pickpack is a small python library based on wong2's pick which allows you to create a curses-based interactive selection tree in the terminal.
It was made with installation processes in mind, so that a user can select a parent node and get all children elements included. Different configurations allow for different outputs.
$ pip install pickpack
options
: a RenderTree (anytree) or a list of options (if using list,options_map_func
MUST be included)title
: (optional) a title displayed above the options listroot_name
: (optional) name of root ("select all") node; defaults to root-node's valuemultiselect
: (optional) if true, it is possible to select multiple values by hitting SPACE; defaults toFalse
singleselect_output_include_children
: (optional) if true, output in singleselect will include all children of the selected node, as well as the node itself; defaults toFalse
output_leaves_only
: (optional) if true, only leaf (childless) nodes will be returned; for singleselect mode,singleselect_output_include_children
MUST be True; defaults toFalse
output_format
: (optional) allows for customising output format. 'nodeindex' =[(Node('name'), index)]
; 'nameindex' =[('name', index)]
; 'nodeonly' =[Node('name')]
; 'nameonly' =['name']
; default is 'nodeindex'indicator
: (optional) custom the selection indicatorindicator_parentheses
: (optional) include/remove parentheses around selection indicator; defaults toTrue
default_index
: (optional) defines at which line the indicator will be placed when the program is started; default is0
(first line)options_map_func
: (optional for multiselect) a mapping function to pass each option through before displaying. Must returnNode
pickpack can be used by creating a tree and passing it into pickpack:
from anytree import Node, RenderTree
from pickpack import pickpack
title = 'Please choose one: '
c1 = Node('child1')
c2 = Node('child2')
p1 = Node('parent', children=[c1,c2])
options = RenderTree(p1)
option, index = pickpack(options, title)
print(option, index)
outputs:
Node('/parent/child1', index=1)
1
pickpack multiselect example returning node-name and index:
from anytree import Node, RenderTree
from pickpack import pickpack
title = 'Please choose one: '
c1 = Node('child1')
c2 = Node('child2')
p1 = Node('parent', children=[c1,c2])
options = RenderTree(p1)
option, index = pickpack(options, title, multiselect=True, min_selection_count=1, output_format='nameindex')
print(option, index)
outputs:
[('child1', 1), ('child2', 2)]
To register custom handlers for specific keyboard keypresses, you can use the register_custom_handler
property:
from anytree import Node, RenderTree
from pickpack import PickPacker
title = 'Please choose one: '
c1 = Node('child1')
c2 = Node('child2')
p1 = Node('parent', children=[c1,c2])
options = RenderTree(p1)
picker = PickPacker(options, title)
def go_back(picker):
return None, -1
picker.register_custom_handler(ord('h'), go_back)
option, index = picker.start()
- the custom handler will be called with the
picker
instance as its parameter. - the custom handler should either return a two-element
tuple
orNone
. - if
None
is returned, the picker would continue to run; otherwise the picker will stop and return the tuple.
If your options are not a RenderTree
, you can pass in a mapping function through which each option will be run. 1
The function must take in elements of the type you passed into the options (Node
if you passed a RenderTree
, T
if you passed a list[T]
) and return a Node
.
You may also store any additional information as a custom property within the node.
pickpack options map function example:
from anytree import Node, RenderTree
from pickpack import pickpack
title = 'Please choose an option: '
options = [
{'label': 'option1', 'abbreviation': 'op1'},
{'label': 'option2', 'abbreviation': 'op2'},
{'label': 'option3', 'abbreviation': 'op3'}
]
def get_node(option):
return Node(option.get('label'), abbreviation=option.get('abbreviation'))
picker = PickPacker(options, title, indicator='*', options_map_func=get_node, output_format='nameindex')
displays:
Please choose an option:
(*) Select all
( ) └── option1
( ) └── option2
( ) └── option3
outputs:
>>> ({ 'label': 'option1' }, 0)
pickpack options map function example for lists with nesting:
from anytree import Node, RenderTree
from pickpack import pickpack
title = 'Please choose an option: '
options = [
{'label': 'option1', 'abbreviation': 'op1', 'children':
[{'label': 'option1.1', 'abbreviation': 'op1.1',}]
},
{'label': 'option2', 'abbreviation': 'op2'},
{'label': 'option3', 'abbreviation': 'op3'}
]
def get_node(option):
children = option.get('children')
if children is not None:
children_list: list[Node] = []
for child in children:
children_list.append(get_nodes(child))
return Node(option.get('label'), children=children_list, abbreviation=option.get('abbreviation'))
else:
return Node(option.get('label'), children=None, abbreviation=option.get('abbreviation'))
picker = PickPacker(options, title, indicator='*', options_map_func=get_node, output_format='nameindex')
displays:
Please choose an option:
(*) Select all
( ) └── option1
( ) └── option1.1
( ) └── option2
( ) └── option3
Footnotes
-
It MAY be also possible to use the
options_map_function
to customise how each option is displayed (as was the case with the originaloptions_map_function
from wong2's pick). However, this behaviour has not been thoroughly tested. Feel free to submit an issue if you try it out. ↩