🎚️VT Sequences
We need to filter and build the VT sequences.
In your own terminal emulator, VT sequences are the power of any terminal emulator found in literally every PC.
This feature provides several filtering and manipulation tools which allow you to perform these operations on strings that contain escape sequences under the Terminaux.Sequences
namespace. Currently, these tools are provided:
Function | Description |
---|---|
| Filters all of the VT sequences |
| Filters all of the VT sequences that are of multiple types |
| Matches all of the VT sequences |
| Matches all of the VT sequences that are of multiple types |
| Does the string contain all of the VT sequences or a VT sequence of any type? |
| Does the string contain all of the VT sequences or a VT sequence of one or more types? |
| Does the string contain all of the VT sequences or a VT sequence of any specific type? |
| Splits all of the VT sequences |
| Splits all of the VT sequences that are of multiple types |
| Determines the VT sequence type from the given text |
| Gets the sequence filter regular expression from the provided VT sequence type |
| Gets the sequence filter regular expression list from the provided VT sequence types (one or more) |
Usage
Place the using Terminaux.Sequences;
clause at the top of the file that you want to call these functions in. You need to put the class name VtSequenceTools
before the function name mentioned above so that it looks like this:
Sequence builder
Terminaux offers a Builder
namespace that contains building blocks for building a VT sequence for your console applications.
It starts with VtSequenceBasicChars
which allows you to get a variety of starting-point characters for your VT sequence in case you want to manually build the sequence yourself. Here are the available characters:
BEL (\x07 - CTRL+G - BellChar)
BS (\x08 - CTRL+H - BackspaceChar)
CR (\x0D - CTRL+M - CarriageReturnChar)
ENQ (\x05 - CTRL+E - ReturnTerminalStatusChar)
FF (\x0C - CTRL+L - FormFeedChar)
LF (\x0A - CTRL+J - LineFeedChar)
SI (\x0F - CTRL+O - StandardCharacterSetChar)
SO (\x0E - CTRL+N - AlternateCharacterSetChar)
SP (" " - SPACE - SpaceChar)
TAB (\x09 - CTRL+I - HorizontalTabChar)
VT (\x0B - CTRL+K - VerticalTabChar)
ESC (\x1B - VerticalTabChar)
ST (\x9C - VerticalTabChar)
Each type of VT sequence contain their own class files that stores both the regex match information about specific actions and sequence generation functions based on the given action and argument. Here are a list of supported sequence types:
APC sequences
Application program command
C1 sequences
8-bit control characters
CSI sequences
Controls beginning with control sequence introducer
DCS sequences
Device control
ESC sequences
Controls beginning with ESC
OSC sequences
Operating system command sequences
PM sequences
Privacy message
To learn more about these sequences, visit the below page:
The builder also provides a powerful tool which allows you to build almost any VT sequence using only the arguments and the specific type of VT sequence (Character attributes for example). This tool is found inside the VtSequenceBuilderTools
class under the Terminaux.Sequences.Builder
namespace.
Currently, it provides these tools:
BuildVtSequence(VtSequenceSpecificTypes specificType, params object[] arguments)
Allows you to build your VT sequence
Returns a string consisting of a VT sequence of the requested type with the requested arguments
DetermineTypeFromSequence(string sequence)
Allows you to determine the type from a specific VT sequence
Returns a tuple of
(VtSequenceType, VtSequenceSpecificTypes)
which holds both the broad VT sequence type (CSI for example) and the specific type (Character attribute for example).
Techniques
There are currently four types of operations.
Filters
Found in VtSequenceTools.FilterVTSequences()
, when this function is called, Terminaux selects the appropriate regular expression for the sequence type and replaces the found sequences with blanks. You can optionally replace it with something, like a text, a syntax, or even another VT sequence.
Matches
Found in VtSequenceTools.MatchVTSequences()
, when this function is called, Terminaux selects the appropriate regular expression for the sequence type and gets all the matched regular expressions. You can then wrap the values in the for
or the foreach
loop to get match information for each matched sequence.
Queries
Found in VtSequenceTools.IsMatchVTSequences()
, when this function is called, Terminaux selects the appropriate regular expression for the sequence type and checks the text to see if any part of the text is a VT sequence.
Additionally, it contains IsMatchVTSequencesSpecific()
, which helps to check the text for any specific VT sequence type.
Splits
Found in VtSequenceTools.SplitVTSequences()
, when this function is called, Terminaux selects the appropriate regular expression for the sequence type and splits the text with the matched VT sequences as delimiters.
Regex of VT expressions
Each type of VT sequences listed below by the VtSequenceRegexes
class are supported by Terminaux for the above operations.
CSI sequences (
CSISequences
)(\x9B|\x1B\[)[0-?]*[ -\/]*[@-~]
OSC sequences (
OSCSequences
)(\x9D|\x1B\]).+(\x07|\x9c)
ESC sequences (
ESCSequences
)\x1b [F-Nf-n]|\x1b#[3-8]|\x1b%[@Gg]|\x1b[()*+][A-Za-z0-9=`<>]|\x1b[()*+]""[>4?]|\x1b[()*+]%[0-6=]|\x1b[()*+]&[4-5]|\x1b[-.\/][ABFHLM]|\x1b[6-9Fcl-o=>\|\}~]
APC sequences (
APCSequences
)(\x9f|\x1b_).+\x9c
DCS sequences (
DCSSequences
)(\x90|\x1bP).+\x9c
PM sequences (
PMSequences
)(\x9e|\x1b\^).+\x9c
C1 sequences (
C1Sequences
)\x1b[DEHMNOVWXYZ78]
All VT sequences (
AllVTSequences
)
Usage in console writers
All console writers internally use the VT sequence filtering tools, like GetFilteredPositions()
that uses FilterVTSequences()
, to be able to determine the exact text position. This is to work around Linux Mono installs that report wrong position when VT sequences are appended.
This workaround was not necessary as of the modern .NET implementation, but the workaround is still in place, because Terminaux targets .NET Standard, which means that it can be used for .NET Framework console projects, and, thus, Mono on Linux.
It works by seeking through every visible letter from the text in the form of "advancing" so that GetFilteredPositions()
can make sure that the filtered positions are actually correct and sought "to the last letter" rather than "past the last letter" that Mono and the normal Console.Write()
and Console.WriteLine()
were suffering.
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