bin is in your PATH (or ~/go/bin if GOPATH isn't set), then tab complete "gowid-" e.g.
gowid-fibHere is a port of urwid's palette example:
Here is urwid's graph example:
And urwid's fibonacci example:
A demonstration of gowid's terminal widget, a port of urwid's terminal widget:
Finally, here is an animation of termshark in action:
This example is an attempt to mimic urwid's "Hello World" example.
package main
import (
	"github.com/gcla/gowid"
	"github.com/gcla/gowid/widgets/divider"
	"github.com/gcla/gowid/widgets/pile"
	"github.com/gcla/gowid/widgets/styled"
	"github.com/gcla/gowid/widgets/text"
	"github.com/gcla/gowid/widgets/vpadding"
)
//======================================================================
func main() {
	palette := gowid.Palette{
		"banner":  gowid.MakePaletteEntry(gowid.ColorWhite, gowid.MakeRGBColor("#60d")),
		"streak":  gowid.MakePaletteEntry(gowid.ColorNone, gowid.MakeRGBColor("#60a")),
		"inside":  gowid.MakePaletteEntry(gowid.ColorNone, gowid.MakeRGBColor("#808")),
		"outside": gowid.MakePaletteEntry(gowid.ColorNone, gowid.MakeRGBColor("#a06")),
		"bg":      gowid.MakePaletteEntry(gowid.ColorNone, gowid.MakeRGBColor("#d06")),
	}
	div := divider.NewBlank()
	outside := styled.New(div, gowid.MakePaletteRef("outside"))
	inside := styled.New(div, gowid.MakePaletteRef("inside"))
	helloworld := styled.New(
		text.NewFromContentExt(
			text.NewContent([]text.ContentSegment{
				text.StyledContent("Hello World", gowid.MakePaletteRef("banner")),
			}),
			text.Options{
				Align: gowid.HAlignMiddle{},
			},
		),
		gowid.MakePaletteRef("streak"),
	)
	f := gowid.RenderFlow{}
	view := styled.New(
		vpadding.New(
			pile.New([]gowid.IContainerWidget{
				&gowid.ContainerWidget{IWidget: outside, D: f},
				&gowid.ContainerWidget{IWidget: inside, D: f},
				&gowid.ContainerWidget{IWidget: helloworld, D: f},
				&gowid.ContainerWidget{IWidget: inside, D: f},
				&gowid.ContainerWidget{IWidget: outside, D: f},
			}),
			gowid.VAlignMiddle{},
			f),
		gowid.MakePaletteRef("bg"),
	)
	app, _ := gowid.NewApp(gowid.AppArgs{
		View:    view,
		Palette: &palette,
	})
    
	app.SimpleMainLoop()
}Running the example above displays this:
- The beginnings of a tutorial
- A list of most of the widgets
- Some FAQs (which I guessed at...)
- Some gowid programming tricks
Gowid is late to the TUI party. There are many options from which to choose - please read https://appliedgo.net/tui/ for a nice summary for the Go language. Here is a selection:
- urwid - one of the oldest, for those working in python
- tview - active, polished, concise, lots of widgets, Go
- termui - focus on graphing and dataviz, Go
- gocui - focus on layout, good input options, mouse support, Go
- clui - active, many widgets, mouse support, Go
- tui-go - QT-inspired, experimental, nice examples, Go
Gowid depends on these great open-source packages:
- urwid - not a Go-dependency, but the model for most of gowid's design
- tcell - a cell based view for text terminals, like xterm, inspired by termbox
- asciigraph - lightweight ASCII line-graphs for Go
- logrus - structured pluggable logging for Go
- testify - tools for testifying that your code will behave as you intend
- The author - Graham Clark ([email protected])